no, the deer blood covers you
Comprehensive coverage will usually cover you if you hit a deer. Coverage may be optionally covered under comprehensive or collision in some states. If you do not actually hit the deer and have a collision, it would only be covered under collision insurance.
Yes, we have deer in Florida!
no, but the PD should be covered by comprehensive
Yes, there is a species of deer in the Florida swamps.
If you hit a deer, coverage is found in your auto policy in the "Other than collision" or comprehensive coverage section for damage to your covered auto. Liability is available only for third parties that you injure due to negligence.
A few types of deer are endangered, primarily through the loss of habitat. The key deer, which lives only in The Florida Keys is an example. Illegal hunting also contributes, as do deaths from being hit by cars. The more common species - the white tailed deer and the mule deer in the US - are not endangered. They are actually overpopulated.
A few types of deer are endangered, primarily through the loss of habitat. The key deer, which lives only in the Florida keys is an example. Illegal hunting also contributes, as do deaths from being hit by cars. The more common species - the white tailed deer and the mule deer in the US - are not endangered. They are actually overpopulated.
in the Florida keyes
Yes
Yes
Deer usually rut in North Florida the last week of October to the first week of November, give or take.
Key deer live only in the Florida Keys. The dwarfism of the key deer results in it being a sub-species of the white-tailed deer.It is believed the deer migrated to Florida during the Wisconsin glaciation.