White Deer: Understanding a Common Animal of Uncommon Color

For millennia, people have regarded white deer with a mix of reverence, superstition and scientific misinformation. And it continues to this day. What's the real story of these ghost-like animals?

You’re driving through your neighborhood and see the usual suburban white-tailed deer in a vacant field. You’ve been seeing these deer a lot more lately, so you hardly take notice. Then a flash of white catches your eye. A white deer.

You pull over to look at this striking, beautiful animal. It seems precious, rare. But what exactly is it?

It turns out people have been captivated by white deer for centuries, and perhaps millennia. The ghost-like appearance of these animals has attracted myth, superstition and rampant scientific misinformation for an equally long period of time.

That misinformation continues to this day. And it stands to reason that, with whitetails becoming more abundant near population centers, more people will be sharing their own tales of these unusual creatures.

Here’s the real story of the white deer.

The White Deer of Story

As a young boy, one of my earliest memories is visiting my grandparents’ home and waiting for my grandfather to return from an afternoon of hunting the nearby woods. The stories he told helped instill my lifelong love of field sports and wildlife.

One morning, he came in from a squirrel hunt with a big smile on his face. “No one is going to believe this,” he began. “But I saw something I’ve never seen today.”

He was sitting against an oak tree waiting for squirrels when a flash of white caught his eye. He looked to see a large, “albino” buck approaching him. The deer sniffed, catching his scent – but it didn’t flee. Instead, it trotted towards him, stopping just a few feet away. He stuck out his hand and the deer allowed him to scratch its forehead.

For several years, stories of this deer roaming around the woods of Snydertown, Pennsylvania were common. As a boy, I imagined encountering this mysterious beast. But decades later, with countless time spent observing and hunting deer, I have yet to see a white deer in the wild. But I still hear the stories, many of them strange or even mythical.

White deer are real, but they may not be what you think.

Albino, Leucistic or Piebald?

Most people, like my grandfather, refer to white deer as “albinos.” While deer can be albinos, it’s exceedingly rare.

Albinism is a congenital condition defined by the absence of pigment, resulting in an all-white appearance and pink eyes. Many plant and animal species exhibit albinism (including humans). It’s difficult to accurately determine how frequently this condition exists in wild animals, because albino animals tend not to survive long. They have poor eyesight and are conspicuous, making them easy prey. Research suggests that albino alligators, for instance, survive on average less than 24 hours after hatching.

Leucistic squirrel. Photo © Conrad Kuiper / Flickr through a Creative Commons license
Leucistic squirrel. Photo © Conrad Kuiper / Flickr through a Creative Commons license

The same undoubtedly holds true for deer, and in fact true albino deer are rarely reported. Instead, most white deer exhibit a condition commonly known as leucism, a recessive genetic trait found in about one percent of all white-tails. As with albinism, leucism can be found in nearly all mammals.

Leucistic animals lack pigment over all or part of their bodies Leucistic deer can be varying levels of white – some contain white splotches, some are half brown and half white, some appear nearly all white. Mixed brown and white animals are often known as piebald deer. (Confusingly, many deer biologists and hunters use “piebald” to describe all leucistic deer).

The nose is black, as in a “normal” deer, and eyesight is not usually affected.

Many other animals exhibit leucism. Birders often report seeing unusual white birds (rendering field guides nearly incomprehensible). White squirrels have become famous tourist attractions in several U.S. towns.

Leucistic deer generally can survive longer than albino deer. Still, they are not very well camouflaged in the forest, making them stand out to predators. In a habitat with its large predators still present, a leucistic deer’s chances of survival are slim.

As wildlife photographer and deer expert Leonard Lee Rue III notes in his recent book Whitetail Savvy (a must-read for deer nerds), “Many piebald deer also exhibit hunched backs, bowed legs, and short, rounded noses.”

Piebald whitetail deer. By U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Piebald whitetail deer. By U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Today, human hunters are the most common large predator over much of the white-tailed deer’s range. Humans bring their own selection pressures to hunting, and they’re quite different from those of wolves or mountain lions.

I’d guess that, because of that, you’re more likely to see a white deer today than at any point in the whitetail’s history.

The Curse of the White Deer

Imagine a Pleistocene hunter peering over a hill to see a white deer – something the hunter would undoubtedly never have seen before. What is this animal? It looks other-worldly: an apparition.

It is easy to see how such an animal might be viewed as sacred and off limits. That belief has informed hunting habits and even regulations to this day.

One of the most persistent legends is that a hunter killing a white deer will experience a long run of bad luck, perhaps never bagging another deer. This idea seems almost universal among hunting cultures. Hunting writer Peter Flack notes in his book Kudu that hunters across Africa believe misfortune (sometimes including death) will befall any hunter who kills a white antelope.

A piebald deer at the Seneca Army Depot in New York. Photo © blmiers2 / Flickr through a Creative Commons license
A piebald deer at the Seneca Army Depot in New York. Photo © blmiers2 / Flickr through a Creative Commons license

When game regulations were comprehensively enforced in North America in the early 1900s, conservationists believed that rare wildlife needed to be protected. White deer qualified as rare, so many state game departments prohibited hunters from killing them. This regulation remains in effect in at least three states and parts of two others.

The most interesting example of white deer protection is Seneca Army Depot in New York. The military installation was surrounded by a fence in 1941, essentially creating a 10,600-acre deer preserve.

The white-tailed deer proliferated and GI’s began hunting them. The hunters began noticing a few white deer around (which were leucistic, not albino). In 1951, the depot commander established a rule protecting these white deer from hunting.

A fenced reserve protecting the animals from predators, hunters targeting brown deer and inbreeding associated with an isolated population allowed this genetic condition to proliferate. Today, an estimated 200-300 of the 800 whitetails on the property are leucistic. It’s likely the largest concentration of these deer to ever exist.

The depot is closed and the future of the property – which has high development value – is uncertain. What will happen to the white deer if and when the fences come down? As has been the case throughout history, many people desperately want to save these deer, recognizing in them rarity that should be protected. The property actually is quite important to wildlife (and people) well beyond the white deer, too — The Nature Conservancy in fact is exploring options for protecting this place with other groups and stakeholders. From conservation values to community impact, tourism, and economic development, there is much to consider. The Nature Conservancy’s goal is to bring science to this conversation and consider the ways this land could best benefit nature and people in the years ahead.

White deer and
White deer and “normal” colored white-tail deer at the Seneca Army Depot in New York. Photo © Devin Kennedy / Flickr through a Creative Commons license

It seems that hunters in many parts of the country no longer have the cultural or legal prohibitions against shooting white deer. Many hunters find them interesting trophies. But society at large feels differently.

Hunters who kill albino and leucistic deer often find themselves the targets of internet outrage and even death threats. A hunter bagging a leucistic moose set off a firestorm of social media hate. Message boards fill with comments like “What kind of sick person kills such a rare animal?”

Many white deer protectors use the language of conservation: they see a rarity that should be protected, much as we would protect a California condor or black-footed ferret. Something so rare should never be killed by humans.

Let’s be clear, here. A leucistic or piebald white-tailed deer is a genetic anomaly. It would always be susceptible to predators, whether or not it was pursued by humans. The Seneca Army Depot is known for the white deer but there are actually many other reasons to protect it. These deer may indeed have cultural and historical value to humans, but let’s not confuse them with endangered species.

I too have been fascinated by these deer since hearing those stories by my grandpa. A white deer intrigues me as a student of deer. They’re fascinating to observe and ponder. But, in this era of over-abundant whitetails – when we desperately need scientific management to protect our forests and biodiversity – we must move beyond the idea of the white deer as a sacred beast.

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151 comments

  1. John S Mishasek says:

    My wife and I moved to Whidbey Island in the Puget Sound region. Piebald and leucistic fawns show up on our property every other years so far. Some of the does will have multiple fawns with one being standard color and the other leucistic. Last year two does had triplets with one leucistic fawn in the mix of six that slowly grazed the empty lot next to our home. Still have a cell phone photo of that mini-herd.
    The small community of 1,800 or so people that is about a mile away from our house has quite a few deer ambling across streets and stopping traffic (willingly). And the leucistic fawns and yearlings collect a crowd (herd?) of cars stopping to take cell phone photos. Wildlife on Whidbey is amazing.

  2. Gordon Clark says:

    At About 16:30 on March 30, 2022, my daughter Nancy and I, observed a white deer, at the below location. Likely a piebald, it seemed to have some brown on the head. We couldn’t tell if it was a buck or a doe as it was about 300 metres from us at the time of sighting.

    By the time we stopped and I got my camera ready, it and 5 other deer, went into the bush, but I expect there may be more chances as this is local to our home. This is in the Rockburn, Québec area.

    Gordon Clark

    Gord in Rockburn QC

    1. Hi Gordon,
      Thanks for reporting your sighting. It sounds like a great sighting. I have removed the GPS coordinates before posting your comment, as the exact location could be used by poachers or others. It is generally not a good idea to list exact locations of wildlife online.

      Best,
      Matt

  3. Jennifer Darter says:

    Me and my husband this evening just saw a white deer pink nose on our way to my mothers house… We live in southern il on outskirts of Carbondale il..it was beautiful..it was only about 4ft away from…never saw one until now.. Im 43..

  4. Marietta Butkus says:

    Have some pinebalds on my street we’ve been here 41 years and never seen one. We live in northern Conn. Yes, protect them!

  5. Linda Durham says:

    We live in northern Greenville county in SC. My husband has spotted a white deer several times in our area. He took a picture of it. It is truly a beautiful creature of God. I hope to see it myself someday.

  6. Curtis Cornett says:

    To think the white tails or full white bucks should be hunted and not reverend for their beauty is pure ignorance just humans destroying something else in this world because really all you care about is taking the land even if it means killing them all it’s people like you that are the real evil !!

  7. theresa Brown says:

    Hi my name is Teresa I was driving to get my granddaughter from work one morning and these deer came out on me and all of a sudden one white one never seen that in my whole life it was the most beautiful thing in the world.

  8. Linda Kennedy says:

    I saw a piebald buck today he was beautiful all my years of hunting and living in the boondocks sure hope nobody kills him this year

  9. L. Ober says:

    I’m from PA retired AF and have lived all over the US & hunted wherever I lived. When I turned 12 & got my 1st shotgun, I hunted deer all over the county & farms where I lived and never have seen a white or spotted deer. The story of the “piebal” was extremely interesting. I’ll sure be looking for one now!

  10. Jim Houston says:

    A white or almost totally white deer was in the area I hunt in. It was distinctive insofar as it was normal coloured on its right front quarter. One of the resident of the area first saw it as a fawn and it frequently fed in the field beside his house. She had at least one fawn every year. Her last year she appeared in this field one spring would lie down for a while get up move a few feet and lie down again, finally ahe made it back to the bush and was not seen again. the neighbour measured her age by the fact the year he first saw her was also the year one of the otherneighbours grand sons was born that year. When she disappeared/died it was her 18th year. Yes eighteen! She was larger than a normal coloured deer, I do have a picture of her with a normal deer. Usually in the fall during deer season she would be accompanied by any where up to 7 other does.