Seneca White Deer

World's largest herd of white deer populate a former U.S. Army depot

Category Fascinating Fauna

Image of Seneca White Deer located in Romulus, New York, US Image of Seneca White Deer located in Romulus, New York, US Image of Seneca White Deer located in Romulus, New York, US | White deer can be seen along with brown deer Image of Seneca White Deer located in Romulus, New York, US | White deer spotted beyond the security fencing
Fascinating Fauna http://atlasobscura.com/category/natural-wonders/fascinating-fauna

For years, rumors have circulated about the strange herd of white deer living in the former Seneca Army Depot in Seneca County, New York. Many people have speculated that the "albino" breed of deer were freak-accidents in an army experiment gone wrong. Others have attributed the animals' appearance to an underground supply of radioactive military weapons. Neither of these rumors, however, are true.

The white deer were first spotted around 1941, when the U.S. Army fenced off 24 square miles of land for the Seneca Army Depot, a munitions storage site. Under the protection of the security fencing, the deer population thrived -- and, along with it, a recessive-gene for white coloration. Though the animals appeared to be albino, they were in fact White-tailed deer who carried the recessive-gene for an all-white coat.

As the white deer population proliferated through the 1950s, the U.S. Army decided to protect the unique herd. Aiding in the process of artificial selection, a depot commander managed the brown deer population through hunting and forbade GI's from shooting any white deer. Since then, the white deer population has grown to approximately 300, making it the largest herd of white deer in the world.

The Seneca Army Depot was shut down in 2000 and has been closed to the public ever since. A non-profit group, Seneca White Deer, Inc., has been fighting to turn the area into a conservation park and Cold War museum. Until then, dozens of deer can still be visible from the highway, frolicking among the hundreds of abandoned bunkers.

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Comments

  • & Anonymous November 28, 2011
    These deer are gorgeous. I really hope the Non-profit succeeds in protecting them.
  • Dylan& Dylan September 21, 2010
    A great example of how a environmental pressure (the army shooting more of the brown deer than the white ones) can change an entire population over a relatively short period of time.
  • spinkk& spinkk September 20, 2010
    We stayed in an Army-run trailer park beside Seneca Lake on the Depot in 1996, when the base was under the command of nearby Fort Drum. At that time hunters could apply for a limited number of permits to shoot white deer on the base during New York State's deer season. Since Seneca Depot had been a storage site for nuclear warheads for the Pershing II missiles during the 1980's, it became a superfund cleanup site in the 1990's. Rumor had it that the white deer were a radiation-induced mutation, but the deer were observed in that area long before nuclear material was stored there.