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5 August 2024 Age-Related Changes in the Body Size and Weight of Sika Deer (Cervus nippon): A Comparison between Northern and Southern Populations of Honshu, The Main Island of Japan
Seiki Takatsuki, Eiji Hosoi, Kazuo Suzuki
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Abstract

The sika deer (Cervus nippon) is known to exhibit north-south variations in body size, but growth patterns and sexual size differences are not well studied. This study compared age-related changes in the hindfoot length and body weight of deer in the northern and southern populations in Japan. Hindfoot lengths of the northern deer were 12% (males) and 9% (females) longer and the body weights were 19% (males) and 8% (females) heavier than the southern deer. Hindfoot length increased from fawns to two years of age and then remained stable in both sexes in the northern deer, while it increased to yearlings in both sexes in the southern deer. Male body weight significantly increased until three years in the northern deer and until two years in the southern deer. Female body weight significantly increased until two years both in the northern and southern deer. Male/female ratios were greater in the northern deer than in the southern deer. We showed that 1) the northern deer were larger, 2) males were larger than females in both places, 3) males grew faster for a longer period than females, and 4) sexual dimorphism was more pronounced in the northern population.

Published online 5 August, 2024; Print publication 31 October, 2024

Seiki Takatsuki, Eiji Hosoi, and Kazuo Suzuki "Age-Related Changes in the Body Size and Weight of Sika Deer (Cervus nippon): A Comparison between Northern and Southern Populations of Honshu, The Main Island of Japan," Mammal Study 49(4), 299-307, (5 August 2024). https://doi.org/10.3106/ms2023-0079
Received: 9 November 2023; Accepted: 22 April 2024; Published: 5 August 2024
KEYWORDS
Bergmann's rule
body weight
foot length
growth
sexual dimorphism
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