No, key deer do not live in Asia, home of the tiger. Tigers eat chital and sambar, which are deer.
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.
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.
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).
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.
no. moose are moose are moose (singular and multiple) they are not deer at all. they are two entirely separate animals.
The cheetah or chital is named as chitra or chitral which means spotted. They are Bengali words that address the axis deer or spotted deer.
Depending on where they live tigers prey on several species of deer including: chital or axis deer, sambar, muntjac, brow tined deer, hog deer, and various members of the red deer family which include several different species. The elk of North America is a member of the red deer group, it's counterpart in the Old World is called a red deer.
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.
Sambhar deer, Barasingha deer, Spotted or Chital deer, Hog deer, Muntjac deer, Kashmir Stag, and Thamin deer. They have more species of deer than anywhere else.
From what I know, Bengal tigers eat antelope and Chital(small deer)