Black-tailed deer
| Black-tailed deer | |
|---|---|
| Young male black-tailed deer (Olympic National Park) | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota | 
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Chordata | 
| Class: | Mammalia | 
| Order: | Artiodactyla | 
| Family: | Cervidae | 
| Subfamily: | Capreolinae | 
| Genus: | Odocoileus | 
| Species: | |
| Subspecies: | O. h. columbianus  | 
| Trinomial name | |
| Odocoileus hemionus columbianus (Richardson, 1829)  | |
Black-tailed deer or blacktail deer occupy coastal regions of western North America. There are two subspecies, the Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) which ranges from the Pacific Northwest of the United States and coastal British Columbia in Canada to Santa Barbara County in Southern California, and a second subspecies known as the Sitka deer (O. h. sitkensis) which is geographically disjunct occupying from mid-coastal British Columbia up through southeast Alaska, and southcentral Alaska (as far as Kodiak Island). The black-tailed deer subspecies are about half the size of the mainland mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus hemionus) subspecies, the latter ranging further east in the western United States.