Deer

What to do if you find a Deer or Fawn

If you have found a deer or fawn and are in need of immediate help, please click here for information.

How to Coexist with Deer

  1. Deer-proofing: To get a list of deer-resistant trees and shrubs, write to the Resources Agency of CA Department of Fish and Game.
  2. Hang bags of human hair in trees and shrubbery that you don't want deer to consume.
  3. Be alert and drive carefully in areas where deer are likely to be present.
  4. If you see a fawn lying still on the ground or walking around without its mother, leave it where it is.
  5. If the situation is such that you feel the fawn's mother has been killed, call CWC.
  6. Do not ever try to take a fawn home to raise it yourself.

About Mule Deer (Odocoileus hemionus)

  • Native to western North America
  • Browser rather than grazer; primarily eats shrubs
  • Crepuscular (dawn and dusk active)
  • Rutting (mating) begins in October
  • Fawns are born in April-June
  • Excellent swimmer
  • Two-toed ungulate (hoofed animal)
  • Bony antlers in the male
  • Antlers shed annually
  • Long and mobile ears
  • Ruminants-digest food like a cow

Mule Deer Facts

  • Natural predators of deer have been reduced in numbers (mountain lions, coyotes)
  • Populations decline due to fragmentation, degradation, or destruction of habitat caused by urban expansion and human interaction
  • Imprinting of fawns to humans: Imprinting on a person can lead to future association with people after release and lack of interest in breeding with its own kind; usually leads to the animal's death