About Rucervus eldii (M'Clelland, 1842)
Eld's deer (scientific name Rucervus eldii, sometimes referred to as Panolia eldii) is also commonly called thamin or brow-antlered deer. This is an endangered species of deer that is endemic to South Asia and Southeast Asia. Eld's deer lives in wetlands and marshlands, is active during the daytime, and its mating season runs from October through the end of December. Three subspecies of Eld's deer are currently recognized, and all three face threats from hunting and deforestation. Each of the three subspecies occupies a distinct habitat. The nominate subspecies R. e. eldii, found in Manipur, India, is tied to wetland environments, specifically the boggy marshland phumdis. It has hoof adaptations that let it move easily through this soft habitat. Compared to the other two subspecies, R. e. eldii lives in a significantly different ecosystem and has divergent physical characteristics. Like other deer in this species, its antlers are shed annually, and antlers grow to their largest size during the breeding season. R. e. thamin, found in Burma and Thailand, is not associated with wetlands. It lives in three forest types: indaing forest (dominated by Dipterocarpus tuberculatus, which corresponds to the deciduous dipterocarp forests of Indochina and Thailand; dipterocarp trees are part of the family Dipterocarpaceae, a group of resinous trees native to Old World tropics), dry deciduous thandahat forests, and mixed teak forests. R. e. siamensis, distributed across Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam, is also not associated with wetlands, and occurs in deciduous dipterocarp forests.