a varied group of artiodactyl animals of the family Bovidae, excluding cattle, buffalo, goats, and sheep. The term antelope refers to all the subfamilies of the family Bovidae; the term pronghorn refers to the particular family Antilocapridae. Antelopes are animals of diverse form and dimensions, from the Madoqua saltiana, the size of a hare, to the eland, which is as large as a cow. In most species of antelopes, only the males have horns, which can be straight and short or long and bent in an arc or spiral. Their coloring ranges from light sand-colored to gray-blue or almost black, with markings in the form of stripes or patches of various colors and forms. The majority of antelopes inhabit Africa and the southern part of Asia. They live in herds and feed on grassy vegetation or, more rarely, on the leaves of trees. There are several groups of antelope, some of which are closer in origin to cattle, and others, to goats and sheep. The only member of the genus Antilope proper is the Indian Antilope cervicapra, or black buck, an animal with spiraling horns. On the African steppes and savannas live the large bovine antelopes, the gnu and bubalis. The African semidesert and desert are inhabited by horse antelope and oryx. Living hidden in the African forests are the royal antelope, Madoqua saltiana, oribi, dik dik, and other pygmy antelope, as well as the duiker. The deserts, steppes, and forest-steppes of Africa and Asia are the homes of a broad group of gazelles; the goitered gazelle and zeren, which live within the boundaries of the USSR, belong to this group. A special group of antelope is represented by the African marsh antelope, which inhabits marshy ground and riverside thickets. The African spiral-horned antelopes (eland, kudu, bushbuck) and the Indian four-horned antelope and nilgai are closer in origin to buffalo and cattle than to other antelopes. The chamois, which lives in the mountains of Europe, the Caucasus, and Transcaucasia, and the saiga, a steppe antelope, are more closely linked with sheep and goats. Many antelope are hunted for their flesh, hides, and horns. The numbers of most antelope species are markedly decreasing. Hunting of many species is partially or entirely prohibited.
I. I. SOKOLOV