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TCE Blackbuck Gallery
Antilope cervicapra
Antilope negro, Hirschziegenantilope, Antilope cervicapre.
Also called Indian antelope.
DESCRIPTION:
(male) Shoulder height 22-25 inches
(56-64 cm). Weight 75-110 pounds (34-50 kg), with an average of about 90 pounds
(41 kg). Females are two-thirds as large as males.
A slender, graceful, very handsome antelope with contrasting
dark-and-white coloration. Considered by many to be the most attractive and
elegant of gazelles. One of the few antelopes where the sexes have different
coloration. Mature males are a rich, dark brown (sometimes almost black) on the
upperparts and outside of upper legs, but with the underparts, inside of legs,
chin, ears and area around the eyes a sharply contrasting white. Females are
fawn and white. Young males are colored like females, darkening gradually with
age until fully mature at 4-5 years. (Oddly, a few males fail to darken,
although normal in other respects.) The horns (males only) are long, closely
ringed and corkscrew shaped, with 3-5 tight twists.
DISTRIBUTION:
Free ranging in Hawaii and Texas.
Also on private properties, mainly in Texas, but also in a number of other U.S.
states and in Mexico.
NATIVE TO:
The plains of India and Pakistan
where, until the last century, it was the most abundant hoofed animal, numbering
about four million. First introduced in the United States in 1932 on private
ranches in Kerr County, Texas. Subsequent introductions and transplants involved
55 counties in Texas, with the 1979 populations totaling 9,600, of which 2,600
were free ranging. Climate and habitat in Texas are similar to those of India,
thus blackbuck do well there except during lengthy periods of cold weather, when
large numbers perish. Blackbuck also were introduced in Argentina at various
times between 1906 and the 1960s, and are well-established over a wide area. Introductions were made in western Australia beginning in 1912. In 1971 and
again in 1985, blackbuck from Texas were reintroduced in Pakistan, where they
had been extinct. Today, there are more blackbuck in the United States and
Argentina than there are in India and Pakistan. Though first stocked on New
World ranches for their ornamental value, they are now propagated mainly in
commercial hunting programs and for meat production. How well blackbuck continue
to do in the New World will depend on the economic viability of game ranching.
Blackbucks generally live on open plains in herds of 5
to 50 animals with one dominant male. They are very fast. Speeds of
more than 80 km/h (50 mph) have been recorded.
They are primarily grazers and avoid forested areas.
They require water every day and may move long distances in search of water
and forage in summer. Usually, they feed during the day. Their
diet consists mostly of grasses, but they have occasionally been observed
browsing on acacia trees in the Cholistan Desert. In the Velavadar
National Park, they were observed feeding on pods of Prosopis juliflora
during seasonal lows in forage quality.
Their chief predator was the now extinct Asiatic
cheetah. Currently, wolves are the main predators of both fawns and
adults. Fawns are also hunted by jackals. Village dogs are
reported to kill fawns but are unlikely to successfully hunt and kill
adults.
The maximum life span recorded is 16 years and the
average is 12 years.
Cliff Baggett
Casey Baggett
979-219-2603 979-218-7225
7280 Co. Rd. 165
Iola, TX 77861-3573
A Breeding, Growing and Delivery Operation