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- Quagga - Wikipedia
The quagga ( ˈkwɑːxɑː or ˈkwæɡə ) [2][3] (Equus quagga quagga) is an extinct subspecies of the plains zebra that was endemic to South Africa until it was hunted to extinction in the late 19th century
- The Quagga Project : official website
Because of the confusion caused by the indiscriminate use of the term “Quagga” for any zebra, the true Quagga was hunted to extinction without this being realised until many years later The official website for the Quagga Project in South Africa
- Quagga | Definition, Facts, Extinction | Britannica
Quagga, subspecies of plains zebra (Equus quagga quagga) formerly found in vast herds on the great plains of South Africa but now extinct Quagga were reddish brown with dark brown stripes that faded behind the shoulder The last known surviving quagga died in the London Zoo in 1872
- Quaggas Went Extinct For A Truly Tragic Reason - Sciencing
The quagga (E q quagga), was a subspecies of plains zebra that once roamed the temperate grasslands of South Africa The local natives named the animal in imitation of its guttural call, and it would later be enshrined in the scientific name of all plains zebras
- Quagga: The Story Pics Of The Accidentally Extinct Zebra ️
What Is A Quagga? The quagga (Equus quagga quagga) is an extinct species of zebra with distinct markings – a yellowish-brown body colour with dark stripes on its head, neck, and shoulders only
- Quagga Animal Facts - Equus quagga quagga - A-Z Animals
The quagga is in the Class Mammalia, Order Perissodactyla, Family Equidae, Genus Equus, and species Equus quagga, which is the plains zebra It developed into a subspecies between 120,000 and 290,000 years ago
- Quagga were extinct for 100 years. Now they’re back | CNN
The quagga, a relative of the zebra, went extinct over 100 years ago Now, a group of scientists outside of Cape Town are bringing it back
- Quagga Facts - Fact Animal
The Quagga was a quirky subspecies of zebra from South Africa, once numbering in the tens of thousands, and rapidly hunted to extinction to make way for livestock grazing in the 1800s
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