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ANIMALS
Aoudad Sheep
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Aoudad Sheep 
      
     
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If you are interested in purchasing an Aoudad, please feel free to contact us for the latest pricing and availability. Click here to see photos of our animals.
   
Aoudad

Aoudad, wild horned sheep of North Africa, also known as Barbary sheep. Six subspecies are found from Morocco to Tunisia and southward into the mountains of the northern Sahara. Introduced populations of aoudads have become established in New Mexico, Texas, and California.

The sandy color of the aoudad provides natural camouflage against the sand and rock of its habitat. Ranging from 75 to 112 cm (30 to 44 in) high at the shoulder, the animal is one of the larger inhabitants of the Atlas Mountains. It has massive horns up to 84 cm (33 in) long, terminating in points, and a thick mane hanging from the chest and forelegs. The aoudad gets water from sparse vegetation and dew. The females and their young gather in small herds, which the rams join during mating season. During long periods of drought the herds suffer severe losses. Hunting for meat and hides has severely decreased the natural populations of aoudads in the Sahara.

Scientific classification: The aoudad belongs to the family Bovidae, in the order Artiodactyla. It belongs to the subfamily Caprinae and is classified as Ammotragus lervia.

   
 Sheep

Sheep are even-toed, hoofed animals. They are cud-chewing animals with the upper incisor teeth missing and with a four-compartmented stomach (see Artiodactyl). They have paired, hollow, unbranched horns that are not shed. The horns of the adult male, or ram, are massive and spirally curved. The horns of the adult female, or ewe, are short and only slightly curved.

Sheep typically have a long, fairly narrow muzzle and pointed ears. The length of the head and body averages about 1.5 m (about 5 ft), with a short tail, and an adult may weigh 75 to 200 kg (165 to 440 lb). In the wild, the animals are nimble runners and climbers. The female bears up to three young after a gestation period of about 150 days. Sheep live as long as 20 years.

Besides providing pelts and wool for clothing and carpets, meat in the form of lamb and mutton, and milk for drinking and cheesemaking, sheep are used to a limited extent as pack animals, and the wild species are hunted as game. Several distinct types and more than 800 breeds of domesticated sheep have been developed. The breeds are adapted to environments that range from desert to tropical conditions.

 
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Home
 
      
ANIMALS
Aoudad Sheep
Barbadou Sheep
Chinese Water Deer
Corsican Sheep
Fallow Deer
Hawaiian Black Sheep
Indian Blackbuck
Miniature Donkeys
Mouflon Sheep
Red Deer
Sika Deer
Texas Dall
 
      
Faq
 
     
 
      
 
   
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
   
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