A pronghorn is a herbivore
Oder der Pronghorn ist ein herbivore.
I think it is the Thomson's Gazelle, but I am not sure.
Nope - they are two entirely different animals. However, they do belong to the same family (Bovidae).
they can live to be 9 years in the wild and one in captivity was said to be 19 years old
An antelope is a herbivore and therefore has teeth similar to those of other herbivores. Its teeth are made for grinding rather than tearing.
The Addax have been hunted because their skin and meat are prized by natives, the former both for use as leather and merely as a trophy kill. They used to live throughout deserts (especially the Sahara) in Northern Africa in herds of 5-20, but now they exist only in herds of four in certain desert areas of Chad, Niger, Sudan, Mali, Libya, and Mauritania: I think under 500 exist in the wild as of now. They are still poached illegally, and use of modern weapons by those that hunt them have been a great cause of their population decline. There are other factors involved though; tourists have harrassed the Addax by doing things like chasing them in 4 wheel drives until they die of exhaustion. Also, recent droughts in the Sahara have deprived the Addax's habitat of the sparse vegetation it lives on.
Yes Africa has many types of antelope that will live in the savannah
The Monkeys, being high up will be able to see predators approaching and when they give their alarm calls for this, the antelopes have learned what this means so they too get an early warning.
· Egypt
· Equatorial Guinea
· Eritrea
· Ethiopia
The head and upper portion of the gnu looks similar to a buffalo or ox. The head looks too large, and heavy for the thin body. They have a mane and tail that looks like a horse, and they weigh around 500 pounds.
Antelope, caribou, chamois, chevrotain, dik-dik, elk, gazelle, gnu, impala, okapi, springbok, Thomson's gazelle- most likely gnu; a large antelope with a head resembling that of an ox, a short mane, a beard, downward curving horns, and a tufted tail. Native to Africa.
The Main Predators Of Springbok Are African Wild Dogs, Jackals, Cheetahs, Hyenas And Leopards.
Wildebeests are large powerful animals and are not timid.It has few enemies but the two it fears are formidable foe. Wildebeests are nomadic and follow the rains and subsequent pasture over great distances in vast herds.When Lions are hungry they will stalk these herds using the prides best hunters,usually female.Being opportunists they wait for the right time.As soon as a straggler on the edge of the herd is in the right place the lions will quickly get between it and the herd and the chase is on.As soon as one lion gets a grip on the rear end or even the tail ,It's all over.
When following the rains the Wildebeest herd must cross many rivers and it's here there numbers are again under attack. the African or Nile Crocodiles are waiting in large groups.If they want to eat, the Wildebeest has no choice but to go on.The croc's have a feeding frenzy, but because of the vast size of the herd the percentage taken is low.Life goes on.
Antelopes are herbivores, grass eaters, they need teeth to shear the grass, and to grind it up. Predators' teeth, carinvore (=meat eaters) teeth look quite different. Just look in the mouth of any cat or dog. It's the grabbing canines, and the shearing teeth. No grinders.
There is no such thing as a mammal bird. An animal is either a mammal or a bird, it cannot be both. Mammals have fur, give birth to live young and feed those young on milk. Birds have feathers and lay eggs. An impala is a type of deer, with fur and live young, so it's a mammal.
They are few and far between, I believe a predator would be stretched to find one. But if in the wild, in large enough numbers to be hunted by something besides paochers, I'd think lions, and other large cats, crocs., and hiena packs.
The bongo has stripes which is camoflauge. Camoflauge is an adaptation.