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Four-horned antelope

The four-horned antelope (Tetracerus quadricornis), or chousingha, is a small antelope found in India and Nepal. Its four horns distinguish it from most other bovids, which have two horns (with a few exceptions, such as the Jacob sheep). The sole member of the genus Tetracerus, the species was first described by French zoologist Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville in 1816. Three subspecies are recognised. The four-horned antelope stands nearly 55–64 centimetres (22–25 in) at the shoulder and weighs nearly 17–22 kilograms (37–49 lb). Slender with thin legs and a short tail, the four-horned antelope has a yellowish brown to reddish coat. One pair of horns is located between the ears, and the other on the forehead. The posterior horns are always longer than the anterior horns, which might be mere fur-covered studs. While the posterior horns measure 8–12 centimetres (3.1–4.7 in), the anterior ones are 2–5 centimetres (0.79–1.97 in) long.

Four-horned antelope
Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary, India
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Subfamily: Bovinae
Tribe: Boselaphini
Genus: Tetracerus
Leach, 1825
Species:
T. quadricornis
Binomial name
Tetracerus quadricornis
(Blainville, 1816)
Subspecies

T. q. iodes (Hodgson, 1847)
T. q. quadricornis (Blainville, 1816)
T. q. subquadricornutus (Elliot, 1839)

Range map of the four-horned antelope
Synonyms[2]
List
    • Antilope chickara (J. B. Fischer, 1829)
    • A. quadricornis (Desmarest, 1816)
    • Cerophorus quadricornis (J. B. Fischer, 1829)
    • Cervicapra chickara (Hardwicke, 1825)
    • C. quadricornis (de Blainville, 1816)
    • Cervus labipes (Saint-Hillaire and Cuvier, 1832)
    • Grimmia quadricornis (Laurillard, 1839)
    • Tetraceros chickera (Blyth, 1842)
    • Tetracerus chickara (Jardine, 1836)
    • T. paccerois (Houghton, 1847)
    • T. quadricornes (Jardine, 1836)
    • T. striaticornis (Saint-Hillaire and Cuvier, 1832)
    • T. undicornis (Saint-Hillaire and Cuvier, 1832)

The four-horned antelope is diurnal (active mainly during the day). Though solitary by nature, four-horned antelopes may form loose groups of three to five –with one or more adults, sometimes accompanied by juveniles. This elusive antelope feeds on grasses, herbs, shrubs, foliage, flowers and fruits. It needs to drink water frequently; as such it stays in places near water sources. The breeding behaviour of the four-horned antelope has not been well studied. The age at which they reach sexual maturity and the season when mating occurs have not been understood well. Gestation lasts about eight months, following which one or two calves are born. They are kept concealed for the first few weeks of their birth. The young remain with the mother for about a year.

Four-horned antelopes tend to inhabit areas with significant grass cover or heavy undergrowth, and avoid human settlements. Earlier common throughout deciduous forests in India, the antelope now occurs in widely disjunct, small populations. Most of the populations are in India, and lower numbers can be found in adjoining Nepal. The four-horned antelope is threatened by the loss of its natural habitat due to agricultural expansion. Moreover, the unusual four-horned skull and the horns have been a popular target for trophy hunters. The four-horned antelope is classified as Vulnerable by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN).

Etymology edit

The scientific name of the four-horned antelope is Tetracerus quadricornis. The generic name Tetracerus is the combination of two Greek words: tetra meaning "four"[3]: 351  and keras meaning "horn".[3]: 422  The specific name quadricornis is derived from two Latin words: quattuor meaning "four"[3]: 351  and cornu "horn".[3]: 421  The four-horned antelope is known by several vernacular names: chausingha, chowsingha, chousingha (Hindi for "four horns"), doda, ghutri (mainly in central India) (Hindi); kondu kuri (Kannada); chauka (Nepalese); nari komboo marn (Tamil).[2]

Taxonomy and phylogeny edit

The four-horned antelope is the sole member of the genus Tetracerus, and is placed under the family Bovidae. The species was first described by French zoologist Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville in 1816.[4] The four-horned antelope has only one other relative in the tribe Boselaphini, the nilgai (Boselaphus tragocamelus).[2] The Boselaphini have horns with a keel on the front and lack rings as found in other antelope groups.[5]

The authority for Tetracerus is variously indicated according to interpretations of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. The name was first published in an 1825 publication by English naturalist Thomas Hardwicke but cited the English zoologist William Elford Leach – probably by an editor – as the authority in a footnote at the end of the publication.[6] Philip Sclater and Oldfield Thomas listed Hardwicke as the genus authority by virtue of his being the author of the publication. However, Leach is now identified as the appropriate authority based on Article 50.1.1 of the Zoological Code.[2]

A 1992 phylogenetic study showed a strong possibility of a clade consisting of Boselaphini, Bovini and Tragelaphini. Bovini consists of the genera Bubalus, Bos, Pseudoryx (saola), Syncerus (African buffalo), Bison and the extinct Pelorovis. Tragelaphini consists of two genera: Taurotragus (eland) and Tragelaphus. Boselaphini and Tragelaphini were predicted to be close;[7] this was seconded by a similar study in 1999.[8] The following cladogram is based on the 1992 study:[7]

Colin Groves (2003) recognizes three subspecies of the four-horned antelope on the basis of distribution and physical characteristics such as coat colour, body size and the number of horns:[4][9]

  • T. q. iodes (Hodgson, 1847): distributed north of the Ganges in Nepal[10]
  • T. q. quadricornis (de Blainville, 1816): distributed in peninsular India
  • T. q. subquadricornutus (Elliot, 1839) distributed in the Western Ghats and southern India[11]

Evolution edit

 
Skull of the four-horned antelope

Though Boselaphini has no African representation today,[12] fossil evidence supports its presence in the continent during as early as the late Miocene – the two living antelopes of this tribe, in fact, have been found to have a closer relationship with the earliest bovids (like Eotragus species) than do the other bovids.[13][14] This tribe originated at least 8.9 Mya, in much the same area where the four-horned antelope occurs today, and may represent the most "primitive" of all living bovids, having changed the least since the origins of the family.[15] The extant and extinct boselaphine forms show similar development of the horn cores (the central bony part of the horn).[16] It is thought that ancestral bovids had a diploid chromosome number of 58 which has reduced in Tetracerus to 38 through a process of concatenation of some chromosomes.[17]

Fossils of Protragocerus labidotus and Sivoreas eremita dating back to the late Miocene have been discovered in the Ngorora formation (Kenya).[18] Fossils from the same period have also been excavated in the eastern Mediterranean region.[19] Other Miocene fossils of boselaphines discovered are of Miotragocerus, Tragocerus and Tragoportax. Fossils of Miotragoceros are not apparent in Africa (only M. cyrenaicus has been reported from the continent), but have significant presence in the Shiwalik Hills in India and Pakistan, as do several Tragoportax species. A 2005 study suggested the migration of Miotragoceros to eastern Asia around 8 Mya.[20] Alan W. Gentry of the Natural History Museum reported the presence of another boselaphine, Mesembriportax, from Langebaanweg (South Africa).[21]

Evidence of early humans hunting four-horned antelope during the Mesolithic period (5,000 to 8,000 years ago) have been found in the Kurnool caves of southern India[22] and similar evidence has been found from the Chalcolithic period (3,000 years ago) in Orissa, eastern India.[23]

Description edit

 
Doe
 
Buck

The four-horned antelope is one of the smallest Asian bovids. The number of its horns distinguishes it from most of the other bovids, that have two horns[24] The four-horned antelope stands 55–64 centimetres (22–25 in) at the shoulder and weighs 17–22 kilograms (37–49 lb); the head-and-body length is typically between 80 and 110 centimetres (31 and 43 in).[25] Sexual dimorphism is not very notable, though only males possess horns.[2]

Slender with thin legs and a short tail, the four-horned antelope has a yellowish brown to reddish coat. The underparts and the insides of the legs are white. Facial features include black markings on the muzzle and behind the ears. A black stripe marks the outer surface of each leg. Females have four teats far back on the abdomen.[2] The hair feels coarse, more like that of a deer than the glossy hair typical of antelopes.[26] The fetlocks are marked with white patches.[26]

One pair of horns is located between the ears, and the other on the forehead. The posterior horns are always longer than the anterior horns, which might be mere fur-covered studs. While the posterior horns each measures 8–12 centimetres (3.1–4.7 in), the anterior ones measure 2–5 centimetres (0.79–1.97 in).[26][27][28] Horns emerge at 10 to 14 months.[2] According to Groves, anterior horns show the poorest development in the subspecies T. q. subquadricornutus. These horns measure nearly 4.5–5 centimetres (1.8–2.0 in) in T. q. quadricornis, and nearly 1.5–2.5 centimetres (0.59–0.98 in) in T. q. iodes. The posterior horn lengths for the subspecies recorded by him were: 8–10 centimetres (3.1–3.9 in) for T. q. quadricornis, 6.5–7.5 centimetres (2.6–3.0 in) in T. q. iodes and 1.8–2 centimetres (0.71–0.79 in) in T. q. subquadricornutus.[9]

The four-horned antelope differs greatly from the nilgai in colour, is much smaller and has an extra pair of horns. The nilgai is nearly nine times heavier and two times taller than the four-horned antelope. Two deer species, the Indian muntjac and the Indian hog deer, can be confused with this antelope. The four-horned antelope, however, lacks their antlers.[2] The chinkara, a gazelle, can be told apart by its light brown coat and larger, ringed horns.[29]

Ecology and behaviour edit

The four-horned antelope is diurnal (active mainly during the day), though it mainly rests or ruminates in dense undergrowth at noon.[30] Though solitary by nature, the four-horned antelope may form loose groups of three to five. Groups consist of one or more adults, sometimes accompanied by juveniles. Males and females hardly interact, except in the mating season.[31]

The antelope is shy and elusive. When alarmed, it stands motionless and may nervously leap away from the danger or even sprint. It often conceals itself in tall grasses to escape predators.[26] The use of alarm calls to alert others is not common because the antelope tries to avoid the attention of predators. However, in extreme cases, these calls may be used to warn predators that they have been identified. Adults mark vegetation in their territories with a colourless secretion of preorbital glands, that soon condenses to form a white film. They maintain multiple latrine sites where piles of their pellet droppings are formed by regular use.[30] Latrine sites can be confused with those of the barking deer but the pellets are longer and larger in four-horned antelopes.[32] Submissive display consists of shrinking the body, lowering the head and pulling the ears back.[30] Predators of four-horned antelopes include tigers,[33] leopards, and dholes.[34]

Diet edit

 
Four-horned antelope prefer habitats with dense undergrowth and tall grasses.

The four-horned antelope feeds on grasses, herbs, shrubs, foliage, flowers and fruits. A study in Mudumalai National Park (Tamil Nadu, India) showed that the antelope prefers grass species of the family Cyperaceae; genera Axonopus, Cynodon, Digitaria, Echinochloa, Panicum, Sehima and Sporobolus; and the species Imperata cylindrica, Ottochloa nodosa, Pseudanthistria umbellata and Themeda cymbaria. The shrub Grewia hirsuta is frequently eaten. Preferred herbs include Helichrysum, Indigofera and Tinospora species and Leucas aspera. The four-horned antelope feeds on the leaves of trees such as Cordia wallichii, Emblica officinalis, Randia dumetorum and Zizyphus xylopyrus. Grasses comprise nearly 29 percent of the diet, followed by foliage from trees (nearly nine percent). Grass and browse were consumed in nearly equal proportions.[31] A study in the Panna National Park (Madhya Pradesh, India) showed preference for Zizyphus mauritiana, Acacia nilotica, A. leucophloea and A. catechu. Babool flowers were frequently eaten. The antelope often associates with langurs under fruiting trees, just as chital frequently do. Interaction with chital, a sympatric species, was infrequent.[30] The antelope is wary when feeding, often raising its head and looking about its vicinity.[30] The four-horned antelope needs to drink water frequently; as such it stays in places near water sources.[26]

Reproduction edit

 
illustration of the head from 1903.

Breeding behaviour of the four-horned antelope has not been well studied. The age at which sexual maturity is gained is doubted; two captive females had their first parturition at less than two years.[2] The breeding season in Panna National Park probably lasts from May to July,[30] and from June to August in Mudumalai National Park.[31] The male approaches the female in a relaxed gait, giving out low coughs. The two may kneel and push against each other with the necks intertwined. The male makes a few short mounting attempts; the female may be foraging all the while without any reaction.[30] Gestation lasts about eight months, followed by the birth of one or two calves. The newborn has a head-and-body length of 42 to 46 centimetres (17 to 18 in), and weighs 0.7 to 1.1 kg (1.5 to 2.4 lb). Juveniles are kept concealed for the first few weeks of birth. Births in Mudumalai National Park peak from February to April. Juveniles remain with their mothers for about a year.[2]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Male four-horned antelope in the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve

The four-horned antelope is confined to the Indian subcontinent, occurring widely in disjunct and small populations. The range in India covers a vast expanse, from the foothills of the Himalayas in the north to the Deccan Plateau in the south. Most of the existing populations live in India, and lower numbers in adjoining Nepal.[1] The four-horned antelope inhabits open, dry, deciduous forests in hilly terrain.[35][36] It prefers areas close to water bodies that are covered with grasses or heavy undergrowth. It generally keeps away from settlements.[citation needed]

It was earlier common throughout deciduous forests in India, but the population declined to an estimated at slightly above 10,000 mature individuals in 2001, with a decreasing trend.[35][1] Numbers in Gir National Park were estimated at 256 individuals in 1974; later estimates at waterholes in the same location put them a little above 1,000. Densities of above 0.7 individuals per km2 have been considered as being healthy.[37]

Threats and conservation edit

The four-horned antelope is threatened by the loss of its natural habitat due to agricultural expansion.[1] Moreover, the unusual four-horned skull and the horns have been a popular target for trophy hunters.[38]

The four-horned antelope is classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List. It is protected under Schedule I of the Indian Wildlife Protection Act of 1972; the population in Nepal is listed in CITES Appendix III.[1]

Major protected areas across India where four-horned antelopes occur include:[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e IUCN SSC Antelope Specialist Group (2017). "Tetracerus quadricornis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T21661A50195368. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-2.RLTS.T21661A50195368.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Leslie, D.M.; Sharma, K. (2009). "Tetracerus quadricornis (Artiodactyla: Bovidae)". Mammalian Species. 843: 1–11. doi:10.1644/843.1.
  3. ^ a b c d Brown, Roland Wilbur (1956). The Composition of Scientific Words. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.
  4. ^ a b Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M., eds. (2005). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 697. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  5. ^ Prater, S.H. (1980). The book of Indian animals. Chennai: Oxford University Press. pp. 271–272. ISBN 978-0195621693.
  6. ^ Hardwicke, T. (1825). "XXIII. Descriptions of two species of antelope from India". Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. 14 (3): 518–24. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1823.tb00099.x.
  7. ^ a b Allard, M.W.; Miyamoto, M.M.; Jarecki, L.; Kraus, F.; Tennant, M.R. (1992). "DNA systematics and evolution of the artiodactyl family Bovidae". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 89 (9): 3972–6. Bibcode:1992PNAS...89.3972A. doi:10.1073/pnas.89.9.3972. PMC 525613. PMID 1570322.
  8. ^ Hassanin, A.; Douzery, E.J.P. (1999). "Evolutionary affinities of the enigmatic saola (Pseudoryx nghetinhensis) in the context of the molecular phylogeny of Bovidae". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 266 (1422): 893–900. doi:10.1098/rspb.1999.0720. JSTOR 51466. PMC 1689916. PMID 10380679.
  9. ^ a b Groves, C. (2003). "Taxonomy of ungulates of the Indian subcontinent". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 100: 353–4.
  10. ^ Hodgson, B.H. (1847). "On the four-horned antelopes of India". Calcutta Journal of Natural History. 8: 87–94.
  11. ^ Elliot, Walter (1839). "A catalogue of the species of mammalia found in the Southern Mahratta Country; with their Synonymes in the Native Languages in use there". Madras Journal of Literature and Science. 10: 207–233.
  12. ^ Brain, C.K. (1981). The Hunters or the Hunted?: An Introduction to African Cave Taphonomy. Chicago, USA: University of Chicago Press. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-226-07089-6.
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  16. ^ Solounias, N. (1990). "A new hypothesis uniting Boselaphus and Tetracerus with the Miocene Boselaphini (Mammalia, Bovidae) based on horn morphology". Annales Musei Goulandris. 8: 425–39.
  17. ^ Ropiquet, A.; Hassanin, A.; Pagacova, E.; Gerbault-Seureau, M.; Cernohorska, H.; Kubickova, S.; Bonillo, C.; Rubes, J.; Robinson, T.J. (2010). "A paradox revealed: karyotype evolution in the four-horned antelope occurs by tandem fusion (Mammalia, Bovidae, Tetracerus quadricornis)". Chromosome Research. 18 (2): 277–86. doi:10.1007/s10577-010-9115-1. PMID 20204496. S2CID 8973690.
  18. ^ Benefit, B.R.; Pickford, M. (April 1986). "Miocene fossil cercopithecoids from Kenya". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 69 (4): 441–64. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330690404.
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  20. ^ Zhang, Z. (2005). "Late Miocene Boselaphini (Bovidae, Artiodactyla) from Fugu, Shaanxi Province, China". Vertebrata PalAsiatica. 43 (3): 208–18.
  21. ^ WoldeGabriel, G. (2009). Haile-Selassie, Y. (ed.). Ardipithecus Kadabba: Late Miocene Evidence from the Middle Awash, Ethiopia. Berkeley, USA: University of California Press. pp. 289–90. ISBN 978-0-520-25440-4.
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  23. ^ Badam, G.L.; Behera, P.; Mishra, J. (2001). "Chalcolithic faunal economy at Khambeswarpally, middle Mahanadi Valley, Orissa: a bioarchaeological perspective". Current Science. 80 (7): 828–30.
  24. ^ Vaughan, T.A.; Ryan, J.M.; Czaplewski, N.J. (2015). Mammalogy (6th ed.). Massachusetts, USA: Jones & Bartlett Learning. p. 353. ISBN 978-1-284-03209-3.
  25. ^ Sharma, K.; Rahmani, A.R. (2004). "Four-horned antelope or chowsingha (Tetracerus quadricornis Blainville, 1816". ENVIS Bulletin (Wildlife and Protected Areas): Ungulates of India. 7.[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ a b c d e Kinloch, A.A.A. (1885). "The four-horned antelope". Large Game Shooting in Tibet, the Himalayas, and Northern India. Calcutta (Kolkata), India: Thacker, Spink and Co. ISBN 978-1-295-81380-3.
  27. ^ Carwardine, M. (2008). Animal Records. New York, USA: Sterling. pp. 10–1. ISBN 978-1-4027-5623-8.
  28. ^ Bentham, T. (1908). An illustrated catalogue of the Asiatic horns and antlers in the collection of the Indian museum. Kolkata, India: Indian Museum. pp. 46–7.
  29. ^ Castelló, J.R. (2016). Bovids of the World: Antelopes, Gazelles, Cattle, Goats, Sheep, and Relatives. Princeton, USA: Princeton University Press. pp. 118–9. ISBN 978-1-4008-8065-2.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g Sharma, K.; Rahmani, A.R.; Chundawat, R.S. (2009). "Natural history observations of the four-horned antelope Tetracerus quadricornis". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 106 (1): 72–82.
  31. ^ a b c Baskaran, N.; Kannan, V.; Thiyagesan, K.; Desai, A.A. (2011). "Behavioural ecology of four-horned antelope (Tetracerus quadricornis de Blainville, 1816) in the tropical forests of southern India". Mammalian Biology – Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde. 76 (6): 741–7. doi:10.1016/j.mambio.2011.06.010.
  32. ^ Pokharel, Krishna Prasad; Ludwig, Tobias; Storch, Ilse (2015-02-25). "Spatial Niche Partitioning in Sub-Tropical Solitary Ungulates: Four-Horned Antelope and Barking Deer in Nepal". PLOS ONE. 10 (2): e0117917. Bibcode:2015PLoSO..1017917P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0117917. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 4340944. PMID 25714092.
  33. ^ Biswas, S.; Sankar, K. (2002). "Prey abundance and food habit of tigers (Panthera tigris tigris) in Pench National Park, Madhya Pradesh, India". Journal of Zoology. 256 (3): 411–20. doi:10.1017/S0952836902000456.
  34. ^ Karanth, K.U.; Sunquist, M.E. (1992). "Population structure, density and biomass of large herbivores in the tropical forests of Nagarhole, India". Journal of Tropical Ecology. 8 (1): 21–35. doi:10.1017/S0266467400006040. S2CID 84489998.
  35. ^ a b Krishna, Y.C.; Krishnaswamy, J.; Kumar, N.S. (2008). "Habitat factors affecting site occupancy and relative abundance of four-horned antelope". Journal of Zoology. 276 (1): 63–70. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.2008.00470.x.
  36. ^ Krishna, Y.C.; Clyne, P.J.; Krishnaswamy, J.; Kumar, N.S. (2009). "Distributional and ecological review of the four horned antelope, Tetracerus quadricornis". Mammalia. 73 (1): 1–6. doi:10.1515/MAMM.2009.003. S2CID 83806831.
  37. ^ Rice, C.G. (1991). "The status of four-horned antelope Tetracerus quadricornis". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 88 (1): 63–66.
  38. ^ Nowak, R. M. (1999). "Four-horned antelope". Walker's Mammals of the World (Sixth ed.). Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 1147. ISBN 978-0-8018-5789-8.
  39. ^ Belsare, D.K. (2011). Vanishing Roar of Bengal Tigers. Pennsylvania, USA: RoseDog Books. pp. 17–29. ISBN 978-1-4349-8509-5.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tetracerus quadricornis at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Tetracerus quadricornis at Wikispecies

four, horned, antelope, four, horned, antelope, tetracerus, quadricornis, chousingha, small, antelope, found, india, nepal, four, horns, distinguish, from, most, other, bovids, which, have, horns, with, exceptions, such, jacob, sheep, sole, member, genus, tetr. The four horned antelope Tetracerus quadricornis or chousingha is a small antelope found in India and Nepal Its four horns distinguish it from most other bovids which have two horns with a few exceptions such as the Jacob sheep The sole member of the genus Tetracerus the species was first described by French zoologist Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville in 1816 Three subspecies are recognised The four horned antelope stands nearly 55 64 centimetres 22 25 in at the shoulder and weighs nearly 17 22 kilograms 37 49 lb Slender with thin legs and a short tail the four horned antelope has a yellowish brown to reddish coat One pair of horns is located between the ears and the other on the forehead The posterior horns are always longer than the anterior horns which might be mere fur covered studs While the posterior horns measure 8 12 centimetres 3 1 4 7 in the anterior ones are 2 5 centimetres 0 79 1 97 in long Four horned antelopeBondla Wildlife Sanctuary IndiaConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaFamily BovidaeSubfamily BovinaeTribe BoselaphiniGenus TetracerusLeach 1825Species T quadricornisBinomial nameTetracerus quadricornis Blainville 1816 SubspeciesT q iodes Hodgson 1847 T q quadricornis Blainville 1816 T q subquadricornutus Elliot 1839 Range map of the four horned antelopeSynonyms 2 List Antilope chickara J B Fischer 1829 A quadricornis Desmarest 1816 Cerophorus quadricornis J B Fischer 1829 Cervicapra chickara Hardwicke 1825 C quadricornis de Blainville 1816 Cervus labipes Saint Hillaire and Cuvier 1832 Grimmia quadricornis Laurillard 1839 Tetraceros chickera Blyth 1842 Tetracerus chickara Jardine 1836 T paccerois Houghton 1847 T quadricornes Jardine 1836 T striaticornis Saint Hillaire and Cuvier 1832 T undicornis Saint Hillaire and Cuvier 1832 The four horned antelope is diurnal active mainly during the day Though solitary by nature four horned antelopes may form loose groups of three to five with one or more adults sometimes accompanied by juveniles This elusive antelope feeds on grasses herbs shrubs foliage flowers and fruits It needs to drink water frequently as such it stays in places near water sources The breeding behaviour of the four horned antelope has not been well studied The age at which they reach sexual maturity and the season when mating occurs have not been understood well Gestation lasts about eight months following which one or two calves are born They are kept concealed for the first few weeks of their birth The young remain with the mother for about a year Four horned antelopes tend to inhabit areas with significant grass cover or heavy undergrowth and avoid human settlements Earlier common throughout deciduous forests in India the antelope now occurs in widely disjunct small populations Most of the populations are in India and lower numbers can be found in adjoining Nepal The four horned antelope is threatened by the loss of its natural habitat due to agricultural expansion Moreover the unusual four horned skull and the horns have been a popular target for trophy hunters The four horned antelope is classified as Vulnerable by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources IUCN Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy and phylogeny 3 Evolution 4 Description 5 Ecology and behaviour 5 1 Diet 5 2 Reproduction 6 Distribution and habitat 7 Threats and conservation 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEtymology editThe scientific name of the four horned antelope is Tetracerus quadricornis The generic name Tetracerus is the combination of two Greek words tetra meaning four 3 351 and keras meaning horn 3 422 The specific name quadricornis is derived from two Latin words quattuor meaning four 3 351 and cornu horn 3 421 The four horned antelope is known by several vernacular names chausingha chowsingha chousingha Hindi for four horns doda ghutri mainly in central India Hindi kondu kuri Kannada chauka Nepalese nari komboo marn Tamil 2 Taxonomy and phylogeny editThe four horned antelope is the sole member of the genus Tetracerus and is placed under the family Bovidae The species was first described by French zoologist Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville in 1816 4 The four horned antelope has only one other relative in the tribe Boselaphini the nilgai Boselaphus tragocamelus 2 The Boselaphini have horns with a keel on the front and lack rings as found in other antelope groups 5 The authority for Tetracerus is variously indicated according to interpretations of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature The name was first published in an 1825 publication by English naturalist Thomas Hardwicke but cited the English zoologist William Elford Leach probably by an editor as the authority in a footnote at the end of the publication 6 Philip Sclater and Oldfield Thomas listed Hardwicke as the genus authority by virtue of his being the author of the publication However Leach is now identified as the appropriate authority based on Article 50 1 1 of the Zoological Code 2 A 1992 phylogenetic study showed a strong possibility of a clade consisting of Boselaphini Bovini and Tragelaphini Bovini consists of the genera Bubalus Bos Pseudoryx saola Syncerus African buffalo Bison and the extinct Pelorovis Tragelaphini consists of two genera Taurotragus eland and Tragelaphus Boselaphini and Tragelaphini were predicted to be close 7 this was seconded by a similar study in 1999 8 The following cladogram is based on the 1992 study 7 BoviniTragelaphiniBoselaphiniColin Groves 2003 recognizes three subspecies of the four horned antelope on the basis of distribution and physical characteristics such as coat colour body size and the number of horns 4 9 T q iodes Hodgson 1847 distributed north of the Ganges in Nepal 10 T q quadricornis de Blainville 1816 distributed in peninsular India T q subquadricornutus Elliot 1839 distributed in the Western Ghats and southern India 11 Evolution edit nbsp Skull of the four horned antelopeThough Boselaphini has no African representation today 12 fossil evidence supports its presence in the continent during as early as the late Miocene the two living antelopes of this tribe in fact have been found to have a closer relationship with the earliest bovids like Eotragus species than do the other bovids 13 14 This tribe originated at least 8 9 Mya in much the same area where the four horned antelope occurs today and may represent the most primitive of all living bovids having changed the least since the origins of the family 15 The extant and extinct boselaphine forms show similar development of the horn cores the central bony part of the horn 16 It is thought that ancestral bovids had a diploid chromosome number of 58 which has reduced in Tetracerus to 38 through a process of concatenation of some chromosomes 17 Fossils of Protragocerus labidotus and Sivoreas eremita dating back to the late Miocene have been discovered in the Ngorora formation Kenya 18 Fossils from the same period have also been excavated in the eastern Mediterranean region 19 Other Miocene fossils of boselaphines discovered are of Miotragocerus Tragocerus and Tragoportax Fossils of Miotragoceros are not apparent in Africa only M cyrenaicus has been reported from the continent but have significant presence in the Shiwalik Hills in India and Pakistan as do several Tragoportax species A 2005 study suggested the migration of Miotragoceros to eastern Asia around 8 Mya 20 Alan W Gentry of the Natural History Museum reported the presence of another boselaphine Mesembriportax from Langebaanweg South Africa 21 Evidence of early humans hunting four horned antelope during the Mesolithic period 5 000 to 8 000 years ago have been found in the Kurnool caves of southern India 22 and similar evidence has been found from the Chalcolithic period 3 000 years ago in Orissa eastern India 23 Description edit nbsp Doe nbsp Buck The four horned antelope is one of the smallest Asian bovids The number of its horns distinguishes it from most of the other bovids that have two horns 24 The four horned antelope stands 55 64 centimetres 22 25 in at the shoulder and weighs 17 22 kilograms 37 49 lb the head and body length is typically between 80 and 110 centimetres 31 and 43 in 25 Sexual dimorphism is not very notable though only males possess horns 2 Slender with thin legs and a short tail the four horned antelope has a yellowish brown to reddish coat The underparts and the insides of the legs are white Facial features include black markings on the muzzle and behind the ears A black stripe marks the outer surface of each leg Females have four teats far back on the abdomen 2 The hair feels coarse more like that of a deer than the glossy hair typical of antelopes 26 The fetlocks are marked with white patches 26 One pair of horns is located between the ears and the other on the forehead The posterior horns are always longer than the anterior horns which might be mere fur covered studs While the posterior horns each measures 8 12 centimetres 3 1 4 7 in the anterior ones measure 2 5 centimetres 0 79 1 97 in 26 27 28 Horns emerge at 10 to 14 months 2 According to Groves anterior horns show the poorest development in the subspecies T q subquadricornutus These horns measure nearly 4 5 5 centimetres 1 8 2 0 in in T q quadricornis and nearly 1 5 2 5 centimetres 0 59 0 98 in in T q iodes The posterior horn lengths for the subspecies recorded by him were 8 10 centimetres 3 1 3 9 in for T q quadricornis 6 5 7 5 centimetres 2 6 3 0 in in T q iodes and 1 8 2 centimetres 0 71 0 79 in in T q subquadricornutus 9 The four horned antelope differs greatly from the nilgai in colour is much smaller and has an extra pair of horns The nilgai is nearly nine times heavier and two times taller than the four horned antelope Two deer species the Indian muntjac and the Indian hog deer can be confused with this antelope The four horned antelope however lacks their antlers 2 The chinkara a gazelle can be told apart by its light brown coat and larger ringed horns 29 Ecology and behaviour editThe four horned antelope is diurnal active mainly during the day though it mainly rests or ruminates in dense undergrowth at noon 30 Though solitary by nature the four horned antelope may form loose groups of three to five Groups consist of one or more adults sometimes accompanied by juveniles Males and females hardly interact except in the mating season 31 The antelope is shy and elusive When alarmed it stands motionless and may nervously leap away from the danger or even sprint It often conceals itself in tall grasses to escape predators 26 The use of alarm calls to alert others is not common because the antelope tries to avoid the attention of predators However in extreme cases these calls may be used to warn predators that they have been identified Adults mark vegetation in their territories with a colourless secretion of preorbital glands that soon condenses to form a white film They maintain multiple latrine sites where piles of their pellet droppings are formed by regular use 30 Latrine sites can be confused with those of the barking deer but the pellets are longer and larger in four horned antelopes 32 Submissive display consists of shrinking the body lowering the head and pulling the ears back 30 Predators of four horned antelopes include tigers 33 leopards and dholes 34 Diet edit nbsp Four horned antelope prefer habitats with dense undergrowth and tall grasses The four horned antelope feeds on grasses herbs shrubs foliage flowers and fruits A study in Mudumalai National Park Tamil Nadu India showed that the antelope prefers grass species of the family Cyperaceae genera Axonopus Cynodon Digitaria Echinochloa Panicum Sehima and Sporobolus and the species Imperata cylindrica Ottochloa nodosa Pseudanthistria umbellata and Themeda cymbaria The shrub Grewia hirsuta is frequently eaten Preferred herbs include Helichrysum Indigofera and Tinospora species and Leucas aspera The four horned antelope feeds on the leaves of trees such as Cordia wallichii Emblica officinalis Randia dumetorum and Zizyphus xylopyrus Grasses comprise nearly 29 percent of the diet followed by foliage from trees nearly nine percent Grass and browse were consumed in nearly equal proportions 31 A study in the Panna National Park Madhya Pradesh India showed preference for Zizyphus mauritiana Acacia nilotica A leucophloea and A catechu Babool flowers were frequently eaten The antelope often associates with langurs under fruiting trees just as chital frequently do Interaction with chital a sympatric species was infrequent 30 The antelope is wary when feeding often raising its head and looking about its vicinity 30 The four horned antelope needs to drink water frequently as such it stays in places near water sources 26 Reproduction edit nbsp illustration of the head from 1903 Breeding behaviour of the four horned antelope has not been well studied The age at which sexual maturity is gained is doubted two captive females had their first parturition at less than two years 2 The breeding season in Panna National Park probably lasts from May to July 30 and from June to August in Mudumalai National Park 31 The male approaches the female in a relaxed gait giving out low coughs The two may kneel and push against each other with the necks intertwined The male makes a few short mounting attempts the female may be foraging all the while without any reaction 30 Gestation lasts about eight months followed by the birth of one or two calves The newborn has a head and body length of 42 to 46 centimetres 17 to 18 in and weighs 0 7 to 1 1 kg 1 5 to 2 4 lb Juveniles are kept concealed for the first few weeks of birth Births in Mudumalai National Park peak from February to April Juveniles remain with their mothers for about a year 2 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Male four horned antelope in the Nilgiri Biosphere ReserveThe four horned antelope is confined to the Indian subcontinent occurring widely in disjunct and small populations The range in India covers a vast expanse from the foothills of the Himalayas in the north to the Deccan Plateau in the south Most of the existing populations live in India and lower numbers in adjoining Nepal 1 The four horned antelope inhabits open dry deciduous forests in hilly terrain 35 36 It prefers areas close to water bodies that are covered with grasses or heavy undergrowth It generally keeps away from settlements citation needed It was earlier common throughout deciduous forests in India but the population declined to an estimated at slightly above 10 000 mature individuals in 2001 with a decreasing trend 35 1 Numbers in Gir National Park were estimated at 256 individuals in 1974 later estimates at waterholes in the same location put them a little above 1 000 Densities of above 0 7 individuals per km2 have been considered as being healthy 37 Threats and conservation editThe four horned antelope is threatened by the loss of its natural habitat due to agricultural expansion 1 Moreover the unusual four horned skull and the horns have been a popular target for trophy hunters 38 The four horned antelope is classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List It is protected under Schedule I of the Indian Wildlife Protection Act of 1972 the population in Nepal is listed in CITES Appendix III 1 Major protected areas across India where four horned antelopes occur include 39 Gir National Park in Gujarat Sariska Tiger Reserve in Rajasthan Bandhavgarh National Park Bori Wildlife Sanctuary Kanha National Park Pachmarhi Biosphere Reserve Panna Tiger Reserve Pench Tiger Reserve Sanjay National Park Satpura National Park in Madhya Pradesh Tadoba Andhari Reserve in Maharashtra Kumbhalgarh Wildlife Sanctuary Ranthambore National Park Rangayyanadurga Four horned antelope Wildlife Sanctuary in Karnataka See also edit nbsp Mammals portalReferences edit a b c d e IUCN SSC Antelope Specialist Group 2017 Tetracerus quadricornis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T21661A50195368 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 2 RLTS T21661A50195368 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Leslie D M Sharma K 2009 Tetracerus quadricornis Artiodactyla Bovidae Mammalian Species 843 1 11 doi 10 1644 843 1 a b c d Brown Roland Wilbur 1956 The Composition of Scientific Words Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press a b Wilson D E Reeder D M eds 2005 Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 697 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Prater S H 1980 The book of Indian animals Chennai Oxford University Press pp 271 272 ISBN 978 0195621693 Hardwicke T 1825 XXIII Descriptions of two species of antelope from India Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 14 3 518 24 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 1823 tb00099 x a b Allard M W Miyamoto M M Jarecki L Kraus F Tennant M R 1992 DNA systematics and evolution of the artiodactyl family Bovidae Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 89 9 3972 6 Bibcode 1992PNAS 89 3972A doi 10 1073 pnas 89 9 3972 PMC 525613 PMID 1570322 Hassanin A Douzery E J P 1999 Evolutionary affinities of the enigmatic saola Pseudoryx nghetinhensis in the context of the molecular phylogeny of Bovidae Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 266 1422 893 900 doi 10 1098 rspb 1999 0720 JSTOR 51466 PMC 1689916 PMID 10380679 a b Groves C 2003 Taxonomy of ungulates of the Indian subcontinent Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 100 353 4 Hodgson B H 1847 On the four horned antelopes of India Calcutta Journal of Natural History 8 87 94 Elliot Walter 1839 A catalogue of the species of mammalia found in the Southern Mahratta Country with their Synonymes in the Native Languages in use there Madras Journal of Literature and Science 10 207 233 Brain C K 1981 The Hunters or the Hunted An Introduction to African Cave Taphonomy Chicago USA University of Chicago Press p 167 ISBN 978 0 226 07089 6 Pilgrim G E 1939 The fossil Bovidae of India Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India New Series 26 1 356 Pitra C Furbass R Seyfert H M 1997 Molecular phylogeny of the tribe Bovini Mammalia Artiodactyla alternative placement of the anoa Journal of Evolutionary Biology 10 4 589 600 doi 10 1046 j 1420 9101 1997 10040589 x S2CID 84545142 Bibi F 2007 Origin paleoecology and paleobiogeography of early Bovini Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 248 1 60 72 Bibcode 2007PPP 248 60B doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2006 11 009 Solounias N 1990 A new hypothesis uniting Boselaphus and Tetracerus with the Miocene Boselaphini Mammalia Bovidae based on horn morphology Annales Musei Goulandris 8 425 39 Ropiquet A Hassanin A Pagacova E Gerbault Seureau M Cernohorska H Kubickova S Bonillo C Rubes J Robinson T J 2010 A paradox revealed karyotype evolution in the four horned antelope occurs by tandem fusion Mammalia Bovidae Tetracerus quadricornis Chromosome Research 18 2 277 86 doi 10 1007 s10577 010 9115 1 PMID 20204496 S2CID 8973690 Benefit B R Pickford M April 1986 Miocene fossil cercopithecoids from Kenya American Journal of Physical Anthropology 69 4 441 64 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330690404 Kostopoulus D S 2005 The Bovidae Mammalia Artiodactyla from the late Miocene of Akkas dag i Turkey Geodiversitas 27 747 91 Zhang Z 2005 Late Miocene Boselaphini Bovidae Artiodactyla from Fugu Shaanxi Province China Vertebrata PalAsiatica 43 3 208 18 WoldeGabriel G 2009 Haile Selassie Y ed Ardipithecus Kadabba Late Miocene Evidence from the Middle Awash Ethiopia Berkeley USA University of California Press pp 289 90 ISBN 978 0 520 25440 4 Murty M L K 2010 Ethnoarchaeology of the Kurnool cave areas South India World Archaeology 17 2 192 205 doi 10 1080 00438243 1985 9979962 Badam G L Behera P Mishra J 2001 Chalcolithic faunal economy at Khambeswarpally middle Mahanadi Valley Orissa a bioarchaeological perspective Current Science 80 7 828 30 Vaughan T A Ryan J M Czaplewski N J 2015 Mammalogy 6th ed Massachusetts USA Jones amp Bartlett Learning p 353 ISBN 978 1 284 03209 3 Sharma K Rahmani A R 2004 Four horned antelope or chowsingha Tetracerus quadricornis Blainville 1816 ENVIS Bulletin Wildlife and Protected Areas Ungulates of India 7 permanent dead link a b c d e Kinloch A A A 1885 The four horned antelope Large Game Shooting in Tibet the Himalayas and Northern India Calcutta Kolkata India Thacker Spink and Co ISBN 978 1 295 81380 3 Carwardine M 2008 Animal Records New York USA Sterling pp 10 1 ISBN 978 1 4027 5623 8 Bentham T 1908 An illustrated catalogue of the Asiatic horns and antlers in the collection of the Indian museum Kolkata India Indian Museum pp 46 7 Castello J R 2016 Bovids of the World Antelopes Gazelles Cattle Goats Sheep and Relatives Princeton USA Princeton University Press pp 118 9 ISBN 978 1 4008 8065 2 a b c d e f g Sharma K Rahmani A R Chundawat R S 2009 Natural history observations of the four horned antelope Tetracerus quadricornis Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 106 1 72 82 a b c Baskaran N Kannan V Thiyagesan K Desai A A 2011 Behavioural ecology of four horned antelope Tetracerus quadricornis de Blainville 1816 in the tropical forests of southern India Mammalian Biology Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 76 6 741 7 doi 10 1016 j mambio 2011 06 010 Pokharel Krishna Prasad Ludwig Tobias Storch Ilse 2015 02 25 Spatial Niche Partitioning in Sub Tropical Solitary Ungulates Four Horned Antelope and Barking Deer in Nepal PLOS ONE 10 2 e0117917 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1017917P doi 10 1371 journal pone 0117917 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 4340944 PMID 25714092 Biswas S Sankar K 2002 Prey abundance and food habit of tigers Panthera tigris tigris in Pench National Park Madhya Pradesh India Journal of Zoology 256 3 411 20 doi 10 1017 S0952836902000456 Karanth K U Sunquist M E 1992 Population structure density and biomass of large herbivores in the tropical forests of Nagarhole India Journal of Tropical Ecology 8 1 21 35 doi 10 1017 S0266467400006040 S2CID 84489998 a b Krishna Y C Krishnaswamy J Kumar N S 2008 Habitat factors affecting site occupancy and relative abundance of four horned antelope Journal of Zoology 276 1 63 70 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 2008 00470 x Krishna Y C Clyne P J Krishnaswamy J Kumar N S 2009 Distributional and ecological review of the four horned antelope Tetracerus quadricornis Mammalia 73 1 1 6 doi 10 1515 MAMM 2009 003 S2CID 83806831 Rice C G 1991 The status of four horned antelope Tetracerus quadricornis Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 88 1 63 66 Nowak R M 1999 Four horned antelope Walker s Mammals of the World Sixth ed Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press p 1147 ISBN 978 0 8018 5789 8 Belsare D K 2011 Vanishing Roar of Bengal Tigers Pennsylvania USA RoseDog Books pp 17 29 ISBN 978 1 4349 8509 5 External links edit nbsp Media related to Tetracerus quadricornis at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Tetracerus quadricornis at Wikispecies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Four horned antelope amp oldid 1197585665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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