SAMBAR SAND-PITS OR PLAYGROUNDS?

The ‘sand wallow’: described in 2019 was around 30 metres long by 10 metres wide and ran across a gentle slope. The sand was churned up by deer tracks. Photo by Contributed

FEATURE Ken Slee

Back in October 2019 I had a story published in this magazine that described what appeared to be sambar wallows, yet they weren’t your typical muddy wallows, but rather large patches of dry white sand covered in deer tracks and beds and surrounded by rubs and preaching trees.

In the absence of any evidence as to how they were created and used by the deer, the best suggestion was that they were just rather unusual sambar wallows. But if scent transfer by stags was a key aspect of wallowing behaviour, creating a ‘wallow’ on dry sand rather than in mud made little sense – it seemed that there could be more to the story.

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