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Anatomy

Outward Appearance:
The whitetail's antlers consist of
two main beams that grow out and backward from their bases
and then sweep forward. Single tines, or points, grow upward
off these main beams, and there is a small tine above the
brow. The average whitetail stands between 36 and 40 inches
high at the top of the shoulder. Especially big bucks may
be 42 inches high. They have a total length of between 60
to 75 inches and an average weight of about 150 pounds. The
Florida Key deer seldom weigh more than 80 pounds, while the
largest whitetail deer on record is 511 pounds.
Deer vary in color shadings from
area to area. They also vary with the season. All whitetails
shed twice a year. In the spring, they get a new coat that
is a bright reddish-brown, the hair solid and thin. As cold
weather approaches in the fall this hair is replaced by the
winter coat, which shades from bluish to a grayish-brown.
The winter hair is long, kinky, and filled with air pockets
providing excellent insulation. I have often seen deer whose
bodies lost so little heat that snow and sleet did not melt
on their backs but remained encrusted on the hair.
Despite regional differences, deer
are colored basically alike. They have a jet-black nose with
two white bands behind it. The face is brown, the eyes circled
with white. The insides of the ears, beneath the chin and
the large throat patch are pure white. The body is darkest
down the middle of the back, shading lighter till it abruptly
reaches the white stomach. The upper portion of the legs on
the outside are brown and the insides are white. The top side
of the tail is brown with some having various amounts of black
at the tip. The underside of the tail and rear portion of
the deer is a sparkling white. Like the pronghorn antelope,
the whitetail can erect and flare its rump hairs when alarmed.
However, bucks do not flaunt their tails as commonly as do
the does. It is thought that does do this to guide their young
as they flee from danger through the dark night or deep forest.
When the deer clasps its tail down tightly and keeps the rump
hairs bent inwardly, it is almost impossible to see any of
the telltale white.
Halfway between the toes and the
heel of the foot on the outside of the hind leg, the deer
has a metatarsal gland. Of the three deer found in the United
States, the whitetail has the smallest metatarsal gland. The
size of this gland is often used as a means of identification
if only the legs are available. Supposedly this gland also
gives off a musk; its purpose is not well understood. At the
deer's hock on the inside of the leg is the tarsal gland.
This gland plays a very important sexual role. In addition
to giving off a strong musk, which is attractive to other
deer, both bucks and does bend their legs together and Curve
their bodies so that they urinate on the hair tufts covering
the glands. In front of the deer's eye is the lachrymal or
preorbital gland. This gland is used to mark bushes and over
hanging limbs by bucks which also plays a pivotal part in
the sexual life of a whitetail.
Skeletal System:
The
skeleton gives the deer protection, support, and movement.
It's also a site for calcium storage and the production of
red blood cells. A deer's skeleton is made of bone.
Evolutionists believe the ancestors of the deer originally
had five toes on each of their feet. Through evolution, the
first toe corresponding to our thumb disappeared entirely.
The second and fifth toes diminished in size and moved to
the rear where they now function as dewclaws. The third and
fourth toes became enlarged and form the main hooves as we
know them today. Actually, the deer walks on its toenails
instead of its toes. This type of foot is very efficient for
fast movement over well-packed earth. Between the center hooves
is the interdigital gland, which gives off a yellow, waxy
substance that marks the ground as the deer walks. This enables
the animals to track one another, particularly the doe to
follow a straying fawn. Of course, it also enables predators
to track the deer.
Buck deer have antlers for the main
purpose of fighting other bucks during the breeding season.
Recent research shows that the antlers may also be an erotic
stimulant. Most bucks lose their antlers during the months
of December or January. They have nothing but the antler bases,
called pedicels, on their heads until April. During this month,
these bases start to swell with the growth of new cells. Horns
that are not shed, such as those on mountain sheep, have a
center core filled with blood cells which foster growth. Antlers
of the deer are solid and nourished externally by a network
of blood vessels called "velvet."
Musculature System:
Muscle
and Meat Content: The water content of fresh deer meat was
found to be 77.8 percent, and protein content varied from
21-24.3 percent. The glycogen level was found to be relatively
high--0.491 percent. Also, muscle fibers are finer than those
of any livestock.
Fat Deposits: Fat levels in deer
depend on nutritional and social conditions, and sex, age,
and season. Fat is stored first in the bone marrow, then deposited
around the kidneys intestines, and stomach cavity, in that
order. Mobilization of fat reserves should follow in reverse
order. Fat that infiltrates bone marrow changes the color
and texture of the marrow, making it possible visually to
estimate the grade of fat present. Femur marrow generally
is used for fat analyses. According to the study of Stockle
et al. (1978), measurement of bone marrow fat can be improved
using the ''Hobart Percentage Fat Indicator." Marrow
fat itself was not found to be a reliable indicator of physical
condition in deer.
Circulatory System:
With respect to management concerns,
there are three important organs of the deer's circulatory
system that deserve particular attention--the heart, lungs,
and spleen.
Heart. Whitetail Deer, like most
mammals, have a four chamber heart which circulates blood
through the circulatory system. It transfers oxygen and nutriants
throughout the body and carries away carbon monoxide and waste
materials for disposal.
Lungs. The Whitetail's Lungs perform
the same function as in all mammals, transfering oxygen into
and carbon monoxide out of the blood circulated through the
alveoli.
Spleen. The spleen is an important
producer of blood cells--primarily Lymphocytes. Erythrocytes
can be stored in large amounts. The spleen of deer belongs
to the blood-storing type, which is characteristic of endurance
runners. Therefore, spleens of animals that die minutes after
being wounded will be of much lower weight than spleens of
animals that die instantly.
Digestive System:
Members of the deer family, unlike
most mammals, do not have any teeth in the front of the upper
jawbone. Replacing the teeth is a resilient pad that makes
contact with the lower incisors. Deer have 32 teeth: 8 incisors,
12 premolars, and 12 molars. They usually do not have any
canine teeth.
The
members of the deer family are ruminants, having a four-compartmented
stomach, which allows the deer to feed very rapidly, chewing
its food just enough to swallow it. This partially chewed
food goes into the storage section of the stomach known as
the rumen. A feeding deer is at a disadvantage because while
feeding it cannot be alert to danger. Not having to masticate
its food thoroughly, the deer can fill its paunch rapidly
and then retire to a safe place to do the job properly. When
the deer is ready, it regurgitates a ball of partially chewed
food about the size of an orange and re-chews it, then re-swallows
the food, which now enters the second section of the stomach,
the reticulum. From there, it goes into the omasurn, then
through the abomasum into the intestines where digestion is
completed.
Deer do not have a gall bladder on
their livers. This allows them to eat vegetation that would
kill domestic animals.
Deer are ruminants, meaning they
are equipped with a four-chambered stomach. An interesting
characteristic about the ruminant's stomach is that it allows
the animal to gather a lot of food at once, then chew, and
digest it later. The four chambered stomach is needed to process
the large quantities of low nutrient food the deer eat.
Depending on the type and abundance
of food, the deer can fill its stomach in about one or two
hours. When a deer eats, food is moved by the tongue to the
back of the mouth, where it is chewed just enough to swallow.
The food then passes down the gullet into the stomach.
The four sections of a deer's stomach are the rumen, the reticulum,
the omasum, and the abomasum. First, the food goes into the
rumen which stores 8 to 9 quarts of unchewed food and acts
as a fermentation vat. Most of the digestion occurs in this
area of the stomach. Deer depend on billions of microorganisms
that live in its stomach. These microorganisms
break down the fibers, cellulose, and other basic plant components,
and convert them into materials that can be used by the deer's
digestive system. The lining of the rumen has small spaghetti-like
fringes called papillae, which vary in length from 3/8 to
1/2 inch. Over 40 percent of a deer's energy is derived from
the acids absorbed through the papillae and the walls of the
rumen.
After the deer has filled its paunch,
it lies down in a secluded place to chew its cud. After chewing
its cud for awhile, the deer re-swallows the food, which then
passes to the second portion of the stomach, the reticulum.
The reticulum has a lining that looks like a honeycomb. The
reticulum holds the food in a clump, which can grow to the
size of a softball. The main function of the reticulum is
to filter out any foreign material. After about sixteen hours,
the food passes to the third chamber, the omasum, where intensive
digestion and absorption take place. The omasum's lining has
forty flaps of varying heights, which absorb most of the water
from the food.
The last compartment, the abomasum,
has a very smooth, slippery lining with about a dozen elongated
folds. The abomasum produces acid to break down the food pieces
for easier absorption of nutrients.
The food eventually passes through 67 feet of intestines,
where most of the liquid is absorbed, leaving an impacted
mass of undigested particles. These particles are passed out
as excrement. A deer goes to the bathroom" an average
of 13 times every 24 hours. Usually 65 percent of the food
will be used by the animal, and 5 percent is lost as methane
gas, 5 percent as urine, and 25 percent as feces.
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