While most bucks develop normal antlers, on occasion a hunter will run across a buck with antlers that a deer biologist might refer to as developmental abnormalities. Developmental abnormalities range from antlers that never leave the velvet stage all the way to antlers that are found on a doe’s head instead of on a buck’s. The wide variety of developmental abnormalties makes it difficult to identify the particular cause of a particular buck’s (or doe’s) abnormality without a detailed dissection or necropsy. There are just too many potentially confounding and overlapping circumstances in the wild for biologists to nail down a specific cause based only on a description or photo.
We do know that most abnormalities are caused by injuries such as damage to a buck’s pedicle, damage to the antler during the velvet stage, or even an injury to a buck’s hind leg. Damage to the antler pedicle or the skull’s frontal bone is the most common cause of antler malformation.
These injuries show up more often in older bucks due to their more aggressive fighting. Damage to the antler during the velvet stage can result in antlers growing in strange directions or weird shapes.
The rarest damage-related injury is when a buck suffers a crippling injury to his hind leg and his opposite side antler grows abnormally. The specific cause has not been confirmed but alterations to the buck’s walk, or gait, due to the crippled leg may alter blood flow or nerve stimulation, resulting in the altered growth of the opposite antler.
In addition to these injuries that can cause abnormalities in antler development, deer can also develop abnormalities due to problems stemming from internal, or systemic, problems, as well as problems stemming from genetic abnormalities. When a deer’s antlers fail to transition out of the velvet stage, the cause is often a lack of testosterone.
Antlers may remain in velvet permanently if testosterone production is insufficient to promote hardening and velvet shedding.
This can either be brought on due to injury or a birth defect. Despite the fact these antlers never leave the velvet stage they do not continue to grow. On the other hand, too much testosterone can actually cause females to grow antlers. These antlers usually stay in the velvet stage; however, some “females” have hardened antlers, but these “females” are in reality males that only have the external “structures” of a “female”.