Breeding :
Young fallow start breeding when they are about 18 months old. The mating season, or rut, starts in late September and peaks in mid October. Usually, the doe gives birth to a single fawn between late May - mid June. The fawn is weaned by October.
Development :
Both sexes live in single sex groups for most of the year, only getting together at the time of the rut. Young bucks will stay with the doe herds until they are 18 months old, when they leave to join the buck herds.
Diet :
Fallow deer are herbivores and graze all types of ground vegetation. They also browse shrub layers in a wood, and the growing shoots and leaves of holly and beech trees. Fallow deer inhabit woodland both for food and shelter, but they like to feed in arable fields on root crops such as carrots, sugar beet, parsnips or potatoes.
Identification
There are different varieties of fallow deer in Britain. The most common has a white spotted chestnut coat, with a white rump patch and a fairly long tail. There are also melanistic (sooty charcoal black – no spots ), Menil (pale brown grey – no spots) and in Sussex approx 1 in 20 is white (resembling a large goat).A mature buck has a very prominent Adam's apple and a very obvious brush of hair under its belly.

Bucks (Males) :
85-90kg
Does (Females) :
50-60kg
Height :
about 1 m at the shoulder
Lifespan :
14 - 15 years in the wild