UAE | 1973 | 25 Fils | Gazelle
Gazelle
Gazelles are small, swift antelopes traditionally placed in the genus Gazella, though modern taxonomy divides them among Gazella, Eudorcas, and Nanger, with related species in Procapra. Their name derives from the Persian ghazal, meaning “elegant and quick,” reflecting their ability to sprint up to 60 mph. Found across African deserts, grasslands, and savannas as well as parts of Asia and the Indian subcontinent, gazelles live in herds and feed on easily digestible vegetation. Typically fawn-colored and 2–3.5 ft tall at the shoulder, many species are threatened, and several are extinct. A familiar example is Thomson’s gazelle, a small brown-and-white species whose males have curved horns and which, like springboks, displays stotting when alarmed.
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