Monday, May 30, 2016
DEER
White-tailed deer, the smallest members of the North
American deer family, are found from southern Canada to
South America. In the heat of summer they typically
inhabit fields and meadows using clumps of broad-leaved
and coniferous forests for shade. During the winter they
generally keep to forests, preferring coniferous stands
that provide shelter from the harsh elements.
Female deer, called does, give birth to one to three young
at a time, usually in May or June and after a gestation
period of seven months. Young deer, called fawns, wear a
reddish-brown coat with white spots that helps them
blend in with the forest. White tailed deer live anywhere
Benjamin, 7.a
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