User:Common Zebra

Infomation about Zoo Animals

Common Zebra Facts:

Name: Common Zebra (Equus burchelli) Family: Equidae (Horses) Range: East, south, southwest Africa Habitat: Grassland, savanna, and aridland Diet: Mostly grasses, but also herbs, leaves, buds and twigs Head and Body Length: 6.5 to 8 feet (2 to 2.5 m) Tail Length: 18.5 to 22 inches (47 to 56 cm) Shoulder Height: 3 to 5 feet (1 to 1.5 m) Weight: 385 to 850 pounds (175 to 385 kg) Life Cycle: Mating throughout year, peaks during wet season October to March; gestation 360 to 390 days, one foal born Description: Black-and-white stripes; stripes are narrow, but broaden across rump; deep chest; long-haired tail

Common zebra Info:

They all graze in large herds on tall grasses. (Gnus often follow them and feed on grasses of medium height, and the gnus in turn are succeeded by gazelles, which graze on short grasses.)

Some zebra herds number in the tens of thousands, but within these larger herds are distinct family groups composed of a male, several females, and their young.

It has often been suggested that the stripes of zebras serve as camouflage in tall grasses. But the fact that they make no attempt to hide and freeze when a predator is seen — indeed, they become noisy and active — seems to contradict this.

Thomson's Gazelle Facts:

Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Artiodactyla Family: Bovidae Genus: Gazella Species: G. thomsoni Thomson's Gazzle's Info:

Female Thomson's gazelles give birth to single fawns after a 5-6 month gestational period. They are unusual among other ungulates in that they can give birth twice yearly, rather than just once.