Showing posts with label Sahara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sahara. Show all posts
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Animal of the Day: Addax
The Addax (Addax nasomaculatus) sometime called
the screwhorn antelope, is a "Critically Endangered" member of the group of animals known collectively as the antelope. The addax is found in the Sahara desert. The Addax has been extirpated, or made regionally extinct, in the countries of Egypt, Algeria, Western Sahara, and Sudan. Nowadays, the Addax can only be naturally found in the countries of Chad, Niger, Mauritania, and has been reintroduced into Morocco and Tunisia. The Addax has earned its
"Critically Endangered" status due to the immense and very frequent
hunting of its horns, and is still often hunted on game reserves in the
United States. The meat and leather obtained from the Addax are also
highly prized. Their diet consists of primarily grass, as well as the
leaves of various shrubs. Rarely drinking, they instead gain most of
their moisture through the plants that they eat. The Addax is a slow
moving animal, leaving it vulnerable to attacks from cheetahs, leopards,
lions, African wild dogs, and humans. The calves can also be killed by
servals, caracals and hyenas.
There is also a Spanish motorsport team named the Barwa Addax Team, but I was unable to ascertain whether this team was named after the animal or not!
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Acrobatic Felines: The Serval
This birthday post goes out to Maiji Castro, happy birthday Maiji! If you have a birthday coming up, just email me the date at
cuyvaldar123946@gmail.com with the date and your favorite animal, and I
will do my best to get a post in!
So that tells us about the serval's phylogenetic position in the feline family tree, but what else do we know about this interesting creature? And how is it so acrobatic? Well, the serval, much like the caracal, is a jumper, perhaps not quite as high of a leaper, but nevertheless an amazingly nimble cat. It's incredible jumps are assisted by its long legs: in fact, the serval has, in relation to its body size, the longest legs of any feline. To see the incredible leaps of the serval, click on the link below!
A Pretty Awesome Serval Jump!
The serval is labeled "Least Concern" by the IUCN, and has a very wide distribution across the continent of Africa, excluding deserts (like the Sahara) and the equatorial jungles of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the neighboring countries. The serval once inhabited the countries of Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco, as well, but seems to have been extirpated (caused to go extinct in one country as opposed to extinct overall; a local extinction). It is also now found in Tunisia again, but was reintroduced there by humans.
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