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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Taxonomy  



1.1  Subspecies  







2 Description  





3 Seasonal behaviors  





4 Diet and foraging behaviors  





5 Nutrition  





6 Migration  



6.1  Risks  





6.2  Management  



6.2.1  Protecting migration corridors  





6.2.2  Highways  





6.2.3  Natural resource extraction  





6.2.4  Urban development  









7 Disease  





8 References  





9 Further reading  





10 External links  














Mule deer






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Mule deer

Male (buck) near Elk Creek, Oregon

Female (doe) near Swall Meadows, California

Conservation status


Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]

Scientific classification Edit this classification

Domain:

Eukaryota

Kingdom:

Animalia

Phylum:

Chordata

Class:

Mammalia

Order:

Artiodactyla

Family:

Cervidae

Subfamily:

Capreolinae

Genus:

Odocoileus

Species:

O. hemionus

Binomial name

Odocoileus hemionus

Rafinesque, 1817[2]

Subspecies

10, but some disputed (see text)

Distribution map of subspecies:
  Sitka black-tailed deer (O. h. sitkensis)
  Columbian black-tailed deer (O. h. columbianus)
  California mule deer (O. h. californicus)
  southern mule deer (O. h. fuliginatus)
  peninsular mule deer (O. h. peninsulae)
  desert mule deer (O. h. eremicus)
  Rocky Mountain mule deer (O. h. hemionus)

Synonyms[3][4]

  • Cervus hemionus Rafinesque, 1817
  • Cervus auritus Warden, 1820
  • Cervus macrotis Say, 1823
  • Cervus lewisii Peale, 1848
  • Cariacus punctulatus Gray, 1852
  • Cervus richardsoni Audubon & Bahman, 1848
  • Eucervus pusilla Gray, 1873
  • Dorcelaphus crooki Mearns, 1897
  • Cariacus virgultus Hallock, 1899
  • The mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) is a deer indigenous to western North America; it is named for its ears, which are large like those of the mule. Two subspecies of mule deer are grouped into the black-tailed deer.[1][5][6][7][8][9]

    Unlike the related white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), which is found throughout most of North America east of the Rocky Mountains and in the valleys of the Rocky Mountains from Idaho and Wyoming northward, mule deer are only found on the western Great Plains, in the Rocky Mountains, in the southwest United States, and on the west coast of North America. Mule deer have also been introduced to Argentina and Kauai, Hawaii.[5]

    Taxonomy

    [edit]

    Mule deer can be divided into two main groups: the mule deer (sensu stricto) and the black-tailed deer. The first group includes all subspecies, except O. h. columbianus and O. h. sitkensis, which are in the black-tailed deer group.[5] The two main groups have been treated as separate species, but they hybridize, and virtually all recent authorities treat the mule deer and black-tailed deer as conspecific.[1][5][6][7][9][10] Mule deer apparently evolved from the black-tailed deer.[9] Despite this, the mtDNA of the white-tailed deer and mule deer is similar, but differs from that of the black-tailed deer.[9] This may be the result of introgression, although hybrids between the mule deer and white-tailed deer are rare in the wild (apparently more common locally in West Texas), and the hybrid survival rate is low even in captivity.[8][9] Many claims of observations of wild hybrids are not legitimate, as identification based on external features is complicated.[8]

    Subspecies

    [edit]

    Some authorities have recognized O. h. crooki as a senior synonymofO. h. eremicus, but the type specimen of the former is a hybrid between the mule deer and white-tailed deer, so the name O. h. crooki is invalid.[5][11] Additionally, the validity of O. h. inyoensis has been questioned, and the two insular O. h. cerrosensis and O. h. sheldoni may be synonymsofO. h. eremicusorO. h. peninsulae.[10]

    The 10 valid subspecies, based on the third edition of Mammal Species of the World, are:[5]

    Description

    [edit]
    Small herd of mule deer in the Sulphur Springs Valley of southern Arizona
    Stotting mule deer
    A young mule deer trots to the right of the frame. Taken near Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, United States of America.
    Female desert/burro mule deer (O. h. eremicus) in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico

    The most noticeable differences between white-tailed and mule deer are ear size, tail color, and antler configuration. In many cases, body size is also a key difference. The mule deer's tail is black-tipped, whereas the white-tailed deer's is not. Mule deer antlers are bifurcated; they "fork" as they grow, rather than branching from a single main beam, as is the case with white-tails.

    Each spring, a buck's antlers start to regrow almost immediately after the old antlers are shed. Shedding typically takes place in mid-February, with variations occurring by locale.

    Although capable of running, mule deer are often seen stotting (also called pronking), with all four feet coming down together.

    The mule deer is the larger of the three Odocoileus species on average, with a height of 80–106 cm (31–42 in) at the shoulders and a nose-to-tail length ranging from 1.2 to 2.1 m (3.9 to 6.9 ft). Of this, the tail may comprise 11.6 to 23 cm (4.6 to 9.1 in). Adult bucks normally weigh 55–150 kg (121–331 lb), averaging around 92 kg (203 lb), although trophy specimens may weigh up to 210 kg (460 lb). Does (female deer) are smaller and typically weigh from 43 to 90 kg (95 to 198 lb), with an average of around 68 kg (150 lb).[24][25][26][27]

    Unlike the white-tailed, the mule deer does not generally show marked size variation across its range, although environmental conditions can cause considerable weight fluctuations in any given population. An exception to this is the Sitka deer subspecies (O. h. sitkensis). This race is markedly smaller than other mule deer, with an average weight of 54.5 kg (120 lb) and 36 kg (79 lb) in males and females, respectively.[28]

    Seasonal behaviors

    [edit]

    In addition to movements related to available shelter and food, the breeding cycle is important in understanding deer behavior. The rut or mating season usually begins in the fall as does go into estrus for a period of a few days, and males become more aggressive, competing for mates. Does may mate with more than one buck and go back into estrus within a month if they did not become pregnant. The gestation period is about 190–200 days, with fawns born in the spring.[29] The survival rate of the fawns during labor is about 50%.[30] Fawns stay with their mothers during the summer and are weaned in the fall after about 60–75 days. Mule deer females usually give birth to two fawns, although if it is their first time having a fawn, they often have just one.[29]

    A buck's antlers fall off during the winter, then grow again in preparation for the next season's rut. The annual cycle of antler growth is regulated by changes in the length of the day.[29][31]

    The size of mule deer groups follows a marked seasonal pattern. Groups are smallest during fawning season (June and July in Saskatchewan and Alberta) and largest in early gestation (winter; February and March in Saskatchewan and Alberta).[31]

    Besides humans, the three leading predators of mule deer are coyotes, wolves, and cougars. Bobcats, Canada lynx, wolverines, American black bears, and grizzly bears may prey upon adult deer but most often attack only fawns or infirm specimens, or they may eat a deer after it has died naturally. Bears and small carnivores are typically opportunistic feeders and pose little threat to a strong, healthy mule deer.[25]

    Diet and foraging behaviors

    [edit]

    In 99 studies of mule deer diets, some 788 species of plants were eaten by mule deer, and their diets vary greatly depending on the season, geographic region, year, and elevation.[32] The studies[33] gave these data for Rocky Mountain mule deer diets:[34]

    Shrubs and trees

    Forbs

    Grasses and grass-like plants

    Winter

    74%

    15%

    11% (varies 0–53%)

    Spring

    49%

    25%

    26% (varies 4–64%)

    Summer

    49%

    46% (varies 3–77%)

    3% (varies 0–22%)

    Fall

    60%

    30% (varies 2–78%)

    9% (varies 0–24%)

    The diets of mule deer are very similar to those of white-tailed deer in areas where they coexist.[35][32] Mule deer are intermediate feeders rather than pure browsersorgrazers; they predominantly browse but also eat forb vegetation, small amounts of grass and, where available, tree or shrub fruits such as beans, pods, nuts (including acorns), and berries.[32][34]

    Mule deer readily adapt to agricultural products and landscape plantings.[36][37] In the Sierra Nevada range, mule deer depend on the lichen Bryoria fremontii as a winter food source.[38]

    The most common plant species consumed by mule deer are the following:

    Mule deer have also been known to eat ricegrass, gramagrass, and needlegrass, as well as bearberry, bitter cherry, black oak, California buckeye, ceanothus, cedar, cliffrose, cottonwood, creek dogwood, creeping barberry, dogwood, Douglas fir, elderberry, Fendlera species, goldeneye, holly-leaf buckthorn, jack pine, knotweed, Kohleria species, manzanita, mesquite, pine, rabbitbrush, ragweed, redberry, scrub oak, serviceberry (including Pacific serviceberry), Sierra juniper, silktassel, snowberry, stonecrop, sunflower, tesota, thimbleberry, turbinella oak, velvet elder, western chokecherry, wild cherry, and wild oats.[39] Where available, mule deer also eat a variety of wild mushrooms, which are most abundant in late summer and fall in the southern Rocky Mountains; mushrooms provide moisture, protein, phosphorus, and potassium.[32][39]

    Humans sometimes engage in supplemental feeding efforts in severe winters in an attempt to help mule deer avoid starvation. Wildlife agencies discourage such efforts, which cause harm to mule deer populations by spreading disease (such as tuberculosis and chronic wasting disease) when deer congregate for feed, disrupting migratory patterns, causing overpopulation of local mule deer populations, and causing habitat destruction from overbrowsing of shrubs and forbs. Supplemental feeding efforts might be appropriate when carefully conducted under limited circumstances, but to be successful, the feeding must begin early in the severe winter (before poor range conditions and severe weather cause malnourishment or starvation) and must be continued until range conditions can support the herd.[40]

    Mule deer are variably gregarious, with a large proportion of solitary individuals (35 to 64%) and small groups (groups with ≤5 deer, 50 to 78%).[41][42] Reported mean group size measurements are three to five and typical group size (i.e., crowding) is about seven.[31][43]

    Nutrition

    [edit]

    Mule deer are ruminants, meaning they employ a nutrient acquisition strategy of fermenting plant material before digesting it. Deer consuming high-fiber, low-starch diets require less food than those consuming high-starch, low-fiber diets. Rumination time also increases when deer consume high-fiber, low-starch diets, which allows for increased nutrient acquisition due to greater length of fermentation.[44] Because some of the subspecies of mule deer are migratory, they encounter variable habitats and forage quality throughout the year.[45] Forages consumed in the summer are higher in digestible components (i.e. proteins, starches, sugars, and hemicellulose) than those consumed in the winter. The average gross energy content of the consumed forage material is 4.5 kcal/g.[46]

    Due to fluctuations in forage quality and availability, mule deer fat storage varies throughout the year, with the most fat stored in October, which is depleted throughout the winter to the lowest levels of fat storage in March. Changes in hormone levels are indications of physiological adjustments to the changes in the habitat. Total body fat is a measure of the individual's energy reserves, while thyroid hormone concentrations are a metric to determine the deer's ability to use the fat reserves. Triiodothyronine (T3) hormone is directly involved with basal metabolic rate and thermoregulation.[47]

    Migration

    [edit]
    The Grand Canyon, Mule Deer diorama at the Milwaukee Public Museum

    Mule deer migrate from low elevation winter ranges to high elevation summer ranges.[48] Although not all individuals in populations migrate, some will travel long distances between summer and winter ranges.[49] Researchers discovered the longest mule deer migration in Wyoming spanning 150 miles from winter to summer range[48] Multiple US states track mule deer migrations.[50][51][52][53]

    Mule deer migrate in fall to avoid harsh winter conditions like deep snow that covers up food resources, and in spring follow the emergence of new growth northwards.[54][55] There is evidence to suggest that mule deer migrate based on cognitive memory, meaning they use the same path year after year even if the availability of resources has changed. This contradicts the idea that animals will go to the areas with the best available resources, which makes migratory paths crucial for survival.[55]

    Risks

    [edit]

    There are many risks that mule deer face during migration including climate change and human disturbance. Climate change impacts on seasonal growth patterns constitute a risk for migrating mule deer by invalidating historic or learned migration paths.[56][57]

    Human activities such as natural resource extraction, highways, fencing, and urban development all have an impact on mule deer populations and migrations through habitat degradation and fragmentation.[58][59][60][61] Natural gas extraction has been found to have varying negative effects on mule deer behavior and can even cause them to avoid areas they use to migrate.[58] Highways not only cause injury and death to mule deer, but they can also serve as a barrier to migration.[62] As traffic volumes increase, the more mule deer tend to avoid those areas and abandon their typical migration routes. It has also been found that fencing can alter deer behavior, acting as a barrier, and potentially changing mule deer migration patterns.[63] In addition, urban development has replaced mule deer habitat with subdivisions, and human activity has increased. As a result of this, researchers have seen a decline in mule deer populations. This is especially prominent in Colorado where the human population has grown by over 2.2 million since 1980.[61]

    Management

    [edit]

    Protecting migration corridors

    [edit]

    Protecting migration corridors is essential to maintain healthy mule deer populations. One thing everyone can do is help slow the increase in climate change by using greener energy sources and reducing the amount of waste in our households.[64] In addition, managers and researchers can assess the risks listed above and take the proper steps to mitigate any adverse impacts those risk have on mule deer populations. Not only will populations benefit from these efforts but so will many other wildlife species.[65]

    Highways

    [edit]

    One way to help protect deer from getting hit on roadways is to install high fence wildlife fencing with escape routes.[66] This helps keep deer off the road, preventing vehicle collisions and allowing animals that are trapped between the road and the fence a way to escape to safety.[66] However, to maintain migration routes that cross busy highways, managers have also implemented natural, vegetated, overpasses and underpasses to allow animals, like mule deer, to migrate and move safely across highways.[67]

    Natural resource extraction

    [edit]

    Approaches to mitigating the impact of drilling and mining operations include regulating the time of year when active drilling and heavy traffic to sites are taking place, and using well-informed planning to protect critical deer habitat and using barriers to mitigate the activity, noise, light at the extraction sites.[68]

    Urban development

    [edit]

    The increase in urbanization has impacted mule deer migrations and there is evidence to show it also disrupts gene flow among mule deer populations.[69] One clear option is to not build houses in critical mule deer habitat; however, build near mule deer habitat has resulted in some deer becoming accustomed to humans and the resources, such as food and water.[70] Rather than migrate through urban areas some deer tend to stay close to those urban developments, potentially for resources and to avoid the obstacles in urban areas.[71] Suggested measures by property owners to protect mule deer genetic diversity and migration paths include planting deer-resistant plants, placing scare devices such as noise-makers, and desisting from feeding deer.[70]

    Disease

    [edit]

    Wildlife officials in Utah announced that a November–December 2021 field study had detected the first case of SARS-CoV-2 in mule deer. Several deer possessed apparent SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, however a female deer in Morgan County had an active Delta variant infection.[72] White-tailed deer, which are able to hybridize with mule deer and which have shown high rates of SARS-CoV-2 infection, have migrated into Morgan County and other traditional mule deer habitats since at least the early 2000s.[73][74]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ a b c Sanchez-Rojas, G.; Gallina-Tessaro, S. (2016). "Odocoileus hemionus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T42393A22162113. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-1.RLTS.T42393A22162113.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
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  • ^ a b "New study: Migrating mule deer don't need directions". EurekAlert!. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
  • ^ "Impacts of climate change on migrating mule deer". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  • ^ Aikens, Ellen O.; Monteith, Kevin L.; Merkle, Jerod A.; Dwinnell, Samantha P. H.; Fralick, Gary L.; Kauffman, Matthew J. (August 2020). "Drought reshuffles plant phenology and reduces the foraging benefit of green-wave surfing for a migratory ungulate". Global Change Biology. 26 (8): 4215–4225. Bibcode:2020GCBio..26.4215A. doi:10.1111/gcb.15169. ISSN 1354-1013. PMID 32524724. S2CID 219586821.
  • ^ a b Sawyer, Hall; Kauffman, Matthew J.; Nielson, Ryan M. (September 2009). "Influence of Well Pad Activity on Winter Habitat Selection Patterns of Mule Deer". Journal of Wildlife Management. 73 (7): 1052–1061. Bibcode:2009JWMan..73.1052S. doi:10.2193/2008-478. ISSN 0022-541X. S2CID 26214504.
  • ^ Coe, Priscilla K.; Nielson, Ryan M.; Jackson, Dewaine H.; Cupples, Jacqueline B.; Seidel, Nigel E.; Johnson, Bruce K.; Gregory, Sara C.; Bjornstrom, Greg A.; Larkins, Autumn N.; Speten, David A. (June 2015). "Identifying migration corridors of mule deer threatened by highway development: Mule Deer Migration and Highways". Wildlife Society Bulletin. 39 (2): 256–267. doi:10.1002/wsb.544.
  • ^ "Abandoned Fencing Is Detrimental to Mule Deer and Other Wildlife". John In The Wild. 9 May 2019. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  • ^ a b "New Study Finds That Expanding Development Is Associated With Declining Deer Recruitment Across Western Colorado". newsroom.wcs.org. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  • ^ Sawyer, Hall; Kauffman, Matthew J.; Middleton, Arthur D.; Morrison, Thomas A.; Nielson, Ryan M.; Wyckoff, Teal B. (5 December 2012). "A framework for understanding semi-permeable barrier effects on migratory ungulates". Journal of Applied Ecology. 50 (1): 68–78. doi:10.1111/1365-2664.12013. ISSN 0021-8901.
  • ^ "New study reveals how fences hinder migratory wildlife in Western US". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  • ^ July 17; Denchak, 2017 Melissa. "How You Can Stop Global Warming". NRDC. Retrieved 6 April 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • ^ "Protecting big-game migration corridors". NFWF. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  • ^ a b Siemers, Jeremy L.; Wilson, Kenneth R.; Baruch-Mordo, Sharon (May 2015). "MONITORING WILDLIFE-VEHICLE COLLISIONS: ANALYSIS AND COST- BENEFIT OF ESCAPE RAMPS FOR DEER AND ELK ON U.S. HIGHWAY 550". Colorado Department of Transportation: Applied Research and Innovation Branch.
  • ^ staff, the Star-Tribune (8 October 2013). "Wyoming wildlife crossings labeled success". Casper Star-Tribune Online. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  • ^ "Study quantifies natural gas development impacts on mule deer". SOURCE. 12 August 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  • ^ Fraser, Devaughn L.; Ironside, Kirsten; Wayne, Robert K.; Boydston, Erin E. (May 2019). "Connectivity of mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) populations in a highly fragmented urban landscape". Landscape Ecology. 34 (5): 1097–1115. Bibcode:2019LaEco..34.1097F. doi:10.1007/s10980-019-00824-9. ISSN 0921-2973. S2CID 145022000.
  • ^ a b "URBAN MULE DEER ISSUES Fact Sheet #9" (PDF). Mule Deer Working Group Fact Sheet. July 2014.
  • ^ "UNDERSTANDING MULE DEER MIGRATION Fact Sheet #12" (PDF). Mule Deer Working Group. July 2014.
  • ^ Harkins, Paighten (29 March 2022). "Utah mule deer is 1st in U.S. to test positive for COVID-19". The Salt Lake Tribune. Archived from the original on 29 March 2022. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
  • ^ Prettyman, Brett (19 October 2008). "Hunting: Whitetail deer influx brings mixed reaction". The Salt Lake Tribune. Archived from the original on 29 March 2022.
  • ^ Jacobs, Andrew (2 November 2021). "Widespread Coronavirus Infection Found in Iowa Deer, New Study Says". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2 November 2021. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  • Further reading

    [edit]
    [edit]
    Extant Artiodactyla species

  • Phylum: Chordata
  • Class: Mammalia
  • Infraclass: Eutheria
  • Superorder: Laurasiatheria
  • Suborder Ruminantia

    Giraffidae

    Okapia

    Giraffa

  • Southern giraffe (G. giraffa)
  • Reticulated giraffe (G. reticulata)
  • Masai giraffe (G. tippelskirchi)
  • Moschidae

    Moschus

  • Dwarf musk deer (M. berezovskii)
  • Alpine musk deer (M. chrysogaster)
  • Kashmir musk deer (M. cupreus)
  • Black musk deer (M. fuscus)
  • Himalayan musk deer (M. leucogaster)
  • Siberian musk deer (M. moschiferus)
  • Tragulidae

    Hyemoschus

    Moschiola

  • Yellow-striped chevrotain (M. kathygre)
  • Sri Lankan spotted chevrotain (M. meminna)
  • Tragulus

  • Lesser mouse-deer (T. kanchil)
  • Greater mouse-deer (T. napu)
  • Philippine mouse-deer (T. nigricans)
  • Vietnam mouse-deer (T. versicolor)
  • Williamson's mouse-deer (T. williamsoni)
  • Cervidae

    Large family listed below

    Bovidae

    Large family listed below

    Family Cervidae

  • Gongshan muntjac (M. gongshanensis)
  • Sumatran muntjac (M. montanus)
  • Southern red muntjac (M. muntjak)
  • Pu Hoat muntjac (M. puhoatensis)
  • Leaf muntjac (M. putaoensis)
  • Reeves's muntjac (M. reevesi)
  • Roosevelt's muntjac (M. rooseveltorum)
  • Truong Son muntjac (M. truongsonensis)
  • Northern red muntjac (M. vaginalis)
  • Giant muntjac (M. vuquangensis)
  • Elaphodus

    Dama

  • Persian fallow deer (D. mesopotamica)
  • Axis

  • Calamian deer (A. calamianensis)
  • Bawean deer (A. kuhlii)
  • Hog deer (A. porcinus)
  • Rucervus

  • Eld's deer (R. eldii)
  • Elaphurus

    Rusa

  • Philippine sambar (R. mariannus)
  • Rusa deer (R. timorensis)
  • Sambar (R. unicolor)
  • Cervus

  • Red deer (C. elaphus)
  • Elk (C. canadensis)
  • Central Asian red deer (C. hanglu)
  • Sika deer (C. nippon)
  • Capreolinae

    Alces

    Hydropotes

    Capreolus

  • Siberian roe deer (C. pygargus)
  • Rangifer

    Hippocamelus

  • South Andean deer (H. bisulcus)
  • Mazama

  • Small red brocket (M. bororo)
  • Merida brocket (M. bricenii)
  • Dwarf brocket (M. chunyi)
  • Gray brocket (M. gouazoubira)
  • Pygmy brocket (M. nana)
  • Amazonian brown brocket (M. nemorivaga)
  • Little red brocket (M. rufina)
  • Central American red brocket (M. temama)
  • Ozotoceros

    Blastocerus

    Pudu

  • Southern pudu (P. pudu)
  • Pudella?

  • Northern pudu (P. mephistophiles)
  • Odocoileus

  • Yucatan brown brocket (O. pandora)
  • White-tailed deer (O. virginianus)
  • Family Bovidae

    Oryx

  • Scimitar oryx (O. dammah)
  • Gemsbok (O. gazella)
  • Arabian oryx (O. leucoryx)
  • Addax

    Reduncinae

    Kobus

  • Kob (K. kob)
  • Lechwe (K. leche)
  • Nile lechwe (K. megaceros)
  • Puku (K. vardonii)
  • Redunca

  • Mountain reedbuck (R. fulvorufula)
  • Bohor reedbuck (R. redunca)
  • Aepycerotinae

    Aepyceros

    Peleinae

    Pelea

    Alcelaphinae

    Beatragus

    Damaliscus

  • Bontebok (D. pygargus)
  • Alcelaphus

    Connochaetes

  • Blue wildebeest (C. taurinus)
  • Pantholopinae

    Pantholops

    Caprinae

    Large subfamily listed below

    Bovinae

    Large subfamily listed below

    Antilopinae

    Large subfamily listed below

    Family Bovidae (subfamily Caprinae)

    Arabitragus

    Budorcas

    Capra

  • West Caucasian tur (C. caucasia)
  • East Caucasian tur (C. cylindricornis)
  • Markhor (C. falconeri)
  • Domestic goat (C. hircus)
  • Alpine ibex (C. ibex)
  • Nubian ibex (C. nubiana)
  • Iberian ibex (C. pyrenaica)
  • Siberian ibex (C. sibirica)
  • Walia ibex (C. walie)
  • Capricornis

  • Red serow (C. rubidus)
  • Mainland serow (C. sumatraensis)
  • Taiwan serow (C. swinhoei)
  • Hemitragus

    Naemorhedus

  • Long-tailed goral (N. caudatus)
  • Himalayan goral (N. goral)
  • Chinese goral (N. griseus)
  • Oreamnos

    Ovibos

    Nilgiritragus

    Ovis

  • Domestic sheep (O. aries)
  • Bighorn sheep (O. canadensis)
  • Dall sheep (O. dalli)
  • Mouflon (O. gmelini)
  • Snow sheep (O. nivicola)
  • Urial (O. vignei)
  • Pseudois

    Rupicapra

  • Chamois (R. rupicapra)
  • Family Bovidae (subfamily Bovinae)

    Boselaphus

    Bovini

    Bubalus

  • Domestic water buffalo (B. bubalis)
  • Lowland anoa (B. depressicornis)
  • Tamaraw (B. mindorensis)
  • Mountain anoa (B. quarlesi)
  • Bos

  • European bison (B. bonasus)
  • Bali cattle (B. domesticus)
  • Gayal (B. frontalis)
  • Gaur (B. gaurus)
  • Domestic yak (B. grunniens)
  • Zebu (B. indicus)
  • Banteng (B. javanicus)
  • Wild yak (B. mutus)
  • Cattle (B. taurus)
  • Pseudoryx

    Syncerus

    Tragelaphini

    Tragelaphus
    (including kudus)

  • Mountain nyala (T. buxtoni)
  • Bongo (T. eurycerus)
  • Lesser kudu (T. imberbis)
  • Harnessed bushbuck (T. scriptus)
  • Sitatunga (T. spekeii)
  • Greater kudu (T. strepsiceros)
  • Cape bushbuck (T. sylvaticus)
  • Taurotragus

  • Common eland (T. oryx)
  • Family Bovidae (subfamily Antilopinae)

    Antidorcas

    Antilope

    Eudorcas

  • Red-fronted gazelle (E. rufifrons)
  • Thomson's gazelle (E. thomsonii)
  • Heuglin's gazelle (E. tilonura)
  • Gazella

  • Cuvier's gazelle (G. cuvieri)
  • Dorcas gazelle (G. dorcas)
  • Erlanger's gazelle (G. erlangeri)
  • Mountain gazelle (G. gazella)
  • Rhim gazelle (G. leptoceros)
  • Speke's gazelle (G. spekei)
  • Goitered gazelle (G. subgutturosa)
  • Litocranius

    Nanger

  • Grant's gazelle (N. granti)
  • Bright's gazelle (N. notatus)
  • Peter's gazelle (N. petersii)
  • Soemmerring's gazelle (N. soemmerringii)
  • Procapra

  • Goa (P. picticaudata)
  • Przewalski's gazelle (P. przewalskii)
  • Saigini

    Pantholops

    Saiga

    Neotragini

    Dorcatragus

    Madoqua

  • Kirk's dik-dik (M. kirkii)
  • Silver dik-dik (M. piacentinii)
  • Salt's dik-dik (M. saltiana)
  • Neotragus

  • Suni (N. moschatus)
  • Royal antelope (N. pygmaeus)
  • Oreotragus

    Ourebia

    Raphicerus

  • Cape grysbok (R. melanotis)
  • Sharpe's grysbok (R. sharpei)
  • Cephalophini

    Cephalophus

  • Brooke's duiker (C. brookei)
  • Peters' duiker (C. callipygus)
  • White-legged duiker (C. crusalbum)
  • Bay duiker (C. dorsalis)
  • Harvey's duiker (C. harveyi)
  • Jentink's duiker (C. jentinki)
  • White-bellied duiker (C. leucogaster)
  • Red forest duiker (C. natalensis)
  • Black duiker (C. niger)
  • Black-fronted duiker (C. nigrifrons)
  • Ogilby's duiker (C. ogilbyi)
  • Ruwenzori duiker (C. rubidis)
  • Red-flanked duiker (C. rufilatus)
  • Yellow-backed duiker (C. silvicultor)
  • Abbott's duiker (C. spadix)
  • Weyns's duiker (C. weynsi)
  • Zebra duiker (C. zebra)
  • Philantomba

  • Maxwell's duiker (P. maxwellii)
  • Walter's duiker (P. walteri)
  • Sylvicapra

    Suborder Suina

    Hylochoerus

    Phacochoerus

  • Common warthog (P. africanus)
  • Porcula

    Potamochoerus

  • Red river hog (P. porcus)
  • Sus

  • Bornean bearded pig (S. barbatus)
  • Visayan warty pig (S. cebifrons)
  • Celebes warty pig (S. celebensis)
  • Domestic pig (S. domesticus)
  • Flores warty pig (S. heureni)
  • Oliver's warty pig (S. oliveri)
  • Philippine warty pig (S. philippensis)
  • Wild boar (S. scrofa)
  • Timor warty pig (S. timoriensis)
  • Javan warty pig (S. verrucosus)
  • Tayassuidae

    Tayassu

    Catagonus

    Dicotyles

    Suborder Tylopoda

  • Vicuña (L. vicugna)
  • Camelus

  • Dromedary/Arabian camel (C. dromedarius)
  • Wild Bactrian camel (C. ferus)
  • Suborder Whippomorpha

    Choeropsis

    Cetacea

    Game animals and shooting in North America

    Game birds

  • Chukar
  • Hungarian partridge
  • Prairie chicken
  • Mourning dove
  • Ring-necked pheasant
  • Ptarmigan
  • Ruffed grouse
  • Sharp-tailed grouse
  • Snipe (common snipe)
  • Spruce grouse
  • Turkey
  • Woodcock
  • Waterfowl hunters
    Waterfowl hunters

    Waterfowl

  • Canada goose
  • Canvasback
  • Gadwall
  • Greater scaup
  • Lesser scaup
  • Mallard
  • Northern pintail
  • Redhead
  • Ross's goose
  • Snow goose
  • Wood duck
  • Big game

  • Black bear
  • Razorback
  • Brown bear
  • Bison (buffalo)
  • Caribou
  • Cougar (mountain lion)
  • Elk
  • Moose
  • White-tailed deer
  • Wolf
  • Mountain goat
  • Mule deer
  • Pronghorn
  • Muskox
  • Dall sheep
  • Polar bear
  • Whales
  • Other quarry

  • Badger
  • Bobcat
  • Coyote
  • Fox squirrel
  • Gray fox
  • Gray squirrel
  • Opossum
  • Rabbit
  • Raccoon
  • Red fox
  • Snowshoe hare
  • See also

  • Big-game hunting
  • Bison hunting
  • Deer hunting
  • Fox hunting
  • Waterfowl hunting
  • Whaling
  • Fishing
  • Wolf hunting
  • Upland hunting
  • Odocoileus hemionus

  • Wikispecies: Odocoileus hemionus
  • ADW: Odocoileus_hemionus
  • BOLD: 12373
  • CoL: 48NBP
  • EoL: 328651
  • EPPO: ODOCHE
  • FEIS: odhe
  • GBIF: 2440974
  • iNaturalist: 42220
  • IRMNG: 10590508
  • ISC: 72771
  • ITIS: 180698
  • IUCN: 42393
  • MDD: 1006300
  • MSW: 14200267
  • NatureServe: 2.101365
  • NBN: NHMSYS0021109739
  • NCBI: 9872
  • Observation.org: 86070
  • Open Tree of Life: 410149
  • Paleobiology Database: 49284
  • TSA: 12238

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mule_deer&oldid=1233916486"

    Categories: 
    IUCN Red List least concern species
    Odocoileus
    Mammals of North America
    Mammals described in 1817
    Taxa named by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of March 2024
    CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Use dmy dates from July 2020
    Articles with 'species' microformats
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