|
<
Back to Resource Center
Antler Development
In most of the whitetails range,
antler growth usually begins during the months of March or
April, by August or early September, antlers are fully-grown.
Deer antlers are among the fastest growing tissues known to
man. Growing at an average of 1 to 2 inches per week. Growing
antlers are covered with a living tissue called velvet. During
development, the deer's antlers are very delicate. This is
the time when most antler damage or breakage occurs. Velvet
is shed or rubbed off by the buck as he rubs small trees with
his antlers. After the breeding season, bucks will shed their
antlers. Antlers are usually shed in January or February.
Antler shedding usually occurs earlier in northern states
than southern states. A new pair of antlers will start growing
in the spring.
Antlers
Antler growth in bucks begins when they are fawns. However,
buck fawns grow antlers larger than short "buttons,"
or pedicles, which on occasion become hardened. These pedicles
then develop into the buck's first spike or branched antlers,
when he is a yearling (1 1/2 years old). Antler size then
continues to increase each additional year until peaking generally
at age 6 1/2 or 7 1/2.
Bucks begin growing their antlers in late-winter or early
spring, within weeks of when the previous year's antlers are
shed. Antlers grow very slowly at first, but by late-May,
antlers are rapidly growing. Antler growth is usually complete
by the end of August. The velvet then hardens and falls off
during September. The hardened, polished antlers remain until
they are shed during December through April, depending on
location and management practices.
Why Are There Annual Cycles In Antler Growth?
Believe it or not, the 23 degree tilt of the Earth's axis
is the ultimate cause for the annual cycles in deer antlers.
This tilt is what causes Earth's annually recurring seasons.
Deer have adapted their physiology and behavior to these seasonal
changes, including antler growth. The environmental cue that
regulates antler growth is the amount of day length, or photoperiod.
The physiological cue is the male hormone testosterone. The
way this works is complicated, but changing day lengths are
sensed by the eyes, which send this message, via the optic
nerve, to the pineal gland. The pineal gland - a pea-sized
organ at the base of the brain - produces many different hormones.
One hormone produced is luteinizing hormone, which controls
the amount of testosterone produced in the testes.
The antler cycle lags behind the changes in day length because
the hormonal changes take time. During fall, decreasing day
lengths cause melatonin production to increase, resulting
in decreased production of both luteinizing hormone and testosterone.
Decreasing testosterone levels then cause the antlers to shed.
Antler Shedding
Antlers are shed when a thin layer of tissue destruction,
called the abscission layer, forms between the antler and
the pedicle. This layer forms as a result of the decrease
in testosterone. As the connective tissue is dissolved, the
antler loosens and is either broken free, or falls off on
its own. This degeneration of the bone-to-bone bond between
the antler and the pedicle is the fastest deterioration of
living tissue known in the animal kingdom.
In whitetails, a restricted diet has been found to cause bucks
to shed their antlers early. It has been suspected that the
lack of adequate nutrition somehow affects testosterone output.
Nutritionally-stressed bucks may also grow their antlers and
shed their velvet later. Older-aged bucks are thought to shed
their antlers earlier than younger bucks. It has also been
reported that higher-ranked (more dominant) bucks cast their
antlers sooner than lower-ranked (subordinate) bucks. Older-aged,
more dominant bucks probably shed their antlers sooner because
of the high energy costs incurred in maintaining a higher
dominance rank.
The farther deer are from the equator, the more defined their
antler cycle. In other words, northern deer have a shorter
"window" of when antler shedding can occur, compared
to deer herds in southern states. In addition, the specific
date when a buck will shed his antlers may be determined more
by his individual antler cycle than any other factor. This
cycle is independent of other bucks and is believed to be
centered on each animal's birth date.
Penned deer studies have allowed scientists to measure the
exact dates of antler shedding for individual deer year after
year. One study in Mississippi found that individual bucks
usually shed their antlers at the same time each year and
almost always during the same week. Yearling bucks with only
spike antlers shed sooner than yearling bucks with forked
antlers, likely because they were more nutritionally stressed
than fork-antlered bucks. This study also indicated there
was no relationship between antler mass and date of antler
shedding, although other studies have shown that bucks shed
their antlers earlier as they grow older. Additional penned
studies have also revealed that bucks usually shed both antlers
within three days of each other.
Although there is no clear evidence that weather directly
affects antler shedding, it is likely that severe winters
may also cause bucks to shed their antlers earlier than normal
because of the nutritional stress this causes.
Why Do Bucks Shed Antlers?
We have examined the environmental and physiological changes
that occur to cause bucks to shed their antlers every year,
but we still haven't addressed the question of why bucks shed
antlers. Why do bucks spend so much energy in growing antlers,
only to shed these antlers a few months later, forcing them
to reinvest an enormous amount of energy to regrow the antlers
again the following year? Why don't deer antlers stay attached
and continue to grow throughout life like the horns of sheep,
goats, and cattle?
Scientists have pondered these same questions for many years
and they still do not know the answers. However, several theories
have been developed to explain why antlers are shed every
year. One of the most common theories is that bucks shed their
antlers annually so that they have the potential to replace
any damage to antlers that may have occurred in the form of
broken tines, or a broken main beam. This theory seems valid
because antlers are extremely important in display for acquiring
females and because they are used during dominance fights
with other bucks. If a buck breaks a main beam and is not
able to replace that antler, it may not be able to acquire
future breeding privileges.
A second related theory suggests that bucks shed antlers annually
so that they can regrow larger antlers the following year,
in order to keep pace with their increasing body size. This
theory is based on the fact that antlers quickly mature into
non-growing structures before the buck is able to attain full
body size.
A third theory states that antlers are shed simply because
of an accident of evolutionary chance. In other words, there
is no real reason why antlers are shed. Antlers are different
from horns, not because they need to be, but because of different
evolutionary origin. A fourth theory suggests that antlers
are shed in order to stop the die-back process, that occurs
at the junction of the pedicle and antler, from traveling
down into the skull.
Another theory suggests that antler shedding developed in
the primitive antlers of ancestral deer from temperate zones.
Antlers of deer in these colder climates would have been vulnerable
to freezing in winter if they were not shed. The only way
to prevent freezing would have been to stop the blood supply
to antlers before the onset of winter.
It is thought that ancestral males shed their antlers so that
they were able to mimic the healthier, non-antlered females.
In theory, this reduced their vulnerability to predation,
because predators may have actively searched for antlered
males due to their weakened condition.
One final theory simply suggests that antlers are shed each
year as an energy-conserving measure, so that males don't
have the added weight from the antlers to carry outside of
the breeding season. Antlers are cumbersome and energy-expensive
structures that are not needed after the breeding season.
However, for this to be true, it must also be true that re-growing
the antlers each year is less energy-expensive than maintaining
the antlers through winter.
|
 |