This small desert antelope has a flexible snout, or proboscis, lined with numerous blood vessels that serves as a heat exchanger. Cooled blood then passes directly to the brain, protecting this vital organ from increased body temperature in the heat of the day.
The dikdik may be active by day or night and is usually about when the moon is full.
It eats shoots and leaves of shrubs and succulents.
Family groups, consisting of an adult pair and their young, live in well-defined territories that they protect from neighboring families.
Dung, urine, and secretions from facial glands are used to mark territorial boundaries and are deposited by each family member. They will also add their own dung to any strong-smelling substance they encounter in their territory.
The male dikdik whistles to warn of danger; different whistles elicit different responses from the female and young: They may run and hide or join together to mob a predator.
Name: Kirk's Dikdik (Madoqua kirkii)
Family: Bovidae (Cattle and Relatives)
Range: Isolated populations in east and southwest Africa
Habitat: Arid areas with thickets and shrubs on stony soil
Diet: Leaves, shrubs, grasses, herbs, and sedges
Head and Body Length: 22 to 28 inches (55 to 70 cm)
Tail Length: 1.6 to 2.4 inches (4 to 6 cm)
Weight: 9 to 15 pounds (4 to 7 kg)
Life Cycle: Gestation about 180 days, one young born; two births per year
Description: Reddish-brown, grizzled coat; grayish to white underneath; white-ringed eyes; elongated snout; ringed horns on males; rubbery-bottomed hooves
Conservation Status: Common
 Order: Artiodactyla, Family: Bovidae The Tibetan antelope, or Chiru, is endemic to the Tibetan Plateau. It is found between Ngoring Hu in China and the Ladakh region in India. Its range once extended to western Nepal, but none have been seen in Nepal for several years.
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