
NATURE OF HUMAN NATURE
The
deer is found in the forests of Europe, Asia and North America, where most deer
grow to an average of about 1 meter tall. Deer-like creatures are found in
Africa, however they are all antelope and not deer.
Deer
stay in herds of approximately 25 deers per herd, mainly female deer and a
dominant male deer known as a stag. The male deer are protective deer and will
often fight other stags to protect their herd of female deer and to protect
their pride.
The
male deer horns shed and regrow every year, a little like the skin on a snake.
The only species of deer with exception to this annual horn shedding is the
Chinese water deer.
There
are around 40 different species of deer found in the woodlands of the Northern
Hemisphere. There are roughly six different species of deer found in the UK
alone, however, only the red deer and the roe deer are truly native to the
Isles.
Deer
are known as selective feeders and spend most of their time browsing for food
with the deer mainly eating leaves. Deer are very selective in what they eat
and deer therefore spend a great deal of time picking out the shoots, leaves,
grasses and fruits that are easy for the deer to digest.
Humans
have hunted deer for thousands of years and hunt the deer for the deer meat,
milk and skins. Today, deer are commercially farmed for their meat, rather than
being hunted, and in New Zealand alone there are over 3,000 deer farms across
the two islands.
Due
to hunting from humans and other large predators, and the continued loss of the
deer habitat, the wild deer are becoming very vulnerable and are being pushed
into smaller areas of forest that is uninhabited by larger mammals.
Deer
are prey to many wild animals around the world from humans, to wolves, tigers,
bears and occasionally foxes, and many other mammals will attempt to scavenge
from a deer that has been killed by something else, seeing as many deer species
can be quite big and are fairly fast.




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