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Then I could have gone on to explain why it was a duiker no more.
In captivity, the black duiker lives up to 14 years.
The plight of a single duiker was not a priority.
They found the duiker enclosure and stood next to it, barking.
When you found the baby duiker, I let you feed it.
"A duiker ram does not stay in the place where he was weaned."
No natural duiker would be so stupid as to stand so close.
Less than 1,500 Abbott's duiker are estimated to be left in the world, with no captive population.
And they would nod, and look closely, never having seen a duiker - even a common one before.
The preferred prey includes various types of duiker and hogs.
Black duiker are reported to be solitary, territorial animals.
This duiker has a glossy, dark brown coat which is lighter on the underside.
Duiker was a child of the city.
The animals are said to prey upon birds, duiker, and other small game animals.
We stopped to take pictures and accidentally flushed a tiny duiker antelope from cover.
The first animal to appear by the roadside that day was a duiker, a tiny antelope the size of a dog.
'This is a common duiker,' we would tell them.
But we haven't seen a single animal, not even a duiker, since we left the homestead.
It may be a subspecies of the yellow-backed duiker.
They are similar to the suni and the duiker.
Duiker was greatly influenced by the work of Jan Vermeer.
The first thing I struck was a duiker, who dived into the scrub and was lost.
The American gave his duiker a blue dog collar, and a metal name tag, and the run of the garden.
You must drive him on to me, just as you drive the duiker in the net hunt.
It has the widest range of any duiker in the genus Cephalophus.
The parasite was found in the blood of two antelopes (Cephalophus grimmi).
Cephalophus adersi.
The yellow-backed duiker (Cephalophus silvicultor) is an antelope found in central and western Africa.
The Brooke's duiker (Cephalophus brookei) is a species of antelope.
The yellow-backed duiker (Cephalophus silvicultor) lives in the dense tropical forests of central Africa.
Tufted Deer (Elaphodus cephalophus)
Anchieta's Antelope (Cephalophus anchietae).
Black Duiker (Cephalophus niger)
The white-bellied duiker (Cephalophus leucogaster) is a duiker found in central Africa.
Nine species of Duikers are found in the park, including the Bay Duiker (Cephalophus dorsalis).
It was described as subspecies of the Ogilby's duiker (Cephalophus ogilbyi) by Peter Grubb in 1978.
P. cephalophi - the antelope (Cephalophus grimmi) and the grey duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia)
Weyns's duiker (Cephalophus weynsi) is a tiny antelope found in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, and western Kenya.
The zebra duiker (Cephalophus zebra) is a small antelope found in Ivory Coast, Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.
In addition, there are species of forest-savannah mosaic habitats such as bushbuck Tragelaphus scriptus and yellowbacked duiker Cephalophus sylvicultor.
The Tufted Deer, Elaphodus cephalophus, is a small species of deer characterized by a prominent tuft of black hair on its forehead and fang-like canines for the males.
Peters's duiker (Cephalophus callipygus) is a small antelope found in Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, southern Cameroon and northern Republic of Congo.
The red forest duiker, Natal duiker, or Natal red duiker (Cephalophus natalensis) is a small antelope found in central to southern Africa.
Harvey's red duiker (Cephalophus harveyi) is one of 19 species of duiker found in Tanzania and scattered through Kenya, southern Somalia, and, possibly, central Ethiopia.
The park's wild animals are elephants, leopards, buffaloes, the endangered Abbott's Duiker (Cephalophus spadix also known as Minde in Swahili), and other small antelopes and primates.
Abbott's duiker (Cephalophus spadix, also known as minde in Swahili) is a large, forest-dwelling duiker (small antelope) found only in a few scattered enclaves in Tanzania.
Bay Duikers (Cephalophus dorsalis) and Maxwell's Duikers (Cephalophus maxwellii) are reported to be locally abundant.
The green fruits are rich in tannins and thus avoided by most herbivores; when ripe they are eagerly eaten by many animals however, such as the rare Aders' Duiker (Cephalophus adersi).
Ecologically they may have resembled a large duiker of our time (e.g. the similarly-sized Yellow-backed Duiker Cephalophus silvicultor), foraging in dense growth where their low build would have been advantageous.