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Giant Sable Antelope - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Giant Sable Antelope

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Giant Sable Antelope

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Subfamily: Hippotraginae
Genus: Hippotragus
Species: H. niger
Subspecies: H. n. variani
Trinomial name
Hippotragus niger variani
(Varian, 1916)

The Giant Sable Antelope, Hippotragus niger variani, also known in Portuguese as the Palanca Negra, is a large, rare subspecies of Sable Antelope native and endemic to the region between Cuango and Luando Rivers in Angola.

They had been thought extinct due to the years of internal civil war within the country until the recent documented sighting of a herd of these large antelopes by Professor Wouter van Hoven of South Africa in 2002.

The Giant Sable Antelope is held in a great deal of respect by the country and people of Angola. This may be the sole reason they survived the long civil war. In African mythology, just like other antelopes, they symbolize the vivacity, the velocity, the beauty and the visual sharpness

The Giant Sable Antelope is evaluated as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

Contents

[edit] Description

Stuffed specimen in the Natural History Museum, London.
Stuffed specimen in the Natural History Museum, London.

Both sexes have horns, which can reach 1,5 meters. Males and females are strikingly similar in appearance until they reach three years of age when the males become darker and develop majestic horns. The male antelope weighs an average of 238 kg with a height of 116-142 cm. Females weigh 220 kg and are slightly shorter than males. The horns are massive and more curved in males reaching lengths of 81-165 cm, while females' horns are only 61-102 cm in length. Coloration in bulls is black while females and young are chestnut, except in southern populations where females turn brown-black. Most sable antelopes have white "eyebrows", a rostrum sectioned into cheek stripes, white belly and rump patch. Young under two months typically are light brown and have slight markings.

[edit] Personality

Like all antelopes they are shy by nature, but they can also be very aggressive. The males can be especially dangerous when hurt, attacked, or approached. In the fights, males avoid some serious injuries by kneeling down on their front legs, and engage in horn wrestling fights. Fatalities from these fights are rare.

[edit] Habitat

They live in forests near the water, where leaves and tree sprouts are always juicy and abundant. It is an endangered species, so it is protected in natural parks, and hunting it is, therefore, forbidden. Typically, sable antelopes are specialized grazers feeding on foliage and herbs, especially those growing on termite mounds. One of the reasons for the declining in antelope numbers could be their very specific feeding pattern. Typically they will feed on tree leaves, which make up to 90 percent of their diet, at heights of 40-140 mm from the ground, taking only the leaf.

[edit] Ecology and Behavior

Juvenile Giant Sables are hunted by leopards and hyenas, while adults are only threatened by lions.[1] When startled, the antelope normally run for only a short distance before slowing and looking back; however, when they are pursued, they can run at speeds of up to 35 mph for a considerable distance.[1]

[edit] Relationship with humans

The Giant Sable is a national symbol of Angola and is portrayed on numerous stamps, banknotes, and even passports of the nation.[1] The Angolan National Football Team is fondly known as the Palancas Negras in honor of the antelope.[1] UNITA used the Giant Sable as its symbol.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Ellis, Richard (2004). No Turning Back: The Life and Death of Animal Species. New York: Harper Perrenial, 139. ISBN 0-06-055804-0. 
  • Antelope Specialist Group (1996). Hippotragus niger ssp. variani. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 23 November 2006. Database entry includes a brief justification of why this species is critically endangered and the criteria used
  • Walker, John Frederick. A Certain Curve of Horn: The Hundred-Year Quest for the Giant Sable Antelope of Angola. Atlantic Monthly Press. 2002.

[edit] External links

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