Born about a week and a half ago at Deer Tracks Junction farm in Cedar
Springs, Michigan, a fawn named Dragon was unique from the start. His
birth mother, "Bunny" is a special type of whitetail deer known as the
Piebald, which carries a genetic defect causing it to have large areas
of white in its coat.
The defect reportedly occurs in less than 1 percent of the whitetail deer population.
Dragon was rejected by his mother after birth, likely by natural instinct because he looks different than other fawns. His white coloring would cause him to stand out rather than blend in when trying to hide in nature, Hilary Powell says. Dragon spent his first few few nights inside Powell's home being bottle-fed before graduating to his own small pen in her yard. Powell still handles his feedings. Later this summer, as he grows and becomes stable, he'll join the other deer in a large fenced-in pasture area. This could happen as early as July, Powell said.
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