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Description
WILDCRETE 3D Sable Antelope
The sable antelope (Hippotragus niger) is an African antelope from the horse antelope family. The males have black and white coats, while the females and young animals have reddish-brown coats. The sable antelope reaches a shoulder height of up to 1.4 metres and weighs up to 250 kilograms. The horns grow up to 1.64 metres long. The horns are strongly ringed and are carried by both sexes. The sable antelope is notable for the jet-black coat of the males, which is bordered by white on the belly. Females and young males are reddish to dark brown.
The southern blackbuck (also known as the common blackbuck, black antelope, Matsetsi blackbuck or southern Zambian blackbuck) is considered the nominative subspecies, as it was the first to be described and named in 1838. Often referred to as the black blackbuck, as it often has the darkest coat, this subspecies occurs south of the Zambezi River, especially in northern Botswana and in large numbers in the Matsetsi Valley in Zimbabwe. However, it can also be found in South Africa.
In South Africa, many commercial breeders crossed their Matsetsi black antelopes (indigenous to South Africa) with Zambian black antelopes in the hope of approximating the almost extinct giant antelope (which was larger and had larger horns).
Technical data:
Height: 1700 mm
Width: 440 mm
Depth: 1500 mm
Weight: 45.8 kg
Target zones: 2
Number of individual parts: 2 (+ horns)
IFAA group: 1
Characteristics
IFAA Classification: | Group 1 |
Animal Class: | mammals |
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Responsible person: | Responsible person: |