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Encyclopedia > Equus quagga
Plains Zebra
image:PlainsZebra.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Equidae
Genus: Equus
Species: quagga
Binomial name
Equus quagga
Boddaert, 1785


The Plains Zebra (Equus quagga, formerly Equus burchelli) is the most common and widespread form of zebra, once being found on plains and grasslands from the south of Ethiopia right through east Africa as far south as Angola and eastern South Africa. Because of hunting for meat and hides, and human encroachment on much of their former habitat, Plains Zebras are much less numerous than they used to be, but they remain common in game reserves and by far the most numerous of the three zebra species.


Plains Zebras are mid-sized and thick-bodied with relatively short legs. Adults of both sexes stand about 1.4 metres high at the shoulder, are 2.3 metres long, and weigh about 230 kg. Like all zebras, they are boldly striped in black and white and no two individuals are the same. There are currently three recognised subspecies, plus two further subspecies which are now extinct. All have vertical stripes on the forepart of the body, which tend towards the horizontal on the hindquarters. In the north, the stripes are narrower and more defined, southern populations have varied but lesser amounts of striping on the underparts, the legs and the hindquarters. The first subspecies to be described, the Quagga which is now extinct, had plain brown hindquarters. (Technically, because the Quagga was described first as E. quagga, the proper zoological name for the most common form of the Plains Zebra is E. quagga burchelli.)


Plains Zebras are highly social and usually form small family groups consisting of a single stallion, one, two, or several mares, and their recent offspring. Groups are permanent, and group size tends to vary with habitat: in poor country the groups are small. From time to time, Plains Zebra families group together into large herds, both with one another and with other grazing species, notably wildebeests


Unlike many of the large ungulates of Africa, Plains Zebras prefer but do not require short grass to graze on. In consequence, they range more widely than many other species, even into woodland, and they are often the first grazing species to appear in a well-vegetated area. Only after zebras have cropped and trampled the long grasses do wildebeests and gazelles move in. Nevertheless, for protection from predators, Plains Zebras retreat into open areas with good visibility at night time, and take it in turns to stand watch. They eat a wide range of different grasses, preffering young, fresh growth where available, and also browse on leaves and shoots from time to time.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Quagga (310 words)
The Quagga is an extinct zebra, which was once found in great numbers in South Africa's Cape Province and the southern part of the Orange Free State.
The last wild Quagga was probably shot in the late 1870s, and the last specimen in captivity died on August 12, 1883 at the Artis Magistra zoo in Amsterdam.
After the very close relationship between the Quagga and surviving zebras was discovered, workers in South Africa began a project to recreate the Quagga by selective breeding from Plains Zebra stock, with the eventual aim of reintroducing them to the wild.
Quagga (761 words)
Quaggas obtained their name from their warning cry, which sounded like “Kwa-ha-ha.” The plains zebra, also known as Burchell’s zebra, has the same distinctive cry, and it is believed that quaggas were a subspecies of the plains zebra.
Quaggas were identified by their colouring—although they had dark stripes on a white head, the stripes slowly became a solid brown colour somewhere behind the shoulder.
Quaggas were social animals often found in the company of other animals, such as the wildebeest and ostrich.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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