That usually depends on the person that sees the deer and where the deer is. If the deer is in a farmers field eating his/her crops, then yes the deer would be considered a pest. If the deer was in your yard, it could be considered a pest. This is possible, because if you lived in a town/city, it may cause a mess in your yard. (possibly due to eating plants, pooping in your yard, etc.) However if you lived out of town (ex. in the bush), it may not be considered a pest. Yes it would probably eat some of the leaves from the trees/bushes, but it isn't eating your crops or wrecking your small lawn. Like I said before it all depends on the person and where the deer is.
Yes, ants and fleas are considered to be pests. There are exterminators that can be hired to take care of pests like ants and fleas.
No, it still considered semi auto, and semi auto rifles are only allowed for pests, not deer or other large game.
yes they were
Rabbits and deer are two of the biggest garden pests.
'Pests' is a political word. Deer are an introduced species. They do browse forests and trample seedlings. But they are not a threat to the New Zealand habitat in the same way that possums and stoats are. Managementof deer numbers adds value to the New Zealand forest experience. Any article mentioning New Zealand 'pest' usually overlooks the value of deer to our country.
Most spiders in general are considered pests. Black Widow spiders are relatively poisonous and thus considered more of a pest than many spiders.
Rabbits, Ground Hogs (woodchucks), Deer are the most common garden pests.
Yes
They are occasional nuisance animals, generally they are not considered pests.
deer are actually considered herbivores and they eat only plant but its considered consumer !
Wild horses are pests in Australia because they have hard hooves which dig up soil and destroy land. Yet I don't agree that they are pests. Kat.
i do not know you was supposed to answer the freaking question