Geography, asked by ahsanmalik364, 8 months ago

What is Musk deer hunted for?

Answers

Answered by Thegreatarsh
2

Musk deer can refer to any one, or all seven, of the species that make up Moschus, the only extant genus of the family Moschidae.[1] The musk deer family differs from cervids, or true deer, by lacking antlers and facial glands and by possessing only a single pair of teats, a gallbladder, a caudal gland, a pair of tusk-like teeth and—of particular economic importance to humans—a musk gland.

Musk deer live mainly in forested and alpine scrub habitats in the mountains of southern Asia, notably the Himalayas. Moschids, the proper term when referring to this type of deer rather than one/multiple species of musk deer, are entirely Asian in their present distribution, being extinct in Europe where the earliest musk deer are known to have existed from Oligocene deposits.

Musk deer resemble small deer with a stocky build, and hind legs longer than their front legs. They are about 80 to 100 cm (31 to 39 in) long, 50 to 70 cm (20 to 28 in) high at the shoulder, and weigh between 7 and 17 kg (15 and 37 lb). The feet of musk deer are adapted for climbing in rough terrain. Like the Chinese water deer, a cervid, they have no antlers, but the males do have enlarged upper canines, forming sabre-like tusks. The dental formula is similar to that of true deer: 0.1.3.33.1.3.3

The musk gland is found only in adult males. It lies in a sac located between the genitals and the umbilicus, and its secretions are most likely used to attract mates.

Musk deer are herbivores, living in hilly, forested environments, generally far from human habitation. Like true deer, they eat mainly leaves, flowers, and grasses, with some mosses and lichens. They are solitary animals and maintain well-defined territories, which they scent mark with their caudal glands. Musk deer are generally shy, and either nocturnal, or crepuscular.

Males leave their territories during the rutting season, and compete for mates, using their tusks as weapons. Female musk deer give birth to a single fawn after about 150–180 days. The newborn young are very small, and essentially motionless for the first month of their lives, a feature that helps them remain hidden from predators.[2]

Musk deer have been hunted for their scent glands, which are commonly used in perfumes. The glands can fetch up to $45,000/kg on the black market. It is rumored that ancient royalty wore the scent of the musk deer and that it is an aphrodisiac.[3]

Musk deer may be a surviving representative of the Palaeomerycidae, a family of ruminants that is probably ancestral to deer.[citation needed] They originated in the early Oligocene epoch and disappeared in the Pliocene.[citation needed] Most species lacked antlers, though some were found in later species. The musk deer are, however, still placed in a separate family.

TaxonomyEdit

While they have been traditionally classified as members of the deer family (as the subfamily "Moschinae") and all the species were classified as one species (under Moschus moschiferus), recent studies have indicated that moschids are more closely related to bovids (antelope, goat-antelope and wild cattle).[4] The following taxonomy is after Prothero (2007)[5]

Moschidae

Hydropotopsis

Hydropotopsis lemanensis

Hispanomeryx

Hispanomeryx aragonensis

Hispanomeryx daamsi

Hispanomeryx duriensis

Hispanomeryx andrewsi

Oriomeryx

Oriomeryx major

Oriomeryx willii

Friburgomeryx

Friburgomeryx wallenriedensis

Bedenomeryx

Bedenomeryx truyolsi

Bedenomeryx milloquensis

Bedenomeryx paulhiacensis

Dremotheriinae

Pomelomeryx

Pomelomeryx boulangeri

Pomelomeryx gracilis

Dremotherium

Dremotherium cetinensis

Dremotherium guthi

Dremotherium quercyi

Dremotherium feignouxi

Blastomerycinae

Pseudoblastomeryx

Pseudoblastomeryx advena

Machaeromeryx

Machaeromeryx tragulus

Longirostromeryx

Longirostromeryx clarendonensis

Longirostromeryx wellsi

Problastomeryx

Problastomeryx primus

Parablastomeryx

Parablastomeryx floridanus

Parablastomeryx gregorii

Blastomeryx

Blastomeryx gemmifer

Moschinae

Micromeryx

Micromeryx styriacus

Micromeryx flourensianus

Micromeryx? eiselei - this species is a proposed member of genus Micromeryx[6]

Moschus

Moschus moschiferus

Moschus anhuiensis

Moschus berezovskii

Moschus fuscus

Moschus chrysogaster

Moschus cupreus

Moschus leucogaster

Answered by syedaliya813
1

MUSK DEER IS HUNTED to make perfumes. The glands can fetch up to $45,ooo/kg on the black market.

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