Old and New World deer

indeer
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Also known as: Cervidae

The family Cervidae divides into two fairly distinct groups, the Old World deer (subfamily Cervinae) and the New World deer (subfamily Capreolinae). This division reflects where the deer originally evolved; however, now it is not a geographical distinction but instead derives from their different foot structures. In the Old World deer the second and fifth hand bones (metapodia) have almost completely disappeared except for proximal, terminal remnants. In the New World deer the remnants are distal.

Old World deer

The Old World deer include the 11 species of tropical Asian muntjacs (genus Muntiacus), the most primitive deer; males bear tusks and antlers on tall antler pedicles. The next evolutionary step is represented by tropical and subtropical deer that have a basic three-pronged antler plan. They include giants such as the sambar of India (Cervus unicolor); three species of large swamp deer of India and Southeast Asia, namely the barasingha (C. duvaucelii), Eld’s deer (C. eldii), and the now-extinct Schomburgk’s deer (C. schomburgki); the gregarious chital (Axis axis) of India and Sri Lanka and Timor deer (C. timorensis) of Indonesia; the small hog deer (A. porcinus) of India; and a plethora of small island species, including the Bawean deer (A. kuhlii) of Indonesia and the Calamian deer (A. calamianensis), Visayan deer (C. alfredi), and Philippine brown deer (C. mariannus), all three of the Philippines. In these species one sees the same basic “deer design” diversified into a large number of ecological niches.

Old World deer with a basic four-pronged antler structure occupy temperate zones. These include the sika (C. nippon) of Japan and the fallow deer (Dama dama) of Asia Minor. The sika stands at the base of a great radiation of species that led to the red deer (C. elaphus) and elk (C. elaphus canadensis), the great cold-adapted deer of Eurasia and North America sporting five- and six-pronged antlers. The fallow deer is the last survivor of a radiation of giant Pleistocene deer, the most spectacular of which was the Irish elk (Megaloceros), which weighed 600 kg (1,300 pounds) and whose antlers spread up to 4 metres (14 feet) in width. The white-lipped deer (C. albirostris) of the Tibetan Plateau and Père David’s deer (Elaphurus davidianus) of the swamps along China’s major rivers complete the category of Old World deer.

New World deer

The New World deer came from a separate radiation that colonized North and South America and Eurasia. Among the grotesque giants that evolved in the Ice Age are the moose (Alces alces), the largest of all deer, standing 2 metres (7 feet) or more at the shoulder, and the reindeer, the most plains-adapted runner among deer with relatively large antlers. Also cold-adapted are the tiny Eurasian roe deer (Capreolus species) and the small, antlerless Chinese water deer of Korea and China. In the Americas the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) colonized both continents. Its closest relative, the mule deer (O. hemionus), occupies western North America. Dwarf brocket deer (genus Mazama) are found southward from Mexico into Argentina. Two species of the tiniest deer, the pudu (genus Pudu), standing only 30 cm (12 inches) at the shoulder, live far apart in the central Andes and southern Chile, as do two species of the larger, rock-climbing Andean deer (genus Hippocamelus). The small pampas deer (Ozotoceros bezoarticus) and the red deer-sized marsh deer (Blastocerus dichotomus), both of South America, are endangered.

Valerius Geist