blesbok

mammal
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Also known as: Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi

blesbok, (Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi), one of the gaudiest of the antelopes, a South African version of the closely related sassaby. The blesbok ranged the treeless Highveld in countless thousands throughout the mid-19th century but was hunted nearly to extinction. It has been reintroduced, mainly on private farms, throughout and beyond its former range and is again one of the most abundant antelopes in South Africa. An isolated related subspecies, the bontebok (Damaliscus pygargus dorcas), confined to the coastal plain of Western Cape province, came nearer to extinction and is still uncommon; the largest population, of 200–250, lives in Bontebok National Park.

The smallest member of the hartebeest tribe, the blesbok is only 85–100 cm (33–39 inches) tall and weighs 55–80 kg (120–175 pounds). The male has S-shaped horns that are 35–50 cm (14–20 inches) long; the female’s horns are somewhat shorter and thinner. The blesbok’s coat is a glossy, dark reddish brown, which contrasts with the white of its belly, lower legs, and facial blaze. The bontebok is even more colourful and glossier, with purple-black blotches on upper limbs and flanks, a white rump patch and upper tail, and a facial blaze bisected by a brown band. Newborn calves of both subspecies are light tan with dark facial blazes.

The antelopes that once dominated the Highveld were all migratory, like their counterparts on the plains of Botswana, Namibia, and East Africa. Less adapted to arid conditions than the springbok, the blesbok spent the rainy season grazing the Highveld’s medium-height sweetveld grasses and in the dry season went west into the poor-quality sourveld grasslands, where it was able to graze more selectively than other species.

Sea otter (Enhydra lutris), also called great sea otter, rare, completely marine otter of the northern Pacific, usually found in kelp beds. Floats on back. Looks like sea otter laughing. saltwater otters
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Despite the recovery of the Highveld herbivores in recent years, free-ranging migratory populations no longer exist, as the Highveld has been settled and divided into fenced ranches. The blesbok exists in separate, often inbred, units. The social and mating systems are resident, with semi-exclusive herds of three to nine females contained within a permanent territorial network whose males may control properties of 10–40 hectares (20–100 acres) for years. Herds of bachelor males are limited to undefended areas. In former times, the migratory populations were organized very differently. Evidence of this can be seen in one subpopulation of several hundred that lives on a large ranch and moves about in mobile aggregations, which include mature males that set up temporary territories averaging slightly more than 2 hectares (5 acres).

The blesbok is a seasonal breeder, calving early in the summer rainy season (November and December) after an eight-month gestation. Calves are not hidden but accompany their mothers from birth—an apparent adaptation to a former migratory existence. Along with the wildebeest, the blesbok is the only antelope with follower young.

Richard Estes