There are two species of Mountain Zebra: the Cape Mountain Zebra (Equus zebra) and the Hartmann's Mountain Zebra (Equus hartmannae). Previously they were regarded as two subspecies of the Mountain Zebra.
Mountain Zebras are native to South West Africa and are found in dry, stony, mountain and hill habitats. Its diet is tufted grass, bark, leaves, fruit and roots.
Zebras' dazzling stripes may be a signalling system for the herd and may also be useful in confusing predators
Groves and Bell found that the Cape mountain zebra exhibits sexual dimorphism, with larger females than males, while the Hartmann's Mountain Zebra does not. The Hartmann's mountain zebra's black stripes are thin with much wider white interspaces, while this is opposite in cape mountain zebra.
The Cape Mountain Zebra and the Hartmann's Mountain Zebra are allopatric, meaning that they occur in separate, nonoverlapping geographic areas. They are therefore unable to crossbreed.
Equids | Fauna of South Africa | Fauna of Angola | Fauna of Namibia
Планинска зебра | Bergzebra | Equus zebra | זברת הרים | Kalninis zebras | Bergzebra | Зебра | Планинска зебра | Vuoriseepra | Ngựa vằn núi | 山斑马
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Mountain Zebra".
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