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Caribou walks by the roadside near Coal River, Yukon Territory, Canada.
Cute Pere David's Deer
Beautiful adult male of Nyala Tragelaphus angasii with big horns staring directly at the camera in a Berlin zoo, Germany
Deer with antlers eating food from the hands of a woman.
Close-up face on view of a single young deer with small antlers
An ox with horns
Young Eastern Bongos - Tragelaphus eurycerus - an herbivorous nocturnal forest Ungulate with Striking Reddish-brown Coat and Spiralled Horns.
lion cubs
Eurasian elk profile, Alces alces, Bialowieza Primeval Forest, Poland
A deer standing in front of a post in Nara, Japan
Close-up of a deer after its antlers are cut and calcified
Black Fallow Deer
The bongo is a large, forest-dwelling antelope native to Africa. It has a striking reddish-brown coat with white stripes, long horns, and is known for its elusive nature.
A craibou walks along a grassy opening.
Large greater male kudu with a red-billed oxpecker in Kruger National Park in South Africa
South American tapir - Tapirus terrestris is resting
A curious deer approaches a post in Nara, Japan
Nyala antelope (Tragelaphus angasii) in zoo
Elk are the most abundant large mammal found in Yellowstone and are an important species within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.\n Elk comprise approximately 85% of winter wolf kills and are an important food for bears, mountain lions, and at least 12 scavenger species. Elk are one of the most photographed animals in Yellowstone
A white-tailed deer roams near a fence in a conservation setting, highlighting wildlife management
Uganda Kob blinking eye at you at Queen Elizabeth National Park at Uganda
Elk eating
Deer, Animal, Animals In The Wild, Nature, Portrait
A Mountain Bongo
The endangered and scarce Western Derby Eland (Taurotragus derbianus derbianus), the largest Eland in the world is shown eating sparse vegetation in open forest and savannah of Senegal in West Africa. Loss of habitat and hunting means there are thought to be less than 150 of this species of antelope in the world remaining in the wild and is considered to be 'Critically Endangered'. The more common Western Giant Eland is a subspecies of this antelope, the Lord Derby Eland. The Lord Derby Eland is so named after an expedition organised by the 13th Earl of Derby when British zoologist, Dr John Edward Gray identified the giant antelope and provided the scientific description of this supreme West African Antelope.The Western Derby Eland antelope can reach up to six feet high at the shoulder and weigh up to 1500 lbs but can only be found in the wild in Africa. The distinctive fawn coat colour has between 8 to 15 vertical pale cream stripes down their sides and a black stripe down the centre of the back. Both the male and the female have distinctive curved, spiraling horns, with the horns of males reaching up to 3 feet long (900mm). Their diet primarily consists of grass, leaves and branches.
The common eland, Taurotragus oryx also known as the southern eland or eland antelope, is a savannah and plains antelope found in East and Southern Africa.
A stag with big horns
The common eland , also known as the southern eland or eland antelope, is a savannah and plains antelope found in East and Southern Africa
Wild animals in an open field with trees on safari in South Florida in the Fall of 2023
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