Antlers are branching bony appendages that are shed annually. All male cervids , like moose, deer and elk have antlers. Only caribou and reindeer have females with antlers, though much smaller than their male counterparts. When they grow, they are covered in a thin fuzzy skin covering called "velvet" which contains blood supply to help the antlers grow. This skin covering is shed before rutting season.
Horns are a pointed projection of skin and hair of an animal, consisting of a layer of keratin surrounding a living bone core. Animals that have horns include all those in the family Bovidae (bovines, sheep, goats and antelope). Horns usually have a spiral or curved shape, with ridges or fluting. Horns begin growth soon after birth, and continue growth until the animal dies. They never fall off every year, except in pronghorns, where they shed the outer shell every year, but retain the inner bony core. Only the males of most species of Bovidae have horns, except those of the bovine genus including bison, buffalo, gnu and domestic cattle.
the difference is that antlers will fall off, where as horns won't
anters are shed
The horns of a deer are called antlers.
horns
Yes, but they are antlers, not horns. Horns on cattle and other ungulates are not shed like antlers are.
No if horns fall out they never grow back, antlers fall out and grow yearly.
Yes, antlers are bone and part of the skeleton like horns are.
horns
A gazelle antlers are called horns that will grow with them their entire life and the animals can be found only in Africa and Asia. A deer has antlers that are shed yearly and deer live in almost every continent except Australia.
Moose don't have horns. They are antlered mammals, much like elk or deer. The difference between horns and antlers is that antlers will typically be grown and fall off annually, whereas horns will grow only once. There are several reasons that moose have antlers. First, when the antlers grow and develop in the warmer months of the year, the antlers are covered in a fine velvet that is soft to the touch. Underneath the velvet flows a system of arteries and veins that circulate blood throughout the antlers. this acts as a cooling mechanism for the moose, keeping it cool in the hot months of summer. When the weather begins to cool down in fall, the moose will shed their velvet, with much bleeding, in order to turn their antlers into weapons. using trees and other objects as sharpening devices, moose peel the velvet from their antlers and sharpen their antlers in order to use them as a defense against predators and as a tool for finding a mate.
No cattle have antlers. They have horns. You could be thinking of moose or elk, which are part of the deer family and have antlers.
I not sure of the scientific ones but know that reindeers have antlers and wolfs don't. hope this helps