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Hey BSK...
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5270248" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>I used to have an old doe with a very pronounced black strip down her nose, making her easy to identify on trail-camera. Even though we have a very tight sex ratio and advanced buck age structure (which is known to keep breeding timing tight), every year when I would start my camera census August 1, I would get pictures of her heavily pregnant. She would usually give birth sometime around August 20. For most does, their estrus timing is genetically driven (they will go into estrus every year in a given timeframe of a few weeks). Natural Selection eventually weeds out estrus timings that produce fawns at the wrong time for fawn survival, but while that doe was alive, she always gave birth in mid to late August.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5270248, member: 17"] I used to have an old doe with a very pronounced black strip down her nose, making her easy to identify on trail-camera. Even though we have a very tight sex ratio and advanced buck age structure (which is known to keep breeding timing tight), every year when I would start my camera census August 1, I would get pictures of her heavily pregnant. She would usually give birth sometime around August 20. For most does, their estrus timing is genetically driven (they will go into estrus every year in a given timeframe of a few weeks). Natural Selection eventually weeds out estrus timings that produce fawns at the wrong time for fawn survival, but while that doe was alive, she always gave birth in mid to late August. [/QUOTE]
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