By: Mary Esch The Associated Press
ROMULUS, N.Y.—Hundreds of ghostly white deer
roaming among overgrown munitions bunkers at a sprawling former Army
weapons depot face an uncertain future after living and breeding largely
undisturbed since the middle of last century.
The white deer — a genetic quirk that
developed naturally on the 7,000-acre (2,800-hectare), fenced-in expanse
— have thrived, even as the depot itself has transitioned from one of
the most important Cold War storehouses of bombs and ammunition to a
decommissioned relic.
Now, as local officials seek to put the old
Seneca Army Depot up for bids next month, there is concern that the sale
could also mean the end of the line for the unusual white deer. A group
of residents dedicated to saving the animals has proposed turning the
old depot into a world-class tourist attraction to show off both its
rich military history and its unusual wildlife. The Nature Conservancy
also is looking at options for preserving the largely undeveloped
landscape.
“When we ran bus tours on a limited basis
between 2006 and 2012, we had people come from all over the United
States to see the deer,” said Dennis Money of Seneca White Deer Inc.
“People are enchanted by them.”
The white deer owe their continued existence
to 39 kilometres of rusting chain-link perimeter fencing that went up
when the depot was built in 1941, capturing several dozen wild
white-tailed deer in the area’s extensive woodlands. The white deer are
natural genetic variants of the normal brown ones. They’re not albinos,
which lack all pigment, but are leucistic, lacking pigment only in their
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