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- Saiga antelope - Wikipedia
During the Pleistocene, it ranged across the mammoth steppe from the British Isles to Beringia Today, the dominant subspecies (S t tatarica) only occurs in Kalmykia and Astrakhan Oblast of Russia and in the Ural Mountains, Ustyurt Plateau and Betpak-Dala regions of Kazakhstan
- Saiga | Antelope, Description, Habitat, Facts | Britannica
Saiga, medium-sized hoofed mammal of the family Bovidae (order Artiodactyla) that lives in herds in treeless steppe country It is found in southwestern Russia, Kazakhstan, and Mongolia
- Saiga - San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
Saiga migrate long distances, walking with their heads pointing to the ground A single male takes charge of leading a harem of 30 to 50 females, which he has earned after a fierce confrontation with another horned male during the mating season
- Saiga Antelope: A Conservation Success Story - U. S. Fish Wildlife Service
In a rare and remarkable conservation success, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has reclassified the saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica) from critically endangered to near threatened on its Red List, signifying a substantial global recovery for the species
- Saiga Antelope - Facts, Diet, Habitat Pictures on Animalia. bio
The Saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica) is a critically endangered antelope that during antiquity inhabited a vast area of the Eurasian steppe During the Pleistocene, they also occurred in Beringian North America and the British Isles It is extirpated from China, Ukraine, and southwestern Mongolia
- Saiga: the worlds weirdest antelopes - Fauna Flora
The critically endangered saiga antelope once roamed the steppes of Central Asia in the millions, but the global population has suffered a series of dramatic declines
- Homepage | The Saiga Resource Centre
Explore the Saiga Resource Centre and learn more about the critically endangered saiga antelope Or visit our other website here
- This floppy-nosed antelope was nearly gone. 20 years later, it’s . . .
Less than a decade ago, more than half of the world’s saiga antelope were lost to a mysterious disease Its comeback is a rare and phenomenal conservation success
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