About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 60. Chapters: African buffalo, African bush elephant, Banded mongoose, Bat-eared fox, Black-footed cat, Blue duiker, Brown fur seal, Brown hyena, Burchell's zebra, Bushbuck, Cape fox, Chacma baboon, Chapman's zebra, Common duiker, Common eland, Gemsbok, Grant's golden mole, Greater kudu, Ground pangolin, Hartebeest, Kirk's dik-dik, Klipspringer, Lechwe, Marsh mongoose, Meerkat, Mountain zebra, Oribi, Roan antelope, Serval, Sitatunga, Southern reedbuck, Springbok, Steenbok, Warthog, Waterbuck, Yellow mongoose. Excerpt: The common eland (Taurotragus oryx), also known as the southern eland or eland antelope, is a savannah and plains antelope found in East and Southern Africa. It is a species of the family Bovidae and genus Taurotragus. It was first described by Peter Simon Pallas in 1766. An adult male is around 1.6 metres (5') tall at the shoulder (females are 20 centimetres (8") shorter) and weighs an average of 500-600 kilograms (1,100-1,300 lb, 340-445 kilograms (750-980 lb) for females). It is the second largest antelope in the world, being slightly smaller on average than the giant eland. Mainly a herbivore, its diet is primarily grasses and leaves. Common elands form herds of up to 500 animals, but are not territorial. The common eland prefers habitats with a wide variety of flowering plants such as savannah, woodlands, and open and montane grasslands; it avoids dense forests. It uses loud barks, visual and postural movements and the flehmen response to communicate and warn others of danger. The common eland provides leather and rich, nutritious milk, and has been domesticated in many areas. It is native to Botswana, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa, South Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe but is no longer...