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Though not common, some deer are monogamous, such as the European Roe deer. When a deer breeds depends on where it lives. Deer in temperate areas breed during late autumn or early winter.
The two main groups are the Cervinae, including the muntjac, the fallow deer and the chital, and the Capreolinae, including the elk, reindeer (caribou), the Western roe deer, and the Eurasian elk ...
Using population data spanning the last 30 years, researchers demonstrated that roe deer in the ... a previous study on the deer population in the Chize forest, in western France, also showed ...
It is widespread across western Europe ... but numbers have since repopulated. Roe are mainly woodland deer, but in recent years the rise in numbers has led them to colonising more open areas ...
The adult Roe Deer was discovered on the beach between the Western Lawns and Hollywell in Eastbourne. East Sussex Wildlife Rescue & Ambulance Service (WRAS), the Coastguard, East Sussex Fire ...
The increasing abundance of roe deer appears to be having an impact on woodlands, a study has suggested. Researchers found that sites with the highest abundance of the native animals had the ...