In Oklahoma, whitetail deer typically shed their antlers between late December and early March, with peak shedding often occurring in January and February. Factors such as genetics, age, and environmental conditions can influence the timing. Overall, most deer will have dropped their antlers by early spring, making way for new growth as the breeding season concludes.
Yes. All species of deer lose their antlers and then grow back new bigger ones.
no, they dont have antlers
Me and a friend of mine started shed hunting our ass's off the last couple years. Needless to say we've found a few. We notice every year that in general the places we look the freshies are on the ground by feb 1st. Now I'm not saying there all on the ground by then, but definitely enough to start looking!
None of them. They all shed their antlers every year and regrow them back again.
After the rut, usually in January or February.
yes
The whitetail deer. Until they scrape the "felt" off of their antlers.
=Yes, after the rut most males loose their antlers and they regrow them the next spring.=
anters are shed
Moose typically shed their antlers in the late fall or early winter, around November or December. This shedding process is triggered by changes in daylight and hormone levels. Once shed, moose will begin growing new antlers for the next mating season.
Yes, but they are antlers, not horns. Horns on cattle and other ungulates are not shed like antlers are.
late march April and few into may but i have encountered a bull in march with antlers still