Episode 366: The Muntjac AKA Deer with Fangs

Published: Feb. 5, 2024, 7 a.m.

b"Thanks to Chuck for suggesting this week's topic, a weird little deer called the muntjac!\\n\\nFurther reading:\\n\\nDam Project Reveals Secret Sanctuary of Vanishing Deer\\n\\nWildlife camera trap surveys provide new insights into the occurrence of two threatened Annamite endemics in Viet Nam and Laos\\n\\nGetting ahead (or two?) with Vietnam's Viking Deer - the Long-Running Saga of a Slow-Running Mystery Beast\\n\\nA giant muntjac [photo by Mark Kostich, taken from article linked above]:\\n\\n\\n\\nA Reeve's muntjac [photo by Don Southerland, taken from this site]:\\n\\n\\n\\nShow transcript:\\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\\nThis week we have a suggestion from Chuck, who wanted to learn about a small hoofed animal that I don\\u2019t think we\\u2019ve ever covered before, the muntjac. It\\u2019s a deer, but it\\u2019s a very weird deer.\\nIn fact, it\\u2019s not just one deer, it\\u2019s at least 12 different species that are native to parts of south and southeast Asia, although it used to have a much broader range. Muntjac fossils have been found throughout Europe in particular. It prefers thick forests with lots of water around. Most species live in tropical or subtropical areas, although it can tolerate colder temperatures. It eats leaves, grass, fruit, seeds, and other plant parts, and it will also sometimes eat bird eggs and small animals when it finds them. It will even sometimes eat carrion.\\nThe typical muntjac is small, barely larger than a fox. The largest species, the giant muntjac, stands a little over two and a half feet tall at the shoulder, or 80 cm, while there are several species of muntjac that don\\u2019t grow taller than 15 inches high, or 40 cm. It\\u2019s brown or reddish-brown, sometimes with darker or lighter markings depending on species. The muntjac appears hump-backed in shape like a rabbit, since instead of having a mostly level back, its back slopes upward from the shoulders to the rump. Its tail is very short and males grow short antlers that either have no branches or only one branch. Males also have a single pair of sharp, curved fangs that grow down from the upper jaw, more properly called tusks.\\nThe muntjac is usually a solitary animal, with each individual defending a small territory. Both males and females have a large gland near the eye that secretes an oily substance with a strong smell. It also has another pair of scent glands on the forehead. The muntjac rubs its face on the ground to mark the edges of its territory with scent. It can even flare its scent glands open to communicate with other muntjacs by smell more effectively.\\nUnlike many deer species, the muntjac doesn\\u2019t have a particular mating season. Females, called does, can come into season any time of the year, so males are always ready to fight with other males for a doe\\u2019s attention. The male loses and regrows his antlers yearly, but mainly he only uses them to push an opponent over. He does the real fighting with his fangs.\\nThere are other types of hoofed animals with fangs. We talked about the musk deer and the chevrotain in episode 116, but even though the chevrotain in particular looks a lot like the muntjac, it\\u2019s not closely related to it at all. Neither is the musk deer. In fact, neither the musk deer nor the chevrotain are actually deer, and they\\u2019re not even closely related to each other.\\nThe southern red muntjac is one of the smallest species of muntjac known and is fairly common throughout much of southeast Asia, although we don\\u2019t know much about it. One thing we do know is that it has the smallest number of chromosomes of any mammal ever studied. Males have 7 diploid chromosomes and females only have 6. In comparison, the common Reeve\\u2019s muntjac has 46 diploid chromosomes. Scientists have no idea why there\\u2019s so much difference in chromosome count between species, but it works for the muntjac.\\nMany species of muntjac are common and are doing just fine, but others are endangered due to habitat loss, hunting,"