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Why do the roe I have shot have hairless necks?

Why do the roe I have shot have hairless necks?

"They often rub the hair on their necks until the skin shows through."


By Richard Prior

Thursday, 14 May 2009

Widely regarded as the world expert on roe deer

Q) I stalk roe in Hampshire and during last season shot a number of does that had no hair on their necks. Some were thin and sickly, but the healthy does also exhibited this condition. Can you explain this?
G. MOORES
By email


A) This is quite a common phenomenon with roe during the spring. The deer have a scruffy appearence because of their normal moult. Before this starts, however, they often rub the hair on their necks until the skin shows through. In some of the worst cases, as you observed, the animals are in poor condition. The cause is probably a biting louse, Damalinia sp., which tends to congregate around the ears and then spreads down the neck. This causes the animal intense irritation, which can only be relieved by scratching. The heaviest infections build up on young beasts and those in poor condition. As the moult progresses, most of the lice are shed and a normal coat grows in the summer. The biology of these lice is something of a mystery because no male lice have ever been found on roe deer. It is good practice to include any affected does in your cull because it is a fair bet that many of them will be in poor health and possibly also affected by disease or other parasites such as sheep ticks.



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