no only if you gut it
Reindeer have hollow hair, but deer which live in temperate zones do not.
Deer are vertebrates, They have a backbone, and a cranium, and a dorsal hollow nerve tube and internal organs.
Hollow as in a hollow space or cave is 空洞 (kuudou) which is pronounced like koo (like the "Koo" in "Kool-Aid") and doe (like the deer or "dough").
Deer require no shelter. Their hair is hollow and is extremely effecient at keping the deer warm and dry. I have however watched deer bed down under a pine tree or heavy bush to escape the snow and rain as well as find a lowspot in the ground to protect them from the wind. More often han not a deer will simply "lay Down"- curled in a ball and let the snow cover them. As the snow covers them it further insulates them and helps keep them warm.
I'm pretty sure that they are HOLLOW because if you look at a horn or something made out of a horn than you'll see that its hollow and no one hollowed it out it just came that way so just to sum it up animal thorns ARE hollow.~Yes animal HORNS are hollow, but don't be confused in thinking that every bone-like structure protruding from an animal's head is a horn. If the structure is NOT hollow it is an ANTLER. Examples: Cows and goats have horns. Deer and elk have antlers.
Yes- for small game in the rabbit/ squirrel class of game. They should not be used for big game, such as deer.
A prism that is hollow.
Water Deer Elk Caribou Moose Red Deer Reindeer Chinese Water Deer Roe Deer Sika Deer Fallow Deer Whitetail Deer Mule Deer
That tree is hollow. Do you have a hollow leg? I'm going to hollow out a hole.
Red deer, Wapiti, Sika deer, whitetail deer, Rusa deer, Sambar deer, Fallow deer,
White-tailed deer actually have more hair per square inch in the summer than in the winter! For protection against the cold, each hair on a deer's winter coat is hollow - like a tiny straw, which holds insulating air next to the body. These hairs are therefore more substantial than the thinner summer hair. So a white-tailed deer's in winter is thicker because each hair is thicker, not because there are more hairs. But this collection of fat, hollow hairs certainly help them survive the cold of winter.
Deer mice habitats are in concealed areas of barns, sheds, well houses, bottoms of hedges, in hollow trees, abandoned automobiles, etc.Be very careful if you uncover a deer mouse nest, as their feces can carry the Hantavirus disease. This is dangerous and can be easily transmitted to humans by stepping on or crushing dried feces and breathing the dust ! This is particularly prevalent in things like well sheds in fields (very common in my area.)