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Animal Fact Sheet
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Mhorr Gazelle
Gazella dama mhorr

What does it look like?
Mhorrs' long legs, long neck and slender body are typical of the gazelle genus' graceful, swift lines. The largest gazelle, mhorrs measure up to 30 inches at the shoulder.

  • Deep, rich rust top coat color extends down the outer side of the legs to the hooves with contrasting white underbelly as part of two-tone coloration, called "counter shading"
  • Counter shading obscures the animals' shape to predators, minimizing detection against the sand
  • Mhorr gazelles have "S" shaped, ringed horns reaching up to a foot long

Where in the world?
Their former natural habitat was the Sahara desert areas of Morocco, North Africa. A subspecies of the dama gazelle, mhorr gazelles are true desert animals. Today they are found only in captivity.

What are some behaviors?
Mhorr gazelles migrated north and south in herds of 10 to 30 during dry seasons when food was scarce. Herds numbered up to 100 in rainy seasons when food was plentiful.

When playing or alarmed, gazelles' exhibit either stotting or pronking gaits, bounding along stiff-legged with all four limbs landing together. Both males and females possess horns, possibly evolved in response to each having to defend its own food resources.

What about offspring?
Little is known about mhorr gazelle courtship or breeding habits in the wild, as there are now none left to observe. However, all gazelle males establish territories during the breeding season, and actively exclude other mature males while females are receptive.

Gestation period is about seven months and young are born singly. Newborns lie outside the herd, hidden in foliage for the first few weeks after birth. Mothers come to nurse, calling the infant with soft bleating.

 

What does it eat?
In the wild, mhorr gazelles were browsers and grazers, mainly taking whatever was the greenest of the woody plants, grass and herbs, depending on availability during the year.

Is it threatened or endangered?
Mhorr gazelles are extinct in the wild. In 1971, the World Wildlife Fund established a private game reserve in Almeria, Spain. But the possibility of disease or disaster wiping out the entire population prompted conservationists to divide the herd and place them in several locations. German zoos in Frankfurt and East Berlin, and the San Diego Zoo in California each received small herds for further captive breeding.

The Living Desert has a breeding group. Over the years, six mhorr gazelles have been born here. Since 1981, the worldwide captive population has increased to about 150 individuals.

 


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