Chital are mainly herbivores. They mainly eat different kinds of sprouting grass, tree branches, fruits, and even the antlers they shed.
no
yes they do
From what I know, Bengal tigers eat antelope and Chital(small deer)
No, key deer do not live in Asia, home of the tiger. Tigers eat chital and sambar, which are deer.
Chital deer primarily eat short grasses. However, they do eat the leaves of some shrubs, and will eat fruit. To recycle nutrients, they eat their own shed antlers.
A chital deer is a deer which commonly inhabits wooden regions of India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan and Pakistan. A baby chital deer is called a fawn.
Sambars=vegetation off all kinds chital=shoots twigs leaves and grass
notopterus chitala
Swamp Tigers are awersome they like to eat chital, sambar adn wild pig they live near India adn Bangledesh.
The chital is a type of spotted deer. It is found in places like Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan. Its spots are white and they also have antlers that shed annually.
there is a deer sambar, chital, sika, swamp deer, and hog deer.
The scientific name of a spotted deer is a Chital, or a Cheetal.
Deer were introduced to Australia by the British. The first species of deer to be introduced into Australia was the chital (Indian spotted deer). It came to Australia in the early 1800s, brought by Dr. John Harris, surgeon to the New South Wales Corps, who sought to establish these animals in the farming industry. 400 chital were brought to Australia from Sri Lanka and India, but they did not survive. The next group of deer were introduced into Tasmania in October 1829 by Mr John Bisdee. These, too, were chital.
It depends on where the tiger lives. Usually they eat what is listed:Sambar deerGaurChitalBarasinghaWild BoarNilgaiWater BuffaloLeopardsPythonsSloth BearsCrocodilesSika DeerMooseRoe DeerMusk DeerMalayan TapirCamelsYakAntelope
Carnivores, tigers prey mainly on wild hog, buffalo, bison, sambhar deer, and chital deer.
The monkeys up in the trees spot predators like tigers and warn the deer.
Axis axis (also known as chital, cheetal, chital deer, spotted deer, or axis deer) is native to India, Bangladesh, (I'll be right back)...the kind of deer), an invasive species are currently "invading" or living in Hawaii and Point Reyes National Seashore (Both in the USA).
Axis deer is also known as chital or cheetal. Axis deer is also known as spotted deer, and around its natural habitat around India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bhutan, it is known by dozens of other local names, such as Chital Horin in Bengali and as Pulli Maan in Tamil.
Habitat RegionstropicalterrestrialTerrestrial Biomessavanna or grasslandOther Habitat Featuresriparian
no. moose are moose are moose (singular and multiple) they are not deer at all. they are two entirely separate animals.
The first species of deer to be introduced into Australia was the chital (Indian spotted deer). It came to Australia in the early 1800s, brought by Dr. John Harris, surgeon to the New South Wales Corps, who sought to establish these animals in the farming industry. 400 chital were brought to Australia from Sri Lanka and India, but they did not survive.
The first species of deer to be introduced into Australia was the chital (Indian spotted deer). It came to Australia in the early 1800s, brought by Dr. John Harris, surgeon to the New South Wales Corps, who sought to establish these animals in the farming industry. 400 chital were brought to Australia from Sri Lanka and India, but they did not survive.
Axis Deer; Chital; Indian Spotted Deer They are four-toed ungulates
In the wild, tigers mostly feed on larger and medium sized animals. Sambar, gaur, chital, barasingha, wild boar, nilgai and both water buffalo and domestic buffalo are the tiger's favoured prey. Sometimes, they also prey on leopards, pythons, sloth bears and crocodiles.
Leopards can on a broad variety of prey, mainly antelopes, deer and rodents. These include: cattle, chital, duiker, dung beetle, hartebeest, hyrax, impala, muntjac, nyala, porcupine, primates, rat, reedbuck, springbok, squirrel, waterbuck, warthog and wildebeest.