Friday, March 24, 2017
Characteristics
Wild water buffalo are larger and heavier than domestic buffalo, and
weigh from 700 to 1,200 kg (1,500 to 2,600 lb). Their
head-to-body-length is 240 to 300 cm (94 to 118 in) with a tail 60 to
100 cm (24 to 39 in) long, and a shoulder height of 150 to 190 cm (59 to
75 in). Both sexes carry horns that are heavy at the base and widely
spreading up to 2 m (79 in) along the outer edges, exceeding in size the
horns of any other living bovid.
Their skin color is ash gray to black. The moderately long, coarse and
sparse hair is directed forward from the haunches to the long and narrow
head. There is a tuft on the forehead, and the ears are comparatively
small. The tip of the tail is bushy; the hooves are large and splayed.[4] They rank alongside the gaur
as the heaviest living wild bovid species, as both attain similar
average if not maximum weights, although, with their stockier,
shorter-legged frame, wild water buffalo are somewhat less in length and
height than the gaur.[5]
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