Archeological studies indicate water deer were once distributed among much broader range than currently during the
Pleistocene and the
Holocene periods; records have been obtained from eastern
Tibet in the west,
Inner Mongolia and northeastern
China in the north, southeastern
Korean Peninsula (Holocene) and
Japanese archipelago (Pleistocene) in the east, southern China and northern
Vietnam in the south. Water deer also inhabited
Taiwan historically, however this population presumably became extinct as late as the early 19th century. Water deer are indigenous to the lower reaches of the
Yangtze River, coastal
Jiangsu province (
Yancheng Coastal Wetlands), and islands of
Zhejiang of east-central China, and in Korea, where the
demilitarized zone has provided a protected habitat for a large number. The Korean water deer (
H. i. argyropus) is one of the two subspecies of water deer. While the population of Chinese subspecies is critically endangered in China, the Korean subspecies is known to number 700,000 throughout South Korea. In China, water deer are found in
Zhoushan Islands in the
Zhejiang (600–800),
Jiangsu (500–1,000),
Hubei,
Henan,
Anhui (500),
Guangdong,
Fujian,
Poyang Lake in
Jiangxi (1,000),
Shanghai, and
Guangxi. They are now extinct in southern and western China. In Korea, water deer are found nationwide and are known as
gorani (고라니). Water deer inhabit the land alongside rivers, where they are protected from sight by the tall reeds and rushes. They are also seen on mountains,
swamps,
grasslands, and even open cultivated fields. Water deer are proficient swimmers, and can swim several miles to reach remote river islands. An introduced population of Chinese water deer exists in the
United Kingdom and another was extirpated from
France.
South Korea Despite a listing of "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature in South Korea, the animal is thriving because of the extinction of natural predators, such as
Korean tigers and
leopards. Since 1994, Korean water deer have been designated as "harmful wildlife", a term given by the
Ministry of Environment to wild creatures that can cause harm to humans or their property. Currently, certain local governments offer bounties from 30,000 to 50,000 won ($30 - 50) during the farming season. However, the hunting of water deer is not restricted to the warm season, as 18 hunting grounds were in operation in the winter of 2018.
Britain Chinese water deer were first introduced into
Great Britain in the 1870s. The animals were kept in the
London Zoo until 1896, when
the Duke of Bedford oversaw their transfer to
Woburn Abbey,
Bedfordshire. More of the animals were imported and added to the herd over the next three decades. In 1929 and 1930, 32 deer were transferred from Woburn to
Whipsnade, also in Bedfordshire, and released into the park. The current population of Chinese water deer at Whipsnade is estimated to be more than 600, while the population at Woburn is probably more than 250. The majority of the current population of Chinese water deer in Britain derives from escapees, with the remainder being descended from many deliberate releases. Most of these animals still reside close to Woburn Abbey. The deer's apparent strong preference for a particular habitat – tall reed and grass areas in rich alluvial deltas - has restricted its potential to colonize further afield. The main area of distribution is from Woburn east into
Cambridgeshire,
Norfolk,
Suffolk, and North
Essex, and south towards Whipsnade. Small colonies have been reported in other areas. The British Deer Society coordinated a survey of wild deer in the United Kingdom between 2005 and 2007 and identified the Chinese water deer as "notably increasing its range" since the previous census in 2000.
France A small population existed in France originating from animals that had escaped an enclosure in 1960 in western France (
Haute-Vienne, near
Poitiers). The population was reinforced in 1965 and 1970 and the species has been protected since 1973. Despite efforts to locate the animals with the help of local hunters, no sightings have occurred since 2000, and the population is assumed to be extinct.
Russia On April 1, 2019, a water deer was spotted using a
photo trap in the
"Land of the Leopard" national park in the
Khasan district of
Primorsky Krai, Russia, 4.5 km from the border with China. In 2022, the population of water deer in Primorsky Krai was about 170 individuals. Thus, the water deer became the newest, and 327th, mammal species to be listed among the
fauna of Russia. ==Morphology==