Flora:
The Black Bear native to the deciduous forest can run up to 25 miles per hour and is 220 to around 600 pounds. They are around 5-6 feet long. Their coat is black and heavy to be well adapted to the cold. They live up to twenty-five years but are frequently hunted by humans for their coat or meat.
The White-Tailed Deer males weighs up to 400 pounds and females weight 70 to 200 pounds. Male white-tailed deer have antlers which they shed from January to march. They are most active at night and eat plants and nuts. White-tailed deer live around ten years, and around twenty when kept in captivity.
The Rabbit species native to the deciduous forest is about 20 to 25 centimeters in length and live about 9 to 12 years in groups called warrens. They have powerful hind legs and large, ten centimeter ears to detect and escape from predators. Rabbits live in meadows, woods, grasslands, dessert and wetlands as well as the deciduous forest.