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Habitat:
Africa - southern Sudan and Ethiopia to northern Rhodesia
Height:
45 to 55 inches at shoulder
Weight:
450 to 550 pounds
Longevity:
8 to 12 years in the wild - 28 to 25 years in captivity
Gestation:
336 to 375 days
Diet:
Primarily a grazer, grasses
Zebras
stripped patterns are like our fingerprints, no tow are alike.
Living in small family groups consisting of several mares,
their foals of the year and a dominant stallion, the Grant
Zebra is non-territorial but constantly move to better feeding
areas. Predators include lions, hyenas and cape hunting dogs.
Mares in a family are usually unrelated and subject to definite
pecking order. Young females are evicted from their family
at about 18 months of age, when their mother gives birth again
and must join other existing family groups or become attached
to a young stallion who is building up his harem. Young mares
mature at approximately 3 years, while stallions may take
up to 5 years. The stripped pattern supposedly confuses predators
and makes it difficult to distinguish an individual zebra
in a fleeing formation. The Natural Bridge Zoological Park
has been raising Grant Zebra for over 30 years and has shipped
over 50 zebra to other zoological parks.
Copyright
@ 2005 - Natural Bridge Zoo
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