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Wildlife-enforcement officers looking to outfox illegal hunters turn to this Wisconsin taxidermist, whose decoys shake their ...
After Wisconsin hunter Jim Jordan shot a 200-plus-inch buck in 1914, his taxidermist vanished — along with the massive ...
White-tailed deer are found in every county of the state, but are not limited to rural areas. One of the most striking things ...
White-tailed deer bucks shed their antlers in late winter and begin growing new antlers in early spring. During the growth ...
Southern Vermont’s Burke Mountain underwent a similar ownership transformation this year. Following a massive financial ...
There’s something magical about white-tailed deer. No matter where you go, whether it’s the sunny forests of Florida or the snow-covered woods of Canada, these animals always seem to find a way to ...
Given their abundance in American backyards, gardens and highway corridors these days, it may be surprising to learn that white-tailed deer were nearly extinct about a century ago.
The story of white-tailed deer underscores an important fact: Humans are not inherently damaging to the environment.
Precolonial rise of deer populations White-tailed deer have been hunted from the earliest migrations of people into North America, over 15,000 years ago.
White-tailed deer were nearly extinct in the early 20th century, but thanks to conservation efforts, they have rebounded to the current population of 30-35 million.