Klipspringer
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Klipspringer Conservation status: Lower risk (cd) | ||||||||||||||
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Missing image Klippspringer-drawing.jpg | ||||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Oreotragus oreotragus (Zimmerman,, 1783) |
The Klipspringer (literally "rock jumper" in Afrikaans), Oreotragus oreotragus, is a small African antelope that lives from the Cape of Good Hope all the way up East Africa and into Ethiopia.
Reaching approximately 58cm (22 inches) at the shoulder, klipspringers are relatively small animals compared to some of their larger antelope cousins. Males have fragile horns that are usually about 20-25cm (4-6 inches) long.
With a thick and dense speckled "salt and pepper" patterened coat of an almost olive shade, klipspringers blend in well with the koppies (rock outcrops) on which they can usually be found.
Klipspringers are herbivores, eating rock plants. They never need to drink, since the succulents they subsist on provide them with enough water to survive.
The mating season for klipspringers is from September through to January. The gestation period is about 214 days.