Well you may look at its spots and if they are starting disappear it is probably an older fawn. You may also be able to tell by the size of their hooves or antlers, if any antlers. With dogs they tell how old they are by their teeth, you may be able to do this with deer, but I really have no idea. That is really all I can think of, I am southern and know some about deer but this is just an odd subject.
You check the genetalia of the fawn to conclude if it is male or female.
go back to fawn and she will tell you what to do next
Let's see . . . the fawn is two years old. In human years, that would be, um, two years old.
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A fawn. A fawn is simply a baby deer. So a young deer is a fawn, and there is no special designation for a "baby" fawn.
A young deer (generally under a month old) is called a fawn.A young deer is called a fawn.yearling?Fawns
if it is under a year old it is clased as a fawn :)
No. When fawns are very young it is hard to tell the sex. No two fawns have the same spotted pattern. In older fawns, you can tell the sex just by looking for the buds at the top of their heads. If the fawn has buds, it is male; if not, it is female.
cnt tell you this i know every thing about fairies
The name of a baby deer is a Fawn
A fawn is a young deer typically just born to 6 months old these have white spots on them, a yearling is around a year old and a lot bigger and these have out grown there white spots
A fawn will stay with its mother for about a year, after which time they are independent. A male fawn will never sees his mother again, whereas a female fawn will sometimes return with her own fawns to form small herds.