NEWS & DOCUMENTARIES | IN WISCONSIN
In Wisconsin
 
White Deer
Thursday, January 7, 2010
 
Explore past videos by clicking on the movie camera icon on the video player.
WHITE DEER
IN WISCONSIN REPORTS
Some call them “the ghosts of the forests”. The animal in question is Wisconsin’s albino or “white” deer and they’ve become an internet and international sensation.  See how they arrived in our state and where they can be found. In Wisconsin Reporter Jo Garrett tracks down Jeff Richter a nature photographer from Mercer and noted Northwood’s naturalist John Bates, to find the answers to these questions.
White Deer
TRANSCRIPT

Patty Loew:
Last winter we brought you a report about Wisconsin's elusive white deer herd. It is still attracting millions of views on the internet so we thought it was worth another look. "In Wisconsin" reporter Jo Garrett shows you these ghosts of the forest near Boulder Junction.

Jeff Richter:
Visually they're so unusual and so startling. It looks like a ghost at times just kind of drifting through the woods.

Jo Garrett:
Jeff Richter is a nature photographer based in Mercer. Some ten years ago Richter took his camera and went to track down a mystery. Local stories of a band of white deer near Boulder Junction. He saw a flash of white.

Jeff Richter:
And so I stopped and got out of the car and had my cameras with me so I eased over there and all of a sudden the deer popped its head up and I looked eye-to-eye with this white deer and was just instantly hooked by them.

Jo Garrett:
So began a decade-long quest that has resulted in Richter's recent book, “White Deer.”

John Bates:
Our headlights flash onto a white doe standing right by the road. We were going slow anyway but oh, the intake of breath and oh my gosh.

Jo Garrett:
John Bates of Manitowish is a well-known Northwoods naturalist and the author of the text of Richter's book. He researched the science and history of these deer in Wisconsin. He discovered that they seem to have been here for ages. They're the subject of Native American legends and they are mentioned in the journals of European explorers.

John Bates:
There is a pocket here in this area and there are individuals around the state. There seems to be an unusual concentration here in north central Wisconsin. Why, I have absolutely no idea.

Jo Garrett:
Why the white deer came to flourish in these places no one knows. But there are at least two reasons why they're thriving now.

John Bates:
Local people protect these deer and feed these deer and we have laws now that prevent people, at least it costs you dearly if you wish to shoot one in Wisconsin, you'll pay.

Jo Garrett:
They're protected by state law and cherished by the local communities. And yes, they really are albino. Pink eyes are not required according to Bates' research. I've always been told that albino deer had to have pink eyes so I eventually contacted a professor of genetic studies at the University of Minnesota who tried his best to educate me and the bottom line is he said there are many forms of albinism and pink eyes are a strong likelihood but not a necessity.

Jo Garrett:
So what will you see in Wisconsin's white deer?

John Bates:
Pink ears. Their noses will be pink and the eye of an albino deer will be either pink or light blue or gray. The eyes almost look like eyes of a goat. Very different looking so you would have this brilliant white animal with these pink characteristics, ears, nose and hooves.

Jo Garrett:
So how many of these white deer do we have in Wisconsin?

John Bates:
If we ran the numbers, we have 1.5 million more or less deer and if we have a one in 20,000 chance of having albinos, 20,000 in the 1.5 million -- where is my calculator? I don't know. It's not a very big number.

Jo Garrett:
That rough number, that roll of the genetic dice, doesn't say how many animals will actually survive. Bates, the naturalist, speculates.

John Bates:
In the summer they'll be far more obvious to a natural predator, but during the winter they would have the advantage. Five months versus seven months, maybe it's a tradeoff.

Jo Garrett:
You can see that roll of the genetic dice played out in individual families.

Jeff Richter:
I've seen albino does with both brown and white fawns and brown does with albino and brown fawns as well, so they can have both. They seem to not be ostracized from the other deer. At times they seem to be the dominant animal and other times they seem to be a more submissive animal. They just seem to be regular deer as far as the deer are concerned.

Jo Garrett:
Regular in behavior. Remarkable in appearance.

Jeff Richter:
We actually have had a couple of stories where clerks overheard people had picked up the book and looking at it and said boy, this is really neat. If only they were real.

Jo Garrett:
Oh, they're real all right.

Jeff Richter:
They just at times look kind of funny out there, honestly, particularly like summertime where they are sort of sneaking around in the woods and you can see them 100 yards away. They stick out like a sore thumb and doing their usual kind of deer sneaking and it is kind of, you chuckle to yourself. But there is something, just a little different about them and special about them.

Patty Loew:
Photographer Jeff Richter's pictures are featured in his book, "White Deer, Ghosts of the Forest." So far more than 14 million people have viewed our white deer video online.

 
RELATED LINKS
 
FUNDING FOR IN WISCONSIN IS PROVIDED IN PART BY
Alliant Energy
Animal Dentistry

Donate to WPT
PBS Kids Go!




PARTNERS

PBS Wisconsin Public Radio UW Extension Educational Communications Boards