yes, mature males do.
· White-tailed Deer
Presence of antlers, antler buds, or the area on the head where antlers have grown but have been shed.
Antlers are a primary feature of the animals that reside under the Family Cervidae. Animals with antlers include deer (red deer, fallow deer, mule deer, white-tailed deer, black-tailed deer, roe deer, pudu, chital, brocket deer), moose, elk (wapiti), and reindeer (caribou).
a medium- large tan or brown slightly horselike mammal. males, also known as bucks, have antlers
Antlers are a primary feature of the animals that reside under the Family Cervidae. These include deer (red deer, fallow deer, mule deer, white-tailed deer, black-tailed deer, roe deer, pudu, chital, brocket deer), moose, elk (wapiti), and reindeer (caribou).
Antlers are a primary feature of the animals that reside under the Family Cervidae. Four footed animals with antlers include deer (red deer, fallow deer, mule deer, white-tailed deer, black-tailed deer, roe deer, pudu, chital, brocket deer), moose, elk (wapiti), and reindeer (caribou).
male deer are quite territorial and will stake ground for themselve through making marks on trees with the antlers or scraping the ground with their hooves
Yes, White-tailed deer do migrate.
a white tailed deer is a vertebrate
A white tailed deer is a herbivore.
The breed of deer known for having fuzzy antlers is the velvet antlered deer, particularly seen in species like the white-tailed deer and mule deer. During the growth phase, the antlers are covered in a soft, velvety skin that supplies nutrients and blood flow. This velvet is eventually shed as the antlers harden and mature, becoming the familiar bony structures seen during the mating season.
The white-tailed deer is the state animal.