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  2. Thomson's gazelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomson's_gazelle

    Thomson's gazelles can be found in numbers exceeding 200,000 [1] in Africa and are recognized as the most common type of gazelle in East Africa. A small fast antelope, the Thomson's gazelle is said to have top speeds up to 80–90 km/h (50–55 mph).

  3. Mountain gazelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_gazelle

    Mountain gazelles are hunted for food in some parts of their range, although hunting mountain gazelles became illegal in Israel in 1955. A 2019 estimate found there are likely 300–1300 gazelles poached annually. [8] As the mountain gazelle's habitat has become a more urban area of the world, there are numerous threats that to the population.

  4. Grant's gazelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grant's_gazelle

    Grant's gazelle are found in several countries in East Africa, including Ethiopia, Kenya, South Sudan and Tanzania, where they live in small to midsized herds, separated into females with juveniles and bachelor groups; during the mating season, when males become territorial and protective over a harem of females to breed with, bachelor herds ...

  5. Arabian sand gazelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabian_sand_gazelle

    A 2010 genetic study established that it was a distinct lineage, [2] and it is now considered a separate species. [1] Further genetic analysis reported in 2012 found that the sand gazelle was closely related to two North African gazelles, Cuvier's gazelle (Gazella cuvieri) and the rhim (Gazella leptoceros), perhaps even belonging to a single ...

  6. Dama gazelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dama_Gazelle

    The dama gazelle (Nanger dama), also known as the addra gazelle or mhorr gazelle, is a species of gazelle.It lives in Africa, in the Sahara desert and the Sahel.A critically endangered species, it has disappeared from most of its former range due to overhunting and habitat loss, and natural populations only remain in Chad, Mali, and Niger.

  7. Rhim gazelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhim_Gazelle

    The rhim gazelle or rhim (from Arabic غزال الريم) (Gazella leptoceros), also known as the slender-horned gazelle, African sand gazelle or Loder's gazelle, is a pale-coated gazelle with long slender horns and well adapted to desert life. It is considered an endangered species because fewer than 2500 are left in the wild.

  8. Red-fronted gazelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-fronted_Gazelle

    The red-fronted gazelle (Eudorcas rufifrons) is widely but unevenly distributed gazelle across the middle of Africa from Senegal to northeastern Ethiopia. It is mainly resident in the Sahel zone, a narrow cross-Africa band south of the Sahara , where it prefers arid grasslands , wooded savannas and shrubby steppes .

  9. Antilopinae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antilopinae

    The members of tribe Antilopini are often referred to as true antelopes, and include the gazelles, blackbucks, springboks, gerenuks, dibatags, and Central Asian gazelles. True antelopes occur in much of Africa and Asia, with the highest concentration of species occurring in East Africa in Sudan , Eritrea , Ethiopia , Somalia , Kenya , and ...