Correlating male white‐tailed deer antler size with female body mass across multiple spatial scales

Author:

Turner Mark A.1ORCID,Harper Craig A.1,Strickland Bronson K.2,Lashley Marcus A.3,Wilber Mark Q.1,McKinley William4

Affiliation:

1. School of Natural Resources University of Tennessee 427 Plant Biotechnology Building Knoxville 37996 TN USA

2. Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Mississippi State University 100 Thompson Hall Mississippi State 39762 MS USA

3. Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Department University of Florida 322 Newins‐Ziegler Hall Gainesville 32611 FL USA

4. Mississippi Department of Wildlife Fisheries and Parks 1505 Eastover Drive Jackson 39211 MS USA

Abstract

AbstractManagers use morphometric data collected from harvested animals as indicators of nutritional condition. Antler or horn size often are considered in ungulates, but there are problems associated with biased and limited harvest data available from male animals in many populations. Adult female body mass also may be collected, but little information exists on how male antler size scales with female body mass. We evaluated the relationship between property‐specific mature male white‐tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) antler size and adult female body mass from harvest data collected at 2 spatial scales. Regression predicted a 4.4‐cm increase in average mature male antler size for every 1‐kg increase in female body mass from 31 properties across the eastern United States, 2015–2023. Adult female mass explained 64% of the variation in mature antler size, and including latitude as a covariate did not improve model fit. When we considered data from 174 properties in Mississippi, USA, 1991–1994, we predicted a 4.7‐cm increase in average mature male antler size for every 1‐kg increase in adult female body mass. Including soil resource region in the Mississippi model explained 48% of the variation in mature male antler size by accounting for differences in average sizes across regions. Our results indicate average female body mass correlates with mature male antler size at multiple spatial scales. We recommend managers collect body mass and age from harvested female deer, as female mass represents a useful metric to track management progress and predict changes in antler size.

Funder

Tennessee Valley Authority

Publisher

Wiley

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