释义 |
pronghorn
prong·horn P0595400 (prông′hôrn′, prŏng′-)n. pl. pronghorn or prong·horns A ruminant mammal (Antilocapra americana) of western North American plains that resembles an antelope, has forked horns that are shed and regrown annually, and is noted for its speed. Also called pronghorn antelope.pronghorn (ˈprɒŋˌhɔːn) n (Animals) a ruminant mammal, Antilocapra americana, inhabiting rocky deserts of North America and having small branched horns: family Antilocapridae. Also called: American antelope prong•horn (ˈprɔŋˌhɔrn, ˈprɒŋ-) n., pl. -horns, (esp. collectively) -horn. a fleet, antelopelike ruminant, Antilocapra americana, of the plains of W North America. Also called prong′horn an′telope. [1805] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | pronghorn - fleet antelope-like ruminant of western North American plains with small branched hornsAmerican antelope, Antilocapra americana, prongbuck, pronghorn anteloperuminant - any of various cud-chewing hoofed mammals having a stomach divided into four (occasionally three) compartmentsAntilocapra, genus Antilocapra - type and sole genus of the Antilocapridae comprising one species | Translationsвилорогвилорогая антилопа
pronghorn
pronghorn or prongbuck, hoofed herbivorous mammal, Antilocapra americana, of the W United States and N Mexico. Although it is often called the American, or prong-horned, antelope, the pronghorn is the only living member of the Antilocapridae and is more closely related to the giraffe; antelopes are African and Eurasian members of the cattle family (Bovidae). The pronghorn is about the size of a goat, standing 3 ft (90 cm) high at the shoulder and weighing about 100 lb (45 kg). The coat is light brown with white underparts, two white throat stripes, and a white rump patch. The tail is short, and the ears are long and pointed. Both sexes have horns, which consist of a horny sheath and a bony core, like those of antelopes; unlike antelope horns, those of the pronghorn bear a single branch, or prong, and lose the outer sheath each year. Pronghorns live in small bands on open plains. Chiefly browsers, they feed largely on sagebrush and other shrubs, but also eat grasses. The swiftest of North American mammals, they attain speeds of 60 mi (96 km) per hr, but are poor jumpers. Their principal enemies, besides humans, are wolves and coyotes. Before the settlement of North America by Europeans pronghorns were comparable in numbers to buffalo; by the beginning of the 20th cent., however, they had been nearly exterminated by hunting. They are now protected on reservations, where they have made a good recovery. Pronghorns are classified in the phylum ChordataChordata , phylum of animals having a notochord, or dorsal stiffening rod, as the chief internal skeletal support at some stage of their development. Most chordates are vertebrates (animals with backbones), but the phylum also includes some small marine invertebrate animals. ..... Click the link for more information. , subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order Artiodactyla, family Antilocapridae. Bibliography See J. van Wormer, The World of the Pronghorn (1968). pronghorn[′präŋ‚hȯrn] (vertebrate zoology) Antilocapra americana. An antelopelike artiodactyl composing the family Antilocapridae; the only hollow-horned ungulate with branched horns present in both sexes. pronghorn
Synonyms for pronghornnoun fleet antelope-like ruminant of western North American plains with small branched hornsSynonyms- American antelope
- Antilocapra americana
- prongbuck
- pronghorn antelope
Related Words- ruminant
- Antilocapra
- genus Antilocapra
|