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In the Big Reservation a Rupicapra skeleton was discovered.
A. rupicapra was originally described in the genus Pheidole (Pheidolacanthinus).
Rupicapra Garsault, 1764 (Mammalia) was established without included species.
Cantabrian Chamois (Rupicapra pyrenaica parva).
El Rebeco Cantábrico (Rupicapra pyrenaica parva).
Other large mammals found here are the Caucasian chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra subsp.
The chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra) is categorized into several subspecies:
Chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra)
The sole known rupicapra specimen was collected in the mountains of the Sepik River catchment by the German colonial Kaiserin Augustafluss Expedition(1912-13).
Type species is Capra rupicapra by subsequent absolute tautonymy (currently Rupicapra rupicapra).
The most common animals are wolf, fox, the European hare (Lepus europaeus), squirrel, and chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra).
It is one of the two species of the genus Rupicapra, the other being the Chamois, Rupicapra rupicapra.
They include the Tatras' endemic goat-antelope and critically endangered species, the Tatra chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra tatrica).
However, the course of infection is similar in guinea pigs, rabbits, bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) and chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra) that were infected experimentally.
Balkan chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra balcanica), a goat-antelope species (native to Europe and the Carpathian Mountains) management has been done with species available from the park.
The Cantabrian chamois (Rupicapra pyrenaica parva) is a slim mountain goat antelope, and is one of the 10 subspecies of the Rupicapra genus.
R. r. rupicapra (Alpine chamois): Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Slovenia, Slovakia (Veľká Fatra, Slovak Paradise)
Tymfi holds the largest recorded population of Balkan chamois deer (Rupicapra rupicapra balcanica) in Greece, with a population between 120-130 individuals out of an estimated national population between 477-750.
The chamois, (Rupicapra rupicapra), is a goat-antelope species native to mountains in Europe, including the Carpathian Mountains of Romania, the European Alps, the Tatra Mountains, the Balkans, parts of Turkey, and the Caucasus.
One of the park's special attractions is the existence of the Balkan chamois deer (Rupicapra rupicapra balcanica), a rare species that lives at higher altitudes far from human activity, especially at the rocky cliffs of the gorges, for example in Megas Lakos, a secondary ravine of the Vikos Gorge.
At these higher altitudes Common Heather Calluna vulgaris is the dominant vegetation and the extreme isolation and remoteness is an ideal habitat for the Chamois Rupicapra rupicapra and birds such as the Red-billed Chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax and Cinereous Vulture Aegypius monachus.