Friday, April 24, 2009

BirthDay Card ... part(1)




Oryx is one of three or four large antelope species of the genus Oryx,
typically having long straight almost upright or swept back horns. Two or
three of the species are native to Africa, with a fourth native to the
Arabian Peninsula. Small populations of several oryx species, such as the
"Scimitar Oryx", exist in Texas and New Mexico, USA as captive populations
on wild game ranches.


he Arabian Oryx (Oryx leucoryx), the smallest species, became extinct in the wild in 1972 from the Arabian Peninsula. It was reintroduced in 1982 in Oman but poaching has had negative effects. Further populations have been reintroduced in Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, with a total population in the wild of about 886 in 2003. About 600 more are in captivity.
The Scimitar Oryx, also called Scimitar-horned Oryx (Oryx dammah) of North Africa is now possibly extinct in the wild. However, there are unconfirmed reports of surviving populations in central Niger and Chad, and a population currently inhabiting a fenced nature reserve in Tunisia is being expanded for reintroduction to the wild in that country.




The East African Oryx inhabits eastern Africa, and the closely-
related Gemsbok inhabits all of eastern and southern Africa. Both are considered threatened species. Between 1969 and 1977, the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish released 93 Gemsbok into the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico and that population is now estimated at about 1,700 animals. The classification of these two animals varies between experts. One system has the Gemsbok as one species (Oryx gazella), and the East African Oryx as another (Oryx beisa) with two subspecies of its own, the East African Oryx "proper" (Oryx beisa beisa) and the Fringe-eared oryx (Oryx beisa calliotis). The other system has one Oryx gazella species, with three subspecies: Oryx gazella gazella, Oryx gazella beisa, and Oryx gazella calliotis.

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