Deer eating leaf litter

Fabnosh

Well-Known Member
I've had trail cams out in my wood for a few years now and regularly get good stills and footage of the Roe, Muntjac, Fallow and Sika going about their normal lives. This year however I've noticed that, despite a late abundance of fresh shoots and foliage, all of the deer species are electing to eat fallen leaves. I've never seen this before. I'm guessing, and it is just a guess, that the fallen leaves must have some mineral breakdown products that aren't in fresh growth and it is these that the deer need.

Can anyone shed any further light on this?

Thanks

FN
 
I've had trail cams out in my wood for a few years now and regularly get good stills and footage of the Roe, Muntjac, Fallow and Sika going about their normal lives. This year however I've noticed that, despite a late abundance of fresh shoots and foliage, all of the deer species are electing to eat fallen leaves. I've never seen this before. I'm guessing, and it is just a guess, that the fallen leaves must have some mineral breakdown products that aren't in fresh growth and it is these that the deer need.

Can anyone shed any further light on this?

Thanks

FN
Fallow have eaten sweet chestnuts plastic bale wrap wheat acorns so deer have a varied diet
 
I watched a roe doe eating leaves inside a release pen before the birds were put in looked like large sycamore spent quite a bit of time just were leaves had blown against the pen net
 
I've had trail cams out in my wood for a few years now and regularly get good stills and footage of the Roe, Muntjac, Fallow and Sika going about their normal lives. This year however I've noticed that, despite a late abundance of fresh shoots and foliage, all of the deer species are electing to eat fallen leaves. I've never seen this before. I'm guessing, and it is just a guess, that the fallen leaves must have some mineral breakdown products that aren't in fresh growth and it is these that the deer need.

Can anyone shed any further light on this?

Thanks

FN
Similar to when a fallen tree often gets many of its leaves fairly quickly stripped, it’s likely that the roots of the tree are able to access the trace elements that gradually get lost over time owing to slightly acid rain washing them down below the depth of grass roots, etc. The deeper roots draw up these trace elements and this is what the deer seek out.

A few years back we dug a trench for drains through the grass lawn about 3 foot or more deep, replacing the upper portion of soil from the dig with that from the bottom of the trench; for months afterwards, the grass which covered the trench line was noticeably darker and more lush looking than that on either side. This was due to the greater availability to its roots of the trace elements.

The grass can indeed be ‘greener on the other side’!
 
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