What say you experts?
I had to get that from my sister so I don't have any other pictures of it. I'll ask. My son is down in Texas hunting and was told to pass on the nice buck and remove this one if it shows up.Gunny456 said:
We had a similar looking deer on our place years back. It ended up being a hermaphrodite. It had boy parts on the outside but also had a uterus and ovaries on the inside.
It grew a set of antlers but never shed them. So they stayed on its head and he/she wore them down and looked similar to your picture. We killed it.
Our TPWD biologist came out and she picked up the sex parts.
Does your picture show anything on its hocks?
I only have the one shot from a cell phone. Maybe somebody will kill it and I'll report back.TAMUallen said:
Can't tell... but is that an antlered doe?
It is from NE of town in Llano County.M-Neezy said:
If you're in Llano County it may be a cactus deer. Something in the Pink Granite soil north of Enchanted rock.
Interesting…we're in nw llano county, a lot of granite, quartzite etc…We've seen these deer for 40 years…a lot of folk call them stags, locally. Generally very large deer and very good eating (larger than normal bucks). We always assumed larger because they never chase does and just eat. Most have some type of horn issues , but sometimes they are symmetrical. Genitals are generally screwed up.Gunny456 said:
Cactus bucks can occur anywhere. Cactus bucks have constant soft velvet because they don't produce enough testosterone….and there is all kinds of causes for that…..including hermaphroditism. Testosterone causes the closing of the blood vessels in the antlers causing the velvet to dry and slough off…. if there is a lack of testosterone…. for various reasons… the velvet will stay soft with blood flow through it and stay that way.
In the Llano area, typically around areas that have granite outcroppings, it is has been thought that a particular type of mold or lichen grows on the granite rock that the deer ingest that causes their testicles to shrink and therefore they don't produce enough testosterone. That in turn keeps them in velvet year after year and they don't shed their antlers.
DOG XO 84 said:Interesting…we're in nw llano county, a lot of granite, quartzite etc…We've seen these deer for 40 years…a lot of folk call them stags, locally. Generally very large deer and very good eating (larger than normal bucks). We always assumed larger because they never chase does and just eat. Most have some type of horn issues , but sometimes they are symmetrical. Genitals are generally screwed up.Gunny456 said:
Cactus bucks can occur anywhere. Cactus bucks have constant soft velvet because they don't produce enough testosterone….and there is all kinds of causes for that…..including hermaphroditism. Testosterone causes the closing of the blood vessels in the antlers causing the velvet to dry and slough off…. if there is a lack of testosterone…. for various reasons… the velvet will stay soft with blood flow through it and stay that way.
In the Llano area, typically around areas that have granite outcroppings, it is has been thought that a particular type of mold or lichen grows on the granite rock that the deer ingest that causes their testicles to shrink and therefore they don't produce enough testosterone. That in turn keeps them in velvet year after year and they don't shed their antlers.
This is first time I've heard of moss/mold connection. Thanks! We have a lot of unique rock outcroppings, including a huge one in back yard that's several hundred yards long a maybe 70 ft high? Most of these have interesting moss or lichens , many of which turn neon greenish color on the rocks . I still can't understand how it stays alive in the middle of summer without turning to dust and never returning.