this post was submitted on 14 Dec 2023
320 points (100.0% liked)
196
16490 readers
2879 users here now
Be sure to follow the rule before you head out.
Rule: You must post before you leave.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Not only deer, but all antlery animals (moose, reindeer, elk, etc). It's completely normal and pain free, but it looks like something out of a horror movie.
For some reason, this does not happen to animals with horns, such as cows.
Unlike horns, which like finger nails grow from the base, antlers are basically bones.
Bone that falls off after the mating season and regrows the next spring
It always weirds me out that antlers just fall off. Like, bone isn't supposed to do that for us. What if we randomly shed bones every year?
we do shed teeth tho, it's not that different.
Hey I have one of those too!
If you've ever seen the skull of a horned animal versus an antlered animal the difference between antler and horn is pretty clear. The center of a horned animals horn is bone and forms a single continuous piece connected to the skull, surrounded by flesh and hard keratin (like finger nails). Antlers grow more like a knuckle, not connected to the skull as one continuous piece.
Another horned oddity is the rhino, whose "horn" is more like a specialized fingernail (keratin again) than a true horn. A rhino "horn" is like a compressed lock of hair filed to a point, a hair shiv if you will.
Yet another weird horn like thing is the giraffe. They have bone knobby lumps on their head that are like something between a horn and an antler, being bone fused to the skull surrounded by flesh but without keratin.
Then there are narwhals. I don't know anything about narwhals. But they are cool and have "horns".
The narwhal's horn isn't a horn but a tooth.
Evolution is fascinating, all these species reinvented the same tool using different parts of the anatomy.
Some have 2, others have 0. Is a narwhal really a narwhal without its tusk(s)?
Also, they love to eat it. Protein is protein.
Well, it is quite bloody, which suggests that the tissue is very much alive. Do they have no pain receptors there or did the brain “learn” to ignore them?
I like to think it's a bit painful, but in the good way like wiggling a loose tooth. By the way they rub their antlers on stuff, it might itch a little too.
Pudüs too or do they have horns?