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State Mammals & Animals

State Mammals & Animals

 

 
 

State AnimalAnimals: White-tailed Deer

White-tailed Deer

 

Whitetail deer are able to survive in a variety of terrestrial habitats, from the big woods of northern Maine to the deep saw grass and hammock swamps of Florida. They also inhabit farmlands, brushy areas and such desolate areas of the west such as the cactus and thornbrush deserts of southern Texas and Mexico. Ideal whitetail deer habitat would contain dense thickets (in which to hide and move about) and edges (which furnish food).

 

 

There are 16 subspecies of white-tailed deer in North America. Subspecies are distinguished by geographic location, body size, coloration, antler growth, and physiological, biochemical, and behavioral differences .

 

Official State Animals and/or Mammals: White-tailed Deer

State

Deer

 Adopted

Scientific

Arkansas White-tailed Deer 1993 Odocoileus virginianus
Illinois White-tailed Deer 1982 Odocoileus virginianus
Michigan White-tailed Deer 1997 Odocoileus virginianus
Mississippi White-tailed Deer April 12,
1974
Odocoileus virginianus
Nebraska White-tailed Deer February 26,
1981
Odocoileus virginianus
New Hampshire White-tailed Deer 1983 Odocoileus virginianus
Ohio White-tailed Deer 1988 Odocoileus virginianus
Oklahoma White-tailed Deer   Odocoileus virginianus
Pennsylvania White-tailed Deer October 2,
1959
Odocoileus virginianus
South Carolina White-tailed Deer 1972 Odocoileus virginianus
Wisconsin White-tailed Deer 1957 Odocoileus virginianus

Deer Family

Utah Rocky Mountain elk February 1,
1971
Cervus canadensis
Vermont The white-tail is depicted on the
state flag and seal.
Odocoileus virginianus
White-tailed deer is the most popular of official state animals and/or mammals, representing eleven states, from New Hampshire south to Mississippi and west to Nebraska and Oklahoma. The only other species representing more states is the honeybee, the state insect of at sixteen states.

Habitat

  1. O. virginianus ssp. borealis: from central Ontario and Quebec south to southern
    Illinois, and from central Minnesota to the East Coast
  2. O. virginianus ssp. clavium: Florida Keys
  3. O. virginianus ssp. couesi: central Arizona south through Mexico and southwestern
    New Mexico
  4. O. virginianus ssp. dakotensis: southern Northwest Territories west into central
    Saskatchewan and Manitoba, and south through Alberta, the Dakotas, eastern Montana, central Wyoming, northern Colorado, and western Minnesota
  5. O. virginianus ssp. hiltonensis: Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
  6. O. virginianus ssp. leucurus: southwestern Washington and the western quarter of
    Oregon
  7. O. virginianus ssp. macrourus: Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, northern Louisiana, eastern Texas, Kansas, and Nebraska, and southeastern South Dakota
  8. O. virginianus ssp. mcilhennyi: southeastern Texas and southern Louisiana
  9. O. virginianus ssp. nigribarbis: Blackbeard Island, Georgia
  10. O. virginianus ssp. ochrourus: British Columbia to western Alberta, south through
    western Montana, Idaho, eastern Washington and Oregon, western Wyoming, northern Utah, and possibly a fringe of the border between northern California and Nevada
  11. O. virginianus ssp. osceola: midwestern Florida, north into southern Alabama and
    Mississippi
  12. O. virginianus ssp. seminolus: Florida
  13. O. virginianus ssp. taurinsulae: Bulls Island, South Carolina
  14. O. virginianus ssp. texanus: Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, western New Mexico
    and Colorado, and southeastern Wyoming
  15. O. virginianus ssp. venatorius: Hunting Island, South Carolina
  16. O. virginianus ssp. virginianus: Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia, Tennesee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, and Alabama
Scientific name

Deer make up the family Cervidae of the order Artiodactyla. The European elk, or moose, is classified as Alces alces. South American pudus make up the genus Pudu, and musk deer the genus Moschus. The Chinese water deer is classified as Hydropotes inermis, and the caribou, or reindeer, as Rangifer tarandus. The red deer make up the genus Cervus, and the roe deer the genus Capreolus. The white-tailed deer, or Virginia deer, is classified as Odocoileus virginianus; the mule, or black-tailed, deer as Odocoileus hemionus; and the American elk, or wapiti, as Cervus elaphus.

 

The genus name Odocoileus is from the Greek words odon (tooth) and koilos (hollow) or "hollow tooth," in reference to the depressions in the crown of the molar teeth. The Latinized species name virginianus (of Virginia) refers to the state from which the species was first collected and described.

 

Taxonomic Hierarchy
Kingdom Animalia -- animals
Phylum Chordata -- chordates
Subphylum Vertebrata -- vertebrates
Class Mammalia
Order Artiodactyla
Family Cervidae
Genus Odocoileus
Species Odocoileus virginianus

 

 

 

 

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