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Red deer didn’t just inhabit the forests—they helped create them. By grazing on young saplings and shrubs, they prevented some plants from overtaking the forest, allowing a greater diversity ...
Sound travels differently through open fields than the woods. When deer eat up bushes, small trees and other forest plants, it affects the transmission of bird calls and other natural sounds.
Too many deer are bad for the forest. ScienceDaily. Retrieved June 2, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2017 / 01 / 170130224740.htm. American Ornithological Society Publications Office.
Ms. Fleegle has blogged about one of the study’s most captivating characters, Doe 12866, in a series titled “The Real Does of the Deer-Forest Study.” Like Buck 8917, this doe was remarkable ...
COLOMA, MI --No more train rides through the trees, nor feeding fish in a fountain and deer in a forest. No more patting baby animals or posing for funny photographs to remember a family vacation ...
This has severely impacted mule deer habitat, resulting in a declining mule deer population which will continue to fall if the Forest Service goes forward with its proposed South Otter logging and ...
Deer proliferation disrupts a forest's natural growth. ScienceDaily. Retrieved June 2, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2014 / 03 / 140308095500.htm. Cornell University.