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Antelopes mainly live in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia.
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- Antelope are often classified by their reproductive behavior.
- Many species have ridges in their horns for at least two-thirds the length of their horns, but these ridges are not a direct indicator of age.
- The boss of the horns is typically arranged in such a way that two antelope striking at each other's horns cannot crack each other's skulls, making a fight via horn more ritualized than dangerous.
- Males more commonly use their horns against each other than against another species.
- With male-male competition for mates, horns are clashed in combat.
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- Horns are efficient weapons, and tend to be better developed in those species where males fight over females (large herd antelope) than in solitary or lekking species.
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- Horns are not shed and their bony cores are covered with a thick, persistent sheath of horny material, both of which distinguish them from antlers.
- Other groups have twisted (e.g. common eland), spiral (e.g. greater kudu), "recurved" (e.g. the reedbucks), lyrate (e.g. impala), or long, curved (e.g. the oryxes) horns.
- Those of the duikers and dwarf antelope tend to be simple "spikes", but differ in the angle to the head from backward curved and backward pointing (e.g. yellow-backed duiker) to straight and upright (e.g. steenbok).
- The size and shape of antelope horns varies greatly.
- In some species, the males and females have differently coloured pelages (e.g. blackbuck and nyala).
- A number of species have hornless females (e.g., sitatunga, red lechwe, and suni).
- but exceptions in which the females tend to be heavier than the males include the bush duiker, dwarf antelope, Cape grysbok, and oribi, all rather small species.
- Males tend to be larger than the females,
- In most species, both sexes have horns, but those of males tend to be larger.
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- Many antelope are sexually dimorphic.
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- many species also use scent marking to define their territories or simply to maintain contact with their relatives and neighbors.
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- vocal communications include loud barks, whistles, "moos", and trumpeting;
- Many species "flash" such markings, as well as their tails;
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- markings on their heads, ears, legs, and rumps are used in such communication.
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- These same senses play an important role in contact between individuals of the same species;
- Acute senses of smell and hearing give antelope the ability to perceive danger at night out in the open (when predators are often on the prowl).
- Their horizontally elongated pupils also help in this respect.
- Their eyes are placed on the sides of their heads, giving them a broad radius of vision with minimal binocular vision.
- Like many other herbivores, antelope rely on keen senses to avoid predators.
- against which their lower incisors bite to tear grass stems and leaves.
- They have no upper incisors, but rather a hard upper gum pad,
- which grind cud (food balls stored in the stomach) into a pulp for further digestion.
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- Antelope are ruminants, so have well-developed molar teeth,
- which opens up when the animal senses danger, causing the dorsal hairs to stand on end.
- The springbok also has a pouch of white, brushlike hairs running along its back,
- and dark stripes midbody (the latter feature is also shared by the springbok and beira).
- which flash a warning to others when they run from danger,
- Common features of various gazelles are white rumps,
- the beisa and southern oryxes have gray and black pelages with vivid black-and-white faces.
- Many desert and semidesert species are particularly pale, some almost silvery or whitish (e.g. Arabian oryx);
- Most of the "spiral-horned" antelope have pale, vertical stripes on their backs.
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- Exceptions include the zebra-marked zebra duiker, the grey, black, and white Jentink's duiker, and the black lechwe.