Sunday, November 27, 2011

Tracking White-tailed Deer in my Backyard

Even though it is old and detail has been lost due to
melting snow, we can still be sure that this track was
left by a white-tailed deer.
Photo by Brad Sylvester, copyright 2011. Do not copy.
In the summer, it can be difficult or impossible to know how many animals or what species walk through the woods in my back yard. I can set out a trail cam, listen at night, or sit quietly and wait for something to walk by, but these areimperfect methods at best. Many animals will smell me and avoid the area,  get missed by the trailcam's motion detector or pass by so silently that I never notice them. In the winter of New England, however, it is a different story.

Animal Tracks in the Snow

That different story is told by tracks in the snow. After a fresh, light snow, animals make very clear and distinct footprints that identify them as accurately as a good photograph. Of course, that only applies to fresh prints that have not had time to melt and lose their detail. Today, three days after four inches of snow fell, I went out to see what kinds of tracks I could find in the woods in my back yard. It is a warm day, and it's been warm for several days since the snow fell so it has mostly melted away. There is still about an inch or two of snow in most places in the woods, but is it slushy and wet.

Nevertheless, even with fine details metled away into oblivion, there is enough evidence to give us some idea of the animals that have passed by.

Hoof Prints in the Snow

Tracks of a white-tailed deer walking
calmly through my backyard.
Photo by Brad Sylvester, copyright 2011.
Do not copy.
Some animals tracks are very distinctive and are very difficult if not impossible to mistake even when most of the detail is gone. One such set of prints are those of the white-tailed deer (Odocileus virginianus). It is one of just two common hooved animals in the forests of New Hampshire. The other is the moose which has much larger feet. This, of course, excludes hoofprints found on the roof of a house after December 25th, which could only be magical reindeer.

Moose Prints or Deer Prints?

So when we see footprints that look like those in the photo at the beginning of this entry, with two distinct halves in each print, a twin-teardrop or arrowhead shape, and a lack of individual toes, we can be pretty certain that they are deer or moose prints. Deer footprints tend to max out at about 3" in length, while moose prints typically run 4.5-5.5" in length. The one thing of which we need to be careful, however, is that footprints in melting snow tend to get bigger over time. If the snow melts a bit, refreezes and melts a bit more, the apparent size of the prints can be quite different than they were when fresh.

How Many Deer Live in my Backyard?

In walking through my back yard, I ran across about half a dozen separate sets of deer footprints. I don't count single paths with multiple sets, because it may be the same animal walking back and forth over the same familiar path. Indeed there's no real way to know if the same animal made more than one set of prints in different areas. If the prints were fresh and distinct, I could measure them and those of different sizes could be attributed to different individuals. Because these are old, and the snow is melting, no reliable measurement can be made.

By finding places where there are multiple sets of deer prints, I can find a good location to set up my trailcam to try to get some pictures of the white-tailed deer that live in my yard.

Do These White-tailed Deer Really Live in my Backyard?

My yard is only about 5.25 acres, of which about 1 acre is cleared and the rest forested. This not even close to enough room for a deer to live all the time. a white-tailed deer will range over an area of about one square mile even if food is plentiful. If food is scarce, then it may cover much more area. So while these deer don't reside in my yard 24 hours a day. My yard is certainly within their normal territory so we can say, yes, these white-tailed deer do live in my yard at least part-time.

In other parts of the country there are other species of deer so the identification from footprints would be much less certain, but in New Hampshire, excluding escaped farm livestock, there only moose and white-tailed deer that might leave hoof prints.

Finding a Fawn All Alone

If you should find a tiny fawn lying alone in the grass, rest assured that it has not been abandoned. When danger is near, the mother will hide the babies in the grass where they will lie flat and still until the mother's return. If the mother has more than one fawn, she will have each one hide in different places.

Quick Facts about White-tailed Deer?

When do they live here? White-tailed deer live in the forests of New Hampshire all year round.

Where do they go in winter? White-tailed deer do not hibernate and are active all winter long. They may take shelter under the branches of evergreen trees or in thich brush to escape the elements durign a particularly harsh winter storm.

Diet: White-tailed deer are herbivores (vegetarians). They will graze on grass in open fields and the eat tender shoots of young ground plants and  during the summer. In the fall, they may eat nuts and fallen fruit. During the winter, when there is a deep snow cover, they  will eat the buds and ends of small softer twigs from trees (which can be a problem for home-owners with ornamenal landscape shrubs like lilacs). Deer, like cows, are ruminants which means they have a stomach with multiple chambers (four) and regurgitate their food after it is partially digested to chew it a second time. This is called chewing their cud.

How big do white-tailed deer get? A big male can reach as much as 300 pounds in weight. The largest deer taken by hunters in New Hampshire in 2010 weighed 289.5 pounds according to NH Fish & Game Department records.

How fast can white-tailed deer run? Over short distances, white-tailed deer can run about 30 miles per hour. This is roughly equal to an average full-sized dog in good physical condition, but dogs can likely keep up the pace longer than the deer chasing it until it is too exhausted to escape or put up much of a defense.

What are the main predators of white-tailed deer? Humans are the main predators of white-tailed deer. In New Hampshire in 2010, hunters killed 9759 deer. Domestic dogs are the second largest killer of wild deer in New Hampshire.

Lifecycle of White-tailed Deer: Deer mate during a rutting season in the fall and early winter. Fawns are born about 7 months later. Typically, the female will give birth to one or two fawns each season. The babies may remain with the mother for one to two years before going off on their own. They reach adulthood after about 16-18 months are are ready to have babies of their own by the fall of their second year.

Lifespan: White-tailed deer usually live about 2-3 years. Maximum lifespan would be 20 years, but, says the University of Michigan's Animal Diversity Web, "few live past 10 years old." That's largely due to hunting fatalities.

Range: With the exception of the desert Southwest, white-tailed deer can be found throughout the 48 states and through southern Canada.

Interesting Notes: With adult males weighing 200-300 pounds, the white-tailed deer is the largest animal living in my yard that we've identified to date (although there are two larger animals that may also live here, we haven't identified them since I started this blog).

When a deer is walking at normal speed, the hoofprints will tend to be shaped like an arrowhead with the points at the front coming together. When it is running, however, the points tend to splay outward so that the front tips are angled away from each other.

Male white-tailed deer grow new antlers each year and then shed them typically between January and March after mating season has ended. The antlers are used to defend territory from other males during the mating or rutting season which makes the antlers at the largest size of the year during hunting season November-December. Females do not grow antlers at all.

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