Suede is a national protected animal.
Muntjac, also known as the red muntjac, is a second-class protected animal, belonging to the deer family, thin legs and strong, good at jumping, commonly known as "muntjac", because of its timid nature, the southern coastal area is also known as the "yellow scare".
Suede is a typical tropical and subtropical forest or forest edge scrub species, mainly inhabiting the tropical rainforests, monsoon rainforests, subtropical broad-leaved evergreen forests, mixed coniferous and broad forests, and alpine wet dark coniferous forests. Mainly nocturnal, often alone, preferring to nibble grass in the forest edge grassy slopes, but also in the sparse forest to eat fresh leaves. Usually give birth in May to July, gestation period of 5 to 6 months, 1 litter per year, 3 to 5 litters per litter.
Muntjac's appearance characteristics:
Muntjac is a small and medium-sized deer, the maximum weight of not more than 35 kilograms, males have horns, females have no horns, only in the corresponding parts of the slight protuberance. Suede horns of the horn base is quite long, outside the fur package. The tip of the horn curves inward and downward, and is basically not forked.
Adult males have not been reported to shed their horns after growing them. There are frontal glands (except in the black muntjac) and infraorbital glands, but no metatarsal glands. The head coat is short and fine, the tear sockets are quite large, and the frontal bone is elevated on both edges to form a bony ridge that extends backward to the base of the horn. The male's maxillary canines are fang-like.