Free: Contests & Raffles.
We had a whitetail doe over at our place in Republic a couple of years ago that had 2 mulie fawns on her. That also was the same doe with the candle shaped antlers so she was all goofed up to begin with.
2 posters mentioned crosses with 'bigger' bodies. Why would a cross make a muley bigger than other muleys? An average muley is bigger than an average whitey? I would suppose the cross would be somewhere inbetween? An biologists around???
Quote from: NoBark on December 29, 2010, 09:50:41 AM2 posters mentioned crosses with 'bigger' bodies. Why would a cross make a muley bigger than other muleys? An average muley is bigger than an average whitey? I would suppose the cross would be somewhere inbetween? An biologists around???Look up Ligers. They are Way bigger then tigers or lions.
Quote from: grundy53 on December 29, 2010, 10:24:06 AMQuote from: NoBark on December 29, 2010, 09:50:41 AM2 posters mentioned crosses with 'bigger' bodies. Why would a cross make a muley bigger than other muleys? An average muley is bigger than an average whitey? I would suppose the cross would be somewhere inbetween? An biologists around???Look up Ligers. They are Way bigger then tigers or lions.And that's Way with a capital "W"...
There's a concept known as "hybrid vigor," whereby genetically insular stocks are cross-bred, and the resulting offspring grow larger than either of the insular stocks. It is possible that this mechanism would take hold in a muley-whitetail cross.
Quote from: grundy53 on December 29, 2010, 10:24:06 AMQuote from: NoBark on December 29, 2010, 09:50:41 AM2 posters mentioned crosses with 'bigger' bodies. Why would a cross make a muley bigger than other muleys? An average muley is bigger than an average whitey? I would suppose the cross would be somewhere inbetween? An biologists around???Look up Ligers. They are Way bigger then tigers or lions.Ligers are pretty much my favorite animal. And I'm pretty good with a bow staff. That's why gangs keep trying to get me to join.
http://www.coueswhitetail.com/coues_biology/hybrids.htmThey have a picture of a verified hybrid that I guy killed in AZ.Hybrids generally look more like whitetail and are almost always the result of a Whitetail buck/Muley Doe cross. Their survival in the wild is very difficult. They usually have a unique awkward gait that is neither whitetail or muley. As a result they rarely mature before being taken by a predator.