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Young Fawn


Young Fawn
Photo Information
Copyright: Mike Schwebag (SchwebagMike) Gold Star Critiquer/Gold Note Writer [C: 53 W: 0 N: 53] (441)
Genre: Animals
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2008-05-30
Categories: Mammals
Camera: Canon EOS 40D, Canon EF 100-400 F4-5.6 L IS USM
Exposure: f/5.6, 1/400 seconds
Photo Version: Original Version, Workshop
Date Submitted: 2008-06-04 9:51
Viewed: 507
Points: 2
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
Captive Water Deer, Ste Croix resort near Rhodes, France.

Water deer are indigenous to the lower reaches of the Yangtze River, coastal Jiangsu province (Yancheng Coastal Wetlands), and islands of Zhejiang of east-central China, and in Korea--where the DMZ has provided a protected habitat for a large number. They frequent the tall reeds, rushes along rivers, and in tall grass on mountains and cultivated fields as well as swampy regions and open grasslands. They have also been known to inhabit swamps, and when the cultivated fields that they occupied are cut, they may be found lying in the furrows and hollows of the open field.

A proficient swimmer, water deer can also swim several miles to make use of river islands.

During the annual rut in November and December, the male will seek out and follow females, giving soft squeaking contact calls and checking for signs of estrus by lowering his neck and rotating his head with ears flapping. Scent plays an important part in courtship, with both animals sniffing each other. Mating among water deer is polygynous, with most females being mated inside the buck's own territory. After repeated mountings, copulation is brief.

Water deer have been known to produce up to seven young, but two to three is normal for this species, the most prolific of all deer. The doe often gives birth to her spotted young in the open, but they are quickly taken to concealing vegetation, where they will remain most of the time for up to a month. During these first few weeks, fawns come out to play. Once driven from the natal territory in late summer, young deer sometimes continue to associate with each other, later separating to begin their solitary existence.

In a survey of zoos, however, it was found that there were usually only two offspring per birth or occasionally three on the average.

Source and more: Wiki

A second shot is in the WS


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Critiques [Translate]

bonjour mike
voila une belle rencontre,felicitations pour la mise au point car avec les herbes cela n'a surement pas été evident.
laurent

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