Defend, Display or Duel: What Are Antlers Good For? | National Deer Association (2024)

Antlers are like the beards on guys at hunting camp – they are secondary sexual characteristics that separate females and males but don’t directly contribute to reproduction. So, why exactly do bucks grow them?

There are four main theories as to why bucks grow antlers. According to noted deer researchers Drs. Steve Demarais and Bronson Strickland from Mississippi State University, writing in the book Biology and Management of White-tailed Deer, the four theoretical functions of antlers are:

  1. Defend against predators,
  2. Display dominance to other bucks
  3. Display genetic quality to does
  4. Duelother bucks.

Before I narrow these down to the one function that is most important, which do you this it is?Here is what the experts say.

DefendAgainst Predators?

Bucks certainly can inflict a hurting with their antlers. Just ask anyone who has worked at a deer research facility how dangerous bucks can be during the rut. However, if this was the main purpose for antlers, then does would have them too. Also free-ranging bucks run from predators and only fight with their antlers as a last resort. Thus, this theory is likely not the main purpose of antlers.

Display of Dominance?

Prior to the rut, bucks routinely establish a pecking order of dominance status. If this was the main function of antlers, then the largest-antlered bucks would be at the top, regardless of age, body size and attitude. This clearly is not the case, and many lucky hunters have watched younger bucks with large antlers make way for older or larger-bodied bucks with smaller antlers. Antlers display information to other bucks, but this theory does not likely explain the main reason for them either.

Display of Fawn-Daddy Potential?

Here is where things get very interesting. Antlers typically get larger with age, so larger antlers can signify older bucks that have successfully survived a few seasons. Larger antlers can also signify good nutrition, suggesting the buck was able to locate high-quality food and was healthy enough to convert a portion of those nutrients to antler growth. These are both meaningful attributes, but a whitetail’s breeding ecology is very different than the harem style of an elk or red deer.

A whitetail doe does not travel with a pre-determined breeding partner prior to estrous. Conversely, does typically breed with the most dominant buck available at the exact time she is in heat. The dominant buck may have recently won the right to breed by defeating other rival bucks, or he is simply the only buck in the area at the crucial time. We know from DNA studies that bucks of many ages, including yearling bucks, successfully breed does. This happens even in populations with abundant mature bucks. Hence, this theory is likely not the primary reason for antlers either, although it is quite possibly a secondary reason.

Weapons for DuelingOther Bucks?

Since this is the final theory, and the prior three were discounted, we have a winner! Antlers in whitetails most likely evolved to be used for fighting other bucks. Unlike bighorn sheep that “ram” heads or bears that stand and fight, whitetails lock heads and push each other around to establish dominance.

Antlers are the perfect structure to accommodate this style of fighting. Bucks can and do injure other bucks with their antlers while fighting, but I contend that’s not their main goal. If bucks were primarily trying to injure or kill other bucks, then they could do so at a much higher rate by attacking foes in the body rather than the head. Fights among bucks are typically well choreographed and proceed through an escalating series of vocalizations and body posturing before reaching the fighting stage that nearly always begins with the bucks locking antlers prior to pushing each other (click on the gallery below to see a series of photos of this escalation). It’s akin to a reverse tug of war where participants must first grab the rope and get in position before the pulling can begin. Bucks first lock antlers and then use their body size, strength, and attitude to exert their dominance. An antler’s structure even helps support this as they contain more collagen than long bones like femurs, and this permits more flexibility and allow antlers to yield more before breaking.

Whether your personal affinity for antlers lies more in their size or shape, whether you hunt them most when they’re attached to a buck in the fall or dropped in the woods in the winter, or whether you simply enjoy them most for the wonder of nature they truly are, I hope this information adds to your knowledge and appreciation of these amazing appendages.

Defend, Display or Duel: What Are Antlers Good For? | National Deer Association (2024)

FAQs

Are antlers used for defense? ›

Antlers or horns adorn many of the species emblematic of the West: bighorn sheep, mountain goats, mule deer, elk, moose and pronghorn. In general, antlers and horns serve similar functions: defense against predators, defense of mating territories or harems and to signal information about health to potential mates.

What is a good score for deer antlers? ›

We all know hunting isn't (or shouldn't) be about what a buck scores, but the score provides a reference point. A buck scoring 120 points is a good deer for any hunter. You're getting into record-book territory if you kill a buck that scores 160 points or more.

What purpose do antlers serve? ›

Antlers are costly to grow, but necessary during the deer breeding season or rut. As the rut starts, males continue to rub their antlers on vegetation to scent mark and begin sparring with each other to determine dominance. Dominant males may offer an antler to young males for sparring.

Is deer antler good for you? ›

Deer Antler Velvet has been used in Traditional Chinese Medicine for millennia, and limited animal studies suggest its potential to support energy, endurance, and bone health. However, many animal rights advocates have serious concerns about these supplements and the way they are sourced.

Do deer use antlers for defense? ›

Some researchers have suggested that deer may use antlers to defend themselves against predators, as antlers can inflict severe injury. Although this theory may be true, it would mean that females are always defenseless and that males are defenseless once their antlers have shed and during the antler growing phase.

Can deer antlers be used for anything? ›

Antlers have been crafted into useful things for thousands of years. Although the origins may have been purely for survival, like making weapons and tools, today we can appreciate the art of antlers. Shed antlers can be used for something as simple as making buttons, or something as intricate as making knife handles.

Is a 150 score buck good? ›

By comparison, most hunters consider a buck whose antlers score 120 inches in B&C system to be desirable. A 140-inch buck is a slammer, and a 150 is the buck of a lifetime for about 99 percent of today's hunters.

Is there an app to score deer antlers? ›

Holding two U.S. issued patents, BuckScore® is the only science-proven program that allows you to score pictures of bucks in minutes.

Is a 130 inch buck good? ›

Now tally in doubled point length totals of 3, 8, 7 and 3, for a total of 42, and you have a ten point buck that scores 130. That may not sound all that impressive. But the fact is a 130 inch buck, is a very good, solid animal for most parts of the country. Sure, there are 140's, 150's and higher roaming the woods.

Why should you leave antlers on the ground? ›

As conservation-minded, big-game enthusiasts, it's one place where we can collectively minimize potential impacts to wintering wildlife.” Along with maintaining safe distances and limited interactions with wintering animals, there is another reason to leave shed antlers where they are, they are a food source.

Why do deer farms cut off antlers? ›

The removal of antlers, or de-antlering, of deer is performed to help protect other animals and handlers from injury. However, antlers are also removed in the production of antler velvet which is used for medicinal purposes.

What happens to deer antlers when they fall off? ›

The dropped antlers are called “sheds” and the process does not hurt the buck. From spring through summer, the antlers grow back and are usually bigger than the previous year. From August through September, the antlers lose the velvet encasem*nt in preparation for the whitetail breeding season.

What is so special about deer antlers? ›

Deer antlers have been known to grow as much as a quarter-inch in a day, making the velvet the fastest growing animal tissue known in the world. Calcium deposited under the velvet creates antlers made of bone. Horns, however, are more keratin-based, like our fingernails.

Does deer antler have side effects? ›

No major side-effects have been reported in previous studies on humans lasting six months. Androgenic (male hormone type) side-effects have been noted in animal studies. The effect antler velvet might have on other medication hasn't been well studied.

Is deer antler FDA approved? ›

As of 2018, it is legal to sell velvet antler powder, extract or spray in the U.S. as a dietary supplement as long as no disease treatment claims are made and the label bears the FDA disclaimer: "This product has not been evaluated by the FDA. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease."

Were antlers used as weapons? ›

Weapons like axes were made of antler and the material was also used for handles and harpoons. The hunters used antlers sawn off quarry as well as naturally shed antlers found in the forest. Antler is a very flexible material, which is suitable for making striking weapons.

Do moose use their antlers for defense? ›

Moose Rarely Use Antlers in Self-Defense

Moose use their antlers to ward off other bull moose. During the autumn mating season, bull moose will establish their breeding territory by brandishing their antlers and butting heads together with thunderous clashes.

Do male deer fight with their antlers? ›

Bucks can and do injure other bucks with their antlers while fighting, but I contend that's not their main goal. If bucks were primarily trying to injure or kill other bucks, then they could do so at a much higher rate by attacking foes in the body rather than the head.

Why do deers fight with their antlers? ›

This hormone driven behavior between two bucks is called “rutting” or “sparring.” The purpose of this behavior is to establish dominance and to gain the right to mate with females. Males use their size strength attitude and antlers to compete with each other.

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