Premium Only Content
Baby deer & mom frolic in first snow of the season
Such a beautiful sight to wake up to. This mom and 2 small fawns stopped out on my back property to feed on the apples and berries.
Here in New Hampshire, the white-tailed deer population is approximately 100,000 individuals. The areas of greatest densities are in the southern counties (Rockingham, Hillsborough, and Cheshire) and along the Connecticut River Valley (Grafton County). In 2014, the NH Fish and Game Department began the process of revising its 10-year management plan for white-tailed deer, moose, turkey, black bear, snowshoe hare, and ruffed grouse.
This document, called the NH Game Management Plan, spans the period of 2016 to 2025. Population level goals for deer were adjusted to more closely reflect current biological conditions and limitation, as well as public interests and concerns. These goals aim to stabilize the deer population in many areas of the state while increasing or reducing it in others.
Habits and Habitats
White-tailed deer can live in a variety of habitats, including farmlands, brushy areas, woods, mountains, and suburbs and gardens. They feed on green plants, including aquatic species in the summer, acorns, beechnuts, and corn in the fall, and woody vegetation, including buds and twigs of birch, maple and conifers in the winter. White-tailed deer will typically consume 5 to 9 pounds of food each day and find water from snow, dew and waterbodies.
Individual deer group into two types of social combinations. These include the family group, with a doe and her young, and the buck group. The family group will stay together for approximately a year. Buck groups are structured with a dominance hierarchy of 3 to 5 individuals. Bucks will challenge each other with stares, lowered ears, kicking, sparring (physically pushing each other back), and less commonly, thrashing of forefeet.
During the winter, these two deer groups may come together, forming communities of up to 150 individuals in locations called “yards.” This unification keeps trails open and accessible for feeding and also provides protection from predators. However, there have been problems with humans providing supplementary feed sites for deer in the winter. These sites can cause unnaturally high densities of congregated deer that attract predators, increase the risk of disease transmission, increase aggression within the community, and lead to over-browsing of local vegetation and more deer-vehicle collisions. They cause deer to be more dependent on humans and artificial food sources that provide few benefits.
-
47:03
Barry Cunningham
5 hours agoPRESIDENT TRUMP MEETS WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF JAPAN!! AND MORE NEWS!
22.4K18 -
DVR
Flyover Conservatives
21 hours agoThe Dollar Devaluation Playbook: Gold, Bitcoin… and the “Genius Act” - Andy Schectman | FOC Show
11.5K3 -
LIVE
SpartakusLIVE
5 hours agoWZ Tonight || Battlefield 6 BATTLE ROYALE Tomorrow!
138 watching -
LIVE
megimu32
2 hours agoON THE SUBJECT: Halloween Nostalgia! LET’S GET SPOOKY! 👻
64 watching -
1:24:56
Glenn Greenwald
5 hours agoThe Unhinged Reactions to Zohran's Rise; Dems Struggle to Find a Personality; DHS, on Laura Loomer's Orders, Arrests UK Journalist and Israel Critic | SYSTEM UPDATE #538
105K58 -
LIVE
Spartan
4 hours agoBack from worlds. Need a short break from Halo, so single player games for now
55 watching -
LIVE
Eternal_Spartan
11 hours ago🟢 Eternal Spartan Plays FF7 Rebirth Episode 15 | USMC Veteran
49 watching -
1:32:11
Tundra Tactical
3 hours ago $1.31 earnedProfessional Gun Nerd Plays Battlefield 6
13.3K -
1:00:08
BonginoReport
6 hours agoDark Brandon Returns - Nightly Scroll w/ Hayley Caronia (Ep.164)
113K65 -
49:24
Donald Trump Jr.
7 hours agoPeter Navarro Went to Prison So You Won't Have to | TRIGGERED Ep,286
57.9K41