Mule Deer
Odocoileus hemionus
Mule deer, Odocoileus hemionus, are western North American deer named for their large ears and bounding stotting gait. They are generally stockier than white-tailed deer, with a black-tipped tail, branching antlers on mature bucks, and strong ties to sagebrush, mountain foothills, desert edges, and open woodland. Several regional forms are recognized, and local herds may differ in body size, migration distance, and habitat use. Their seasonal movement between high summer range and lower winter range is one of the key traits shaping their management.
People manage mule deer mostly through wildlife agencies, habitat programs, hunting rules, rehabilitation, and conservation research. Healthy herds depend on winter range, fawn recruitment, predator balance, water access, and connected migration corridors rather than pen-style care. Captive handling is specialized and usually limited to permitted facilities because stress, disease risk, and fencing needs are significant. Managers often track age class, buck-to-doe ratios, chronic wasting disease surveillance, and land-use pressure. For landowners and communities, stewardship may mean protecting native forage, reducing vehicle collisions, and keeping domestic livestock practices compatible with deer movement.