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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5492010" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>And that is one of the great unanswered questions. In the Deep South, I've seen deer 20 miles apart have peak breeding dates almost 3 months apart. What it is that makes breeding at one time better than another for fawn survival <strong>in a given location</strong> is probably something we haven't even thought of. But there are a few locations where "weird" peak breeding times produce fawn birthing times that are highly beneficial in obvious ways. But not everywhere. In fact, not in most regions of the south. But these very different localized breeding dates are not linked to past genetic lineage, only naturally Selected current genetics. This is just like humans. Ancestry DNA can tell you where your ancestors are from, but that doesn't mean any of those regional genetics are still active in your body. You may display no traits of the region your ancestors were from. I have a lot of Irish genetics in my system, yet I display zero Irish traits.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5492010, member: 17"] And that is one of the great unanswered questions. In the Deep South, I've seen deer 20 miles apart have peak breeding dates almost 3 months apart. What it is that makes breeding at one time better than another for fawn survival [B]in a given location[/B] is probably something we haven't even thought of. But there are a few locations where "weird" peak breeding times produce fawn birthing times that are highly beneficial in obvious ways. But not everywhere. In fact, not in most regions of the south. But these very different localized breeding dates are not linked to past genetic lineage, only naturally Selected current genetics. This is just like humans. Ancestry DNA can tell you where your ancestors are from, but that doesn't mean any of those regional genetics are still active in your body. You may display no traits of the region your ancestors were from. I have a lot of Irish genetics in my system, yet I display zero Irish traits. [/QUOTE]
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