“But he’s got a white face and a Roman nose, must be an old buck”You guys do realize that the majority of 2 and 3 point bucks are simply young, right? Big mature bucks weren't big when they were were young and the vast majority of 4 1/2+ year old muleys aren't 2 points or small 3 points.
You sir, did not pay enough attention in high school biology class.Genetics are a product of mom's health while the buck is in gestation. Mom's health is a product of habitat and all the factors that go into her environment. The best explanation of this is a podcast on meat eater titled -landscape of fear episode 162.
Of course both parents are going to have an influence on the genetics but both parents are also a product of every generation of deer before them. The more generations of deer you have living on good feed and good habitat the bigger they will become. It allows their offspring to have a reproductive advantage. If you live in an area with scarce resources and you're trying to grow that big before you can hit reproductive maturity there's a good chance you die before that happens. In those circumstances it's advantageous to be small.You sir, did not pay enough attention in high school biology class.
Genetics control a lot more that just antler size. It's actually what makes a deer a deer and not a chicken. The genetic makeup is established at conception and cannot be changed at all during the gestation period.Of course both parents are going to have an influence on the genetics but both parents are also a product of every generation of deer before them. The more generations of deer you have living on good feed and good habitat the bigger they will become. It allows their offspring to have a reproductive advantage. If you live in an area with scarce resources and you're trying to grow that big before you can hit reproductive maturity there's a good chance you die before that happens. In those circumstances it's advantageous to be small.
I'm assuming you have no idea the study that I'm referencing. Going to give you the benefit of the doubt on that one. It's not my theory. People who have doctoral degrees in this field did this research. I just happen to agree with it.
So insightful. I didn't realize that a deer wasn't a chicken. I appreciate your generalities which don't in any way address the study I was talking about. Body and antler size are both controled by what I'm talking about. In the frame of reference that people are using when they're talking about deer they're typically referring to antler characteristics and body size specifically. Probably not so much to do with the genetic variation between a chicken and a deer. I love your out of context references though.Genetics control a lot more that just antler size. It's actually what makes a deer a deer and not a chicken. The genetic makeup is established at conception and cannot be changed at all during the gestation period.
I'm not arguing with you at all. Just clarifying for those who might not know thatSo insightful. I didn't realize that a deer wasn't a chicken. I appreciate your generalities which don't in any way address the study I was talking about. Body and antler size are both controled by what I'm talking about. In the frame of reference that people are using when they're talking about deer they're typically referring to antler characteristics and body size specifically. Probably not so much to do with the genetic variation between a chicken and a deer. I love your out of context references though.
I would encourage you to listen to the podcast I referenced.
You're probably too busy arguing with people on the internet to do that though.
Genetics are a product of mom's health while the buck is in gestation.
Google epigenetics. some aspects of “genetics” are actually influenced by environmental factors.Genetics control a lot more that just antler size. It's actually what makes a deer a deer and not a chicken. The genetic makeup is established at conception and cannot be changed at all during the gestation period.
If the herd in question has the genetic potential for large, multi-branched antlers with eyeguards/browtines then this would be correct. Without the underlying genetic makeup, you'd still have bucks with smaller antlers, and fewer tines/points. Genotype vs phenotype.Biologist after biologist has stated that the largest contributing factor to antler growth is the quality of the food supply, specifically limestone and phosphorus in the food supply.
I think what he isn't saying is that study focused heavily on the does health prior to, during, and after birth. The healthier the doe was in all of those stages, then the bigger the fawns were at birth and every other mile stone after that. Bigger bodied deer equaled higher survival rates and larger antlered bucks. It's a totalality of all of the circumstances that dictate antler growth. Genetics is only part of it.Genetics control a lot more that just antler size. It's actually what makes a deer a deer and not a chicken. The genetic makeup is established at conception and cannot be changed at all during the gestation period.