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  2. Antler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antler

    As a result of their fast growth rate, antlers are considered a handicap since there is an immense nutritional demand on deer to re-grow antlers annually, and thus can be honest signals of metabolic efficiency and food gathering capability. [12] Increasing size of antlers year on year in different European game species, 1891 illustration

  3. Blackbuck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackbuck

    [2] [3] The specific name cervicapra is composed of the Latin words cervus ("deer") and capra ("she-goat"). [2] [4] The vernacular name "blackbuck" is a reference to the dark brown to black colour of the dorsal part of the coat of the males. [5] The earliest recorded use of this name dates back to 1850. [6]

  4. Mule deer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mule_deer

    The mule deer's tail is black-tipped, whereas the white-tailed deer's is not. Mule deer antlers are bifurcated; they "fork" as they grow, rather than branching from a single main beam, as is the case with white-tails. Each spring, a buck's antlers start to regrow almost immediately after the old antlers are shed.

  5. Joe Bumgardner of Starkville harvested a giant 175-inch Mississippi buck that had partially shed velvet antlers. 'It was a dinosaur.': Mississippi hunter bags massive 13-foot alligator

  6. 'That thing's a monster': Pennsylvania deer hunters share ...

    www.aol.com/things-monster-pennsylvania-deer...

    Hunters across Pennsylvania are finding big trophy bucks since the start of the two-week rifle deer season Nov. 25. Rifle deer season is a statewide tradition that attracts hundreds of thousands ...

  7. Black-tailed deer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-tailed_deer

    Black-tailed deer or blacktail deer occupy coastal regions of western North America. There are two subspecies, the Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) which ranges from the Pacific Northwest of the United States and coastal British Columbia in Canada [1] to Santa Barbara County in Southern California, [2] and a second subspecies known as the Sitka deer (O. h ...