Why Do Female Deer Sometimes Grow Antlers? (2024)

We’d been sitting in the aspen stand for hours, glassing the same distant seam of sagebrush-pine transition, waiting for a group of whitetails to creep out into the open. As the light began to fade, three slowly appeared from behind the trees: one yearling; one young, skinny doe; and one small deer with a single spike antler.

It became pretty obvious that my dad and I weren’t going to notch our antlerless tags that night. The sun continued to drop, shooting light ran out, and we started making our way back to the truck. But as we stumbled down the mountain, our friend Richard made a quiet comment under his breath that stopped my dad and me in our tracks.

“I think that spike buck was actually a doe.”

As we recalled the image of the three whitetails, my dad and I agreed that the spike did have a particularly skinny neck for a buck, even a young one. The one measly antler lacked any branches and only measured four or five inches. And it would be slightly unusual for a buck to travel with a doe and a yearling so casually, especially on the verge of the pre-rut. We immediately jumped to the conclusion that the animal was simply an underdeveloped buck who would be unrecognizable the following year. The idea that the deer might be female seemed impossible. How wrong we were.

Testing TheoriesAccording to Kip Adams, chief conservation officer for the National Deer Association, in extreme instances female deer can end up with high testosterone levels.

“It doesn’t happen very often in the wild because it takes some type of hormonal imbalance or injury to the deer to cause that hormonal imbalance, so it’s rare in nature,” Adams told MeatEater.

When this does occur, the antlers are usually small, skinny, unbranched, or barely discernible from the crown of the head. Some stay either partially or fully in velvet. It would be practically impossible for doe antlers to fully develop and resemble a normal set of buck antlers, Adams said.

“During the spring and summer, testosterone levels rise slowly, which causes antler growth. In bucks, a steep increase in testosterone, usually in the late summer, causes those antlers to harden,” Adams said. “In does that have antlers, the antlers typically aren’t that large, and they almost always stay in velvet or only partially harden, because it takes quite an imbalance to grow them in the first place. They almost never get that surge of testosterone that’s required to actually harden them off.”

Hunters Who Cry ‘Doe’Despite the unlikely nature of harvesting a doe with high T, many hunters have bagged fully antlered deer without male sex organs and instantly assumed they’d found a once-in-a-lifetime animal. But this often isn’t the case.

“You’ll see reports each year where hunters will kill this deer with big antlers and numerous tines, and they’ll go to field dress it, and it won’t have testicl*s. And they’ll think it’s a doe with this big set of antlers, but in most cases that’s not true," Adams said. "It’s likely a buck that’s injured itself and lost its testicl*s, or it’s a cryptorchid or hermaphrodite.”

In bucks with cryptorchidism, their testicl*s never fully descend from their abdominal cavity. In addition to stunted antler growth, this can create other antler-related phenomena like nontypical formation and “cactus buck” syndrome, in which bucks don’t have enough testosterone to shed their velvet properly and the annual growth builds on top of itself.

Hermaphrodidic deer are a bit more complicated. They have both male and female sex organs and can present as either bucks or does, with antlers or without. A simple Google image search of “hermaphrodite deer” yields a few confused hunters yanking their deer into unnatural positions to get the antlered head next to the bare spot where male sex organs would be for photo evidence of the cervid sorcery. Some hunters look ecstatic to come across the rarity, while other images are more “grip 'n' grimace” than “grip 'n' grin.”

To Shoot or Not to ShootAdams pointed out that these unique deer are one of the reasons why states might choose to label their tags as “antlered” and “antlerless” instead of “buck” or “doe/fawn."

“You can have bucks that don’t have antlers long enough to be classified as antlered deer, and you can shoot a doe that has antlers long enough to classify the deer as antlered, which you can then put your antlered tag on,” Adams said. “As far as I’m aware, there aren’t legal ramifications there.”

He also pointed out that female deer with high testosterone can also successfully and healthily reproduce. It isn’t unheard of to see an antlered deer nursing a fawn, a dead giveaway that the deer is definitely a doe. Cow caribou and other female ungulates of other species frequently grow antlers.

There are countless exceptions to the rule that bucks are the only deer to boast antlers, all of which are proof of how important properly identifying your target really is. Ultimately, we’ll never know for sure if the single-spiked whitetail we saw was female or not. But one thing’s certain: It’s way more fun to reminisce about an unsolved mystery of nature than a phone call to the game warden for accidentally shooting an antlered deer with an antlerless tag.

Why Do Female Deer Sometimes Grow Antlers? (2024)

FAQs

Why Do Female Deer Sometimes Grow Antlers? ›

Antlers grow annually on the bucks as their hormones rise in spring. Later in early winter, the reduction in male hormones cause the antlers to drop off. Sometimes, a doe will have male hormones and may grow a set of small antlers. Just like after menopause, human females may grow a mustache or beard.

Why do female deer grow antlers? ›

Deer grow and shed antlers every year, requiring large amounts of nutrients and energy. Typically, only male deer grow antlers. Female deer have been documented to grow antlers when experiencing issues with regulation of the hormone testosterone, which happens very rarely.

Why do male deer have antlers but females don t? ›

Female deer, known as does, typically do not have antlers because antler growth and shedding is primarily driven by hormonal changes in males. The development of antlers in male deer, including moose, is influenced by the hormone testosterone, which is produced during the breeding season.

How common is it for a doe to have antlers? ›

Wildlife officials have reported an overpopulation of deer, making it rare to see an antlered doe of any size with only a 1-in-10,000 chance of occurrence.

Do deer antlers grow randomly? ›

In most Arctic and temperate-zone species, antler growth and shedding is annual, and is controlled by the length of daylight. Although the antlers are regrown each year, their size varies with the age of the animal in many species, increasing annually over several years before reaching maximum size.

Do female deers lose their antlers every year? ›

Typically, males drop their antlers in the late fall, leaving them without antlers until the following spring, while females keep their antlers through the winter until their calves are born in the spring.

What is the only kind of deer whose females have antlers? ›

Males of almost all deer species grow antlers, used to battle for females. But reindeer are the only species in which the females also grow antlers, and an explanation can be found by looking at bovids, a closely related family including antelopes, goats and sheep.

Why do deer fight with their antlers? ›

Establishing Dominance

Both before and during breeding season, males often use their antlers as a threat. They posture and spar with the other males as a way to establish hierarchies.

Do deer regrow antlers every year? ›

Deer and their relatives grow antlers each spring and shed them every winter. Once antlers are shed, the process of growing them begins anew. Male deer have two spots on their skulls called pedicles from which their antlers grow. In the spring, the antlers begin to sprout from the pedicles.

Do deer antlers fall off? ›

A drop in testosterone, after the rut, causes weakness in the connection tissue and the antlers fall off. Antlers drop annually in late winter, typically January through March. The dropped antlers are called “sheds” and the process does not hurt the buck.

Is there a 50 point buck? ›

The following slide shows two extreme outliers at the Faith Ranch: a 50 point deformed buck and the 236 I shot in 1990. These images provide a visual to describe outliers on the bell curve of antler scores.

Can female deer with antlers have babies? ›

Most antlered females have velvet-covered pedicels or small spikes with some branching, and can produce fawns. Antler development is a complex interaction of hormonal cues.

Can a doe with antlers have fawns? ›

On rare occasions whitetail does can develop antlers. This is most likely due to an abnormally high level of testosterone. This four year old antlered doe has produced twin fawns for the past two years.

Why do you never find deer antlers in the woods? ›

Originally Answered: Since male dear and elk shed their horns or racks, how come you hardly ever find any horns in the woods? Rodents will chew shed deer antlers to sharpen their teeth. Rabbits, squirrels, mice, and rats will drag shed antlers into their den or nest. That's what happens to most of them.

Why do deer bleed when they shed their antlers? ›

During this growing period the buck's antlers are covered in a soft layer of skin tissue called 'velvet'. Underneath this velvet layer are nerves and blood vessels that support the fast antler growth. This velvet layer gradually dries and sheds away from the antlers once they are fully developed.

How old is a 10 point buck? ›

The number of antler points a buck has does not correlate with the buck's age. Yearling bucks have been known to grow antlers with eight or 10 points when the habitat and nutrition are good. The spread of the antlers can offer a clue to a buck's age. Yearling bucks rarely have antlers that grow wider than their ears.

Why do doe deer have antlers? ›

Antlered does occur because of a hormone imbalance that causes higher levels of male testosterone to be present, causing antlers to grow. But true viable antlered female whitetailed deer are very rare.

Why male whitetail deer grow antlers but females seldom grow antlers? ›

Male deer have antlers while females do not due to sexual dimorphism, which refers to physical differences between males and females of a species. Antlers are primarily used by male deer for various purposes such as competing for mates and establishing dominance within their social hierarchy. Females don't need them.

Why do male deer lose their antlers? ›

Male deer or bucks use their antlers to establish dominance and compete for mates during the breeding season. Once the breeding season is over and hormone levels decrease the bone where the antler was attached to the pedicel begins to erode away. Eventually the antler falls off, generally during January to March.

Do female deers grow antlers in the winter? ›

Typically, no. However, a doe may grow antlers if she is experiencing higher levels of male testosterone to be present, Some antlered does turn out to be hermaphrodites having both male and female sex organs. Most of the time, female antlers stay in velvet and do not form properly.

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