Rusa Deer
Rusa timorensis
Rusa deer, often called Javan rusa, are medium to large tropical deer native to Java, Bali, Timor, and nearby Indonesian islands, with introduced populations in places such as New Guinea, Australia, New Caledonia, and Mauritius. Rusa timorensis has a rough gray-brown coat, large rounded ears, and relatively long legs; mature stags carry three-tined antlers and develop a heavier neck during the rut. They are adaptable grazers and browsers, using forest edges, grassland, plantations, and savanna-like habitat, which explains both their value as game animals and their impact where they have been released.
On farms, game ranches, and zoo paddocks, rusa deer need secure high fencing, dry resting areas, shade, clean water, and enough space to reduce fighting during the breeding season. Diets usually combine pasture or browse with hay and mineral supplementation when forage quality drops. Handlers treat adult stags with caution because antlers and rut behavior can be dangerous even in animals raised around people. In introduced ranges, management may involve licensed hunting, culling, or exclusion fencing to protect native vegetation and crops, so buyers and landowners need to understand local rules before moving animals.
Colors: Gray-Brown