Gazelles
Of the antelope, 19 different species are in the Genus Gazella. They are herbivores, and are found in Africa and Southwest Asia. Powerful jumpers and very swift, they live in herds on grassy plains and in scrub country.
Asked in Gazelles
What does a gazelle eat?
Asked in Antelope, Gazelles
Do gazelle eat antelopes?
Asked in Gazelles
What do gazelles eat?
Asked in Land Mammals, Gazelles
What is a nagor?
Asked in Endangered, Vulnerable, and Threatened Species, Wolves, Gazelles
Why are Arabian wolves endangered?

Endangered species are commonly endangered because humans
destroy their homes (to expand cities, for the natural resources
there, etc.); because humans hunt, trap, kill, shoot, poisoned,
ecettera, animals; and so on and so forth.
Arabian wolves are endangered for the following reaons:
The climate of the desert force animals, and humans, to live
near permanant sources of water, which means they have an equal
chance of hunting and killing livestock than they do of killing
natural prey.
Rabies epidemic in that part of the world has wiped out many
Arabian wolves.
Interbreeding with feral dogs, which means that more and more
'Arabian wolves' are actually a mix of wolf and wild dog, which
means pure-blooded Arabian wolves will continually be rarer to
find. An example: pure-blooded Arabian wolves have yellow-gold
eyes, like most wolves, but many Arabian wolves are discovered with
brown eyes, a sign of interbreeding with wild dogs.
Unlike most wolf breeds, Arabian wolves don't have such a wide
range of livability, which means that they cannot live in much
different climate than what they do now. Which means, as hunters,
farmers, etc., kill the wolves, they can't move like other wolves
would have, because they would die because of the climate change as
they travelled. Which, thus, gives them a limited area to live in,
which humans are quickly pouring into.