Sambar deer are elk-like in conformation, but sport a longer tail and a
shaggy dark mane that stands up when the deer is threatening intruders.
They sport a dull grey-brown coat with pale bellies and underneath the
tail. Bucks grow a spectacular three-pronged rack that grows about 43
inches (110 cm) long. Adult deer, both does and buck, have a strange
hairless red spot mid-way down their throats. Underneath the skin of
this spot is a gland that secretes musk.When really frightened, both adults and fawns can emit high-pitched
shrieks. Bucks bellow during the rut but does are quiet. Sambar stags
often rub their antlers against tree trunks to mark their territory and
may even rear up on their hind legs to do so.
Sambar deer prefer to live near water. They are not only excellent
swimmers, but water can help relieve them of parasites and serve as
defense against non-human predators. Smaller predators such as dholes
cannot maneuver in water. Sambar deer have also been found 11,500 feet
(3500 meters) up the Himalayan Mountains and snitching illicit snacks
out of cultivated fields. Bucks live alone, except during the rut, while
females and fawns live in small herds from 2 to 16 individuals.
Does
have a gestation lasting seven or eight months. Normally, a single calf
is born but twins occur in about 2% of sambar does. Fawns are born with
light spots on a chestnut-brown coat, but these spots fade in weeks.
They can walk within hours of birth and begin eating solid food at a
mere 5 days old. Over the next two months, they transition from milk to
an adult diet of twigs, tree bark, leaves, water plants, shrubs, herbs
and fruits. Buck calves begin growing antlers when they are one year
old. Unlike many other species of deer, calves stay with their mothers
for up to 24 months. If lucky, a sambar deer can live nearly 20 years in
the wild. The oldest sambar in captivity lived be 38. Sambar deer
thrive in captivity.
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