http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2090818/how-deer-chinas-emperors-was-brought-back-dead
This April marks the start of the birthing season for the Milu deer, which has long been famed as having the head of a horse, the hooves of a cow, the tail of a donkey and the antlers of a deer. As the herds across China grow each spring, they mark a rare conservation success story in a country suffering from pollution and other environmental challenges.
“Our protection of the Milu is about protecting our living cultural heritage and natural heritage,” said Guo Geng, vice-director of the Beijing Milu Ecological Research Centre, where they expect about 30 fawns this year. Known as Pere David’s Deer in the West, the Milu’s significance to Chinese culture is embodied in its appearance in ancient Chinese poems and writings.
“But if, outside of books, they become extinct, then the next generation will be extremely regretful,” said Guo.
Today there are about 5,500 milu deer in China, with as many as 600 living in the wild in Hubei and Hunan provinces along the Yangtze River. How the species was spared from extinction is an unlikely tale spanning lifetimes and involving a French missionary, an English duke and a Slovak-born American zoologist.