Arabian tahr, Arabian leopard ,sand gazelle,spiny-tailed lizard,Arabian mountain gazelle
The answer is Tahr Tahrs are three species of large ungulates closely related to the wild goat. The Himalayan Tahr is one of three species of tahr. The others are the Arabian Tahr of Oman and the Nilgiri Tahr of southern India. Up until recently the three species were believed to be closely related to each other and were placed in one genus, Hemitragus. Molecular genetic studies have proved that the tahrs are not genetically related as thought earlier. Now they are considered as three separate genera; Hemitragus (Himalayan Tahr), Nilgiritragus (Nilgiri Tahr) and Arabitragus (Arabian Tahr). The Himalayan Tahr (Hermitragus jemlahicus) is found in the Southern Alps of New Zealand where it is hunted recreationally.[1] A small population was also released on Table Mountain in South Africa, but they were later determined to be a 'pest' animal by authorities, and most were exterminated (although some rare sightings still occur).
Arabian Oryx The Sand Gazelle Arabian Mountain Gazelle Arabian Tahr Hare Arabian Wolf Striped Hyaena Arabian Red Fox Blandford's Fox Sand Fox or Rueppell's Fox Arabian Leopard Caracal Arabian Wildcat Sand Cat Hedgehogs Bats Lesser Jerboa Cheesman's Gerbil Baluchistan Gerbil Jirds Egyptian Spiny Mouse
Yes, the dromedary, a type of African camel, is an endangered species.
The area of the Arabian Peninsula is 3 200 000 km2.
Tahr http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tahr
If you go on a dictionary, for the pronunciation, it says (gi-tahr). TAHR is the accented syllable.
The Arabian Desert has an area of 2,330,000 square kilometers (900,000 square miles).
grass
A normal Arabian will run 13.2 hands to 16.2 hands with occassional individual sabove and below this size
Leopards and snow leopards
ibex