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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Moose Antlers…Why Don’t You Ever Find Them? ©


A bull moose, feeding at the mouth of the Galipo River and Pen Lake, Algonquin Provincial Park, summer of 2014, courtesy of Steve Burgeson



I have been adventuring in Algonquin Provincial Park since I was a kid in 1978.  It wasn’t until this summer that I finally found a moose antler in the woods.  It isn’t that I haven’t been looking for them, I have, for 41 years!

Discarded, or shed, moose antlers are hard to find, and I will tell you why; but first, let us back up a bit.



A shed moose antler, found during the summer of 2019, on the shore of Welcome Lake, near the beginning of the Galipo River.



Every spring bull moose begin to grow new antlers to attract cow moose, to show rivals who is the biggest bull in the bog and come fall to fight with.  Big antlers are the moose equivalent of bling or a tricked-out truck and show other moose, the owner’s social status, dominance and quality as a mate.  Moose antlers are among the fastest growing animal tissue in the world and antlers grow from nothing to over 44 pounds (20 kg) in just 160 days!  While they are growing, a moose’s antlers are covered with soft skin called “velvet” and are easily damaged.  Before the beginning of the breeding season, which starts in late September, when the antlers are done growing, bull moose will rub and scrape the velvet off their new antlers on a handy tree trunk.  Unfortunately for the moose, his antlers are heavy, awkward, cumbersome and make it difficult to move through the woods and avoid predators; especially during the winter.  Every year as winter begins and the breeding season ends, bull moose lose or shed their “disposable” antlers.  When winter ends and spring begins, bull moose begin to grow new antlers and the cycle begins again.

So why is it so hard to find shed antlers?  Because antlers are mostly made of calcium and phosphorus and these two elements are uncommon in the wilderness.  For this reason, many animals will scavenge antlers as soon as they fall to the ground.  Porcupines, squirrels, mice and other rodents are quick to gnaw on them for the minerals that they contain.  Wolves also like to chew on discarded antlers, much like dogs like to chew on bones and for the same reasons.  Chewing on the antlers helps to clean their teeth and provides them with a much-needed vitamin supplement.

Shed moose antlers are also the home, feeding ground, nursery and battlefield for antler flies, protopiophilia litigate, a tiny, little fly that was only officially discovered in 1988.  In the spring male antler flies will claim a section of a discarded antler and will defend it against all commers and the females, after mating, will lay their eggs in the cracks and pores of the antler.  The hatched eggs in turn will become small maggots, feeding on the bone marrow within the antler.  The maggots will remain inside of the antler until they are big enough to spring to the ground near the antler, where they will develop into adult antler flies and begin the cycle all over again.

The reason why shed moose antlers are so hard to find in the wilderness, is that they are such a valuable resource and usually they have already been found by the forest animals and insects and have been consumed.

So, if you do find a shed antler, remember that it is someone else’s home or lunch or multi-vitamin and leave it where you found it.  Take away only pictures, keep only memories.

I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and my videos at BandanaMan Productions and don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube, and if you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.  I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.


Source

Angell, Chris; “One Moose’s Trash is Another Fly’s Treasure”, The Raven, Vol. 60, No. 2, July 1, 2019 [Queen’s Printer, Ontario, Canada, 2019]

Van Ballenberghe, Victor; “Rutting Behavior of Moose”, Series: Denali Fact Sheets: Biology, [National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, February 5, 2015], https://www.nps.gov/articles/aps-v5-i1-c7.htm, accessed 10/04/19


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