#black-tailed deer
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
identifying-deer-in-posts · 19 hours ago
Text
Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus)
Tumblr media
White Boy spotted in Washington
Tumblr media
Seeing white deer isn’t all that rare around here but this lil baby was just SO CUTE with his giant brown nose I had to draw em
1K notes · View notes
rebeccathenaturalist · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
It’s Tell a Friend Friday! Please enjoy this picture of a Columbian black-tailed buck (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) just outside my kitchen window.
Then tell someone you know about my work–you can reblog this post, or send it to someone you think may be interested in my natural history writing, classes, and tours, as well as my upcoming book, The Everyday Naturalist: How to Identify Animals, Plants, and Fungi Wherever You Go. Here’s where I can be found online:
Website - http://www.rebeccalexa.com
Rebecca Lexa, Naturalist Facebook Page – https://www.facebook.com/rebeccalexanaturalist
Tumblr Profile – http://rebeccathenaturalist.tumblr.com
BlueSky Profile - https://bsky.app/profile/rebeccanaturalist.bsky.social
Twitter Profile – http://www.twitter.com/rebecca_lexa
Instagram Profile – https://www.instagram.com/rebeccathenaturalist/
YouTube Profile - https://www.youtube.com/@RebeccaLexaNaturalist
LinkedIn Profile – http://www.linkedin.com/in/rebeccalexanaturalist
iNaturalist Profile – https://www.inaturalist.org/people/rebeccalexa
Finally, if you like what I’m doing here, you can give me a tip at http://ko-fi.com/rebeccathenaturalist
29 notes · View notes
sitting-on-me-bum · 1 year ago
Photo
Tumblr media
A black-tailed deer in rut keeps his eye on a nearby doe on a hillside near Elkton, rural Oregon
Photograph: Robin Loznak/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock
126 notes · View notes
inatungulates · 10 months ago
Note
Hello! I've noticed your posts of Columbian black-tailed deer are labelled Odocoileus columbianus columbianus, and sitka black-tailed deer are Odocoileus columbianus sitkensis. I've seen literature which considers both to be a subspecies of mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus)—naming them Odocoileus hemionus columbianus and Odocoileus hemionus sitkensis respectively—and so have wondered if you might share your reasoning for your taxonomic schema. Thank you, and thank you for the wonderful posts!
Hi! Glad you're enjoying the ungulates :)
Regarding the status of the black-tailed deer, the traditional position is that the two subspecies belong to the mule deer, O. hemionus, as each other's closest relatives. Following the genetic trees established by this paper (which, I believe, has also contributed to work like the resurrection of Pudella and description of Pudella carlae earlier this year), however, the two black-tailed deer are recovered as sister to one another, but not to O. hemionus.
The authors note that it is possible that this may be because of incomplete lineage sorting in the fairly-young North American Odocoileus radiation, or because of the absence of robust nuclear DNA data from the genus. While the authors refrain from elevating O. columbianus to species status pending further results, the taxonomy used on this blog is not tied to any one particular source, is not meant to be authoritative, and follows my own taxonomic inclinations. I tend to take a "splitter" position, and as black-tailed deer have long been recognized as distinctive relative to (other) mule deer, I tentatively favor recognition of a separate Pacific coastal species of dark-tailed Odocoileus. I have recently acquired some additional recent papers on mule deer taxonomy and genetic structure, and as I make my way through these -- and further research is done on the rather confused relationships of New World deer -- I will reevaluate my opinions should the scale tip harder toward the position that the black-tailed deer are within O. hemionus.
Paper linked above is:
Gutiérrez, EE, KM Helgen, MM McDonough, F Bauer, MTR Hawkins, LA Escobedo-Morales, BD Patterson, and JE Maldonado. 2017. A gene-tree test of the traditional taxonomy of American deer: the importance of voucher specimens, geographic data, and dense sampling. ZooKeys 697:87-131.
12 notes · View notes
shithowdy · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
followed a doe over a hillside and discovered another doe and three fawns. all of them were charmingly scruffy after the recent rain. two of the fawns had an intriguing light coat; uncertain if leucism or just a result of being wet.
60 notes · View notes
identifying-deer-in-posts · 1 month ago
Text
Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus)
Love him... love mr. cool...
134K notes · View notes
doingitfortheexposure · 7 months ago
Text
A velvet-antlered black-tailed deer stag.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Photos by Xer S. Rowan, Creative Commons Attribution license, linktr.ee/DoingItForTheExposure
I take photos for the love of photography and share them under a free-to-use-as-long-as-I-am-properly-credited license.
0 notes
rebeccathenaturalist · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
It’s Tell a Friend Friday!
Please enjoy this photo I took of the hoofprint of a Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus).
Then tell someone you know about my work–you can reblog this post, or send it to someone you think may be interested in my natural history writing, classes, and tours, as well as my upcoming book, The Everyday Naturalist: How to Identify Animals, Plants, and Fungi Wherever You Go. Here’s where I can be found online:
Website - http://www.rebeccalexa.com
Rebecca Lexa, Naturalist Facebook Page – https://www.facebook.com/rebeccalexanaturalist
Tumblr Profile – http://rebeccathenaturalist.tumblr.com
BlueSky Profile - https://bsky.app/profile/rebeccanaturalist.bsky.social
Twitter Profile – http://www.twitter.com/rebecca_lexa
Instagram Profile – https://www.instagram.com/rebeccathenaturalist/
LinkedIn Profile – http://www.linkedin.com/in/rebeccalexanaturalist
iNaturalist Profile – https://www.inaturalist.org/people/rebeccalexa
Finally, if you like what I’m doing here, you can give me a tip at http://ko-fi.com/rebeccathenaturalist
12 notes · View notes
orofeaiel · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Columbian Black-Tailed Deer | MRNP
1K notes · View notes
identifying-deer-in-posts · 15 days ago
Text
Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus)
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
a hard rain’s a‐gonna fall.
2K notes · View notes
ammg-old2 · 2 years ago
Link
Columbian black-tailed deer range from southern British Columbia to Southern California, and as far east as the Cascade Range and southern Sierra Nevada. They are native to this archipelago. They are also wildly out of balance. By the late 1800s, foreign settlers had exterminated the islands’ cougars and wolves, the deer’s primary predators, and alienated Indigenous people from their traditional deer hunting grounds. Over the past century, wildlife managers here and across the continent encouraged the proliferation of all deer species—popular game animals. More recently, changes in regulations and cultural attitudes have resulted in a dramatic drop in hunting. Deer have never had it so easy. Martin estimates that their population on the islands is now 10 times what it was before colonists arrived.
Here and there, oceanspray shoots up like topiary umbrellas. Indigenous people used these flowering shrubs, also known as ironwood, for making tools and utensils. Well past two meters tall, these specimens are old-timers, Martin explains, up to 100 years in age, that have been relentlessly clipped and shaped by deer who swim between islands. Few, if any, new oceanspray plants survive because deer eat them before they can establish. It’s the same for other bushes and flowering plants. Seedling and sapling trees often meet a similar fate. Native deer prefer to browse native fare, especially succulent flowering plants, giving unpalatable invasive plant species an edge. Gone too are the native, perennial, tussock-forming grasses that some birds favor for nesting. What the deer leave behind is an impoverished understory dotted with moss and thorny Himalayan blackberry. And the evidence of deer overbrowsing reaches well beyond the trees.
Martin leads me to a meadow near the beach where the sun illuminates a grassy field of vibrant green. While I take in the inviting scene, she conjures a vanished world of purples and pinks, the trill and hum of pollinating birds and bees—the way this meadow used to be. Martin grew up just 22 kilometers north of here, on Saltspring Island, in the 1970s. “There were places you could be knee-deep in wildflowers,” she recalls. Now, with the proliferation of deer, development, and other stressors, “those places are long gone.” They’ve been replaced by a carpet of invasives, including European orchard grass. It’s a process repeated throughout the archipelago, she says, and wherever overabundant deer are found.
1 note · View note
cornbelt · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
104 notes · View notes
inatungulates · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media
Columbian black-tailed deer Odocoileus columbianus columbianus
Observed by eckhartdpe, CC BY
96 notes · View notes
identifying-deer-in-posts · 30 days ago
Text
Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus)
Tumblr media Tumblr media
just watched this guy fumble two does in a row
10K notes · View notes
claypigeonpottery · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
a little fawn, just carved last night while I couldn’t sleep
210 notes · View notes
delightiq · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
I wish I wasn’t insane. I wish I could be understood.
23 notes · View notes