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Films about goats (Capra hircus), a domesticated species of goat-antelope typically kept as livestock. It was domesticated from the wild goat ( C. aegagrus ) of Southwest Asia and Eastern Europe .
The goat-antelope, or caprid, group is known from as early as the Miocene, when members of the group resembled the modern serow in their general body form. [5] The group did not reach its greatest diversity until the recent ice ages , when many of its members became specialised for marginal, often extreme, environments: mountains, deserts, and ...
The serow (/ s ə ˈ r oʊ /, or / ˈ s ɛr oʊ /), is any of four species of medium-sized goat-like or antelope-like mammals in the genus Capricornis. All four species of serow were, until recently, classified under Naemorhedus , which now only contains the gorals .
Goat Cuticle Detective Inaba: Donkey: Donkey Shrek: Shrek's first friend and partner in his adventures. Dorothy Cattle Clifford's Really Big Movie: Dorothy is a cow who is friends with Clifford and is the only female in Shackleford's group. Ellie Moose Work It Out Wombats! An athletic and kind-hearted moose who is an emergency medical technician.
Members of the goat-antelope subfamily from myth and legend. See also. Category:Fiction about goats; Category:Fictional sheep; Subcategories.
Myotragus (Neo-Latin, derived from the Greek: μῦς, τράγος "mouse-goat") is an extinct genus of goat-antelope in the tribe Caprini which lived on the Balearic Islands of Mallorca and Menorca in the western Mediterranean until its extinction around 4,500 years ago. [1]
The chamois (/ ˈ ʃ æ m w ɑː /; [2] French: ⓘ) (Rupicapra rupicapra) or Alpine chamois is a species of goat-antelope native to the mountains in Southern Europe, from the Pyrenees, the Alps, the Apennines, the Dinarides, the Tatra to the Carpathian Mountains, the Balkan Mountains, the Rila–Rhodope massif, Pindus, the northeastern mountains of Turkey, and the Caucasus. [1]
The Pyrenean chamois (Rupicapra pyrenaica) is a goat-antelope that lives in the Pyrenees and Cantabrian Mountains of Spain, France and Andorra, and the Apennine Mountains of central Italy. It is one of the two species of the genus Rupicapra, the other being the chamois, Rupicapra rupicapra. [1]