Sambar Deer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Sambar
Image:Sambar deer.JPG
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Suborder: Ruminantia
Family: Cervidae
Subfamily: Cervinae
Genus: Cervus
Species: C. unicolor
Binomial name
Cervus unicolor
(Kerr, 1792)
Image:Sambar Deer Keoladeo NP.jpg
Female Sambar Deer in Keoladeo National Park, Rajasthan, India

Sambar (also sambur, sambhur, Tamil: Kadaththi man), is the common name for several large dark brown and maned Asian deer, particularly for the Indian species, which attains a height of 102 to 160 cm (40 to 63 in) at the shoulder and may weigh as much as 1200 pounds (546 kg). The coat is dark brown with chestnut marks on the rump and underparts. The large, rugged antlers are typically rusine, the brow tines being simple and the beams forked at the tip. In some specimens the antlers exceed 101 cm (40 in).

Contents

[edit] Ecology

Sambars are primarily browsers that live in woodlands and feed mainly on coarse vegetation, grass, and herbs. They are diurnal animals who live in herds of 5-6 members, grazing on grass, sprigs, fruit and bamboo buds. These deer are seldom far from water and, although primarily of the tropics, are hardy and may range from sea level up to high elevations such as the mixed deciduous forest zone in the Himalayan Mountains sharing its range with the Himalayan musk deer. These deer are found in habitats ranging from tropical seasonal forests (tropical dry forests and seasonal moist evergreen forests), subtropical mixed forests (conifers, broadleaf deciduous, and broadleaf evergreen tree species)to tropical rainforests. Their range covers a vast majority of territory that is classified as tropical rainforest, but their densities are probably very low there. In these areas, the deer probably prefer clearings and areas adjacent to water. They live as far north, according to Wild China, as the southern slopes of the Qinling Mountains in Central China. In Taiwan, sambar along with sika deer have been raised on farms for their antlers, which they drop annually in April to May. Sambars are a favorite prey item for tigers.

[edit] Lifestyle and reproduction

Though they have no specific mating season, sambars commonly mate from September and on to January. Males defend rutting territories and attempt to attract females by vocal and olfactory displays. The males are solitary and highly aggressive toward other males during this time. Females may live in groups of eight. A male may have one whole group of females in his territory.

The gestation period for the females is around 9 months with one fawn born at a time. Sambar fawns have brown hair with light spots which they lose very shortly. Fawns stay with their mothers for up to two years.

[edit] Species Distribution

The Indian Sambar (Cervus unicolor) inhabit much of southern Asia (as far north as the south-facing slopes of the Himalayan Mountains), mainland Southeast Asia (Burma, Thailand, Indochina, the Malay Peninsula), southern China (including Hainan Island), Taiwan, and the islands of Sumatra and Borneo in Indonesia. This deer has been seen congregating in large herds in protected areas such as national parks and reserves in India, Sri Lanka, and Thailand. The subspecies of Indian sambar in India and Sri Lanka are the largest of the genus with the largest antlers both in size and in body proportions. The South China sambar of Southern China and Mainland Southeast Asia is probably second in terms of size with slightly smaller antlers than the Indian sambar. The Sumatran sambar, that inhabits the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra, and the Bornean sambar seem to have the smallest antlers in proportion to their body size. The Formosan sambar is the smallest Cervus unicolor with antler-body proportions more similar to the South China sambar.

There are two small, separate but similar species, the Philippine Sambar (Cervus mariannus) and the Philippine Spotted Deer (also known as the Visayan Spotted Deer or Alfred's Sambar) (Cervus alfredi), that inhabit the Philippine Islands. Both deer are smaller than the Formosan sambar.

The Rusa Deer, or Sunda Sambar (Cervus timorensis), is slightly smaller than the Indian Sambar and inhabits the islands of Java and Bali in Indonesia and, unlike the latter three species, it is predominantly a grazer and forms the largest herds. This deer probably originated in Java but was widely introduced to several adjacent islands as well as the Molucca Islands and Lesser Sunda Islands. Herds gather in open savannas but will retreat to adjacent dry deciduous woodlands or seasonal mixed deciduous monsoon forests for cover. This deer is a favorite prey of the Komodo Dragon.

There is also a small herd of sambar located on St. Vincent Island in Florida. These were brought in by the former owner, before he sold the island to the Nature Conservancy.

[edit] Species in Australia and New Zealand

Sambar deer are an introduced species in both Australia and New Zealand. In Australia, hunting them is a popular sport. Large sambar trophies are very prized and taking a sambar deer in the highlands of Victoria and New South Wales (where they are most prevalent) is considered an admirable act in Australian hunting fraternities.

Sambar were originally introduced into Victoria at Mt Sugarloaf in the 1860s, near the present Kinglake National Park, and at Harewood Estate near Tooradin, where they quickly adapted to the Koo Ree Wup coastal ti tree swamps and thereafter spread into the high country, where today the state herd may number as high as 100,000 animals. Later releases were at Ercildoune Estate near Ballarat, Wilsons Promontory and French Island in Western Port. Another release occurred on the Cobourg Peninsula in the Northern Territory.

In 2006/07, a severe wildfire burned over 13,000 km² of Victoria's Alpine National Park and State Forest, and is believed to have killed as many as 20,000 sambar, along with millions of native birds and wildlife.

In New Zealand, sambar deer roam the coastal and gullies in Horowhenua, Manawatu, Rangitikei and Wanganui. Until recently they were protected, but New Zealand Department of Conservation has now removed hunting regulations surrounding them, allowing them now to be hunted year round.

Sambar are quick to recover from adversity - when a female loses a calf to a predator, she immediately comes into oestrous, and produces another offspring within 8 months. While Sambar in Sri Lanka and India are preyed upon by the swamp tigers, their main predator in Australia is the recreational hunter, who mainly takes the sambar for food and trophy value. Sambar stags in Australia are known to have reached body weights as high as 800 lb (360 kg), so favourable is the habitat found in the Victorian high country.

The spread of sambar has been steady in both NSW and Victoria, with animals being seen on many southern Victorian beaches since 1980, and as far east as Western Port and the outer suburbs of Melbourne. There is considerable debate about how they should be managed, in particular, conservations groups believe their environmental impact outweighs their social value, although this is strongly contested by hunting organizations who are largely responsible for their management along with State forest managers. They are currently listed as a desired game species, and a game licence is required to hunt them, although some conservation groups want them declared a feral species, though it is known that such claims are based on doubtful science.

[edit] See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
deer

[edit] References

[edit] External links

de:Sambar es:Cervus unicolor eo:Akvocervo fr:Sambar it:Cervus unicolor ml:മ്ലാവ് ms:Rusa sambar nl:Sambar ja:サンバー th:กวางป่า tr:Sambar geyiği zh:水鹿

Views
Personal tools

Toolbox