Of all of South Africa's species of antelope, the kudu is my favourite, mainly because of those elegantly spiralling horns. They adorn the logo of the national parks and several street signs (which promise kudus majestically leaping out across highways, but seldom deliver). And they're pretty tasty too...
This individual is one of the only adult males we saw. The one in the second photo is a juvenile, and his shorter horns have only begun their first turn. The animals in the bottom two photos are hornless females.
The fact that they're called antelope suggests a relationship with gazelles, impalas and the like, but kudus are more closely related to cows. They belong to the subfamily Bovinae, which includes domestic cattle and wild cow-like beasts including bison, African buffalo (more on them later), gaur, water buffalo and yak. Other antelopes that belong in this group include the nyala, bongo and the largest of them all - the eland.
It just goes to show the problems with the word "antelope". The term is used ot describe a collection of hooved, plant-eating animals that don't form an exclusive evolutionary group. The closest you could get to a definition is "any member of the family Bovidae, except cattle, sheep, buffalo, bison or goats". As if that wasn't clumsy enough, the pronghorn antelope of North America isn't really an antelope at all and belongs to a family all of its own.
More South African photos:
- South African wildlife - Tyson the leopard
- South African wildlife - Wait, that's not a trunk...
- South African wildlife - Elephant encounter
- South African wildlife - Spotted hyena
- South African wildlife - White rhinoceros
- South African wildlife - Martial eagle
- South African wildlife - Safari the leopard
- Leopards and elephants and rhinos, oh my
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I suppose you could say that the pronghorn is an "interlope." ;-)
And why do they seldom deliver?
My father has a trophy of one of these up on his wall. I believe he shot it in Botswana. Tragic. Although eating them strikes me personally as just as tragic. They really are beautiful animals.
Matty, the way i see it, everything is born someday dies and is eaten. i tend to think that it is more the quality of the interlude in between that matters.
Ed, great write-up. i learned something new today! kudu, and eland, and others besides, are technically bovines. i'm a bit of an amateur naturalist myself, and i've always been intrigued by the folk biology behind colloquial or "common" names, and how they can shape perceptions of the natural world. bass, minnow, sparrow, hawk, fox, rat, wildcat, toad, blacksnake, asp. my inner language geek wishes names were more explicit, so the relationships between organisms were clearer to the layperson; but my inner science geek loves digging those up for myself. :)