Rams: Facts About Male Bighorn Sheep
Rams are male bighorn
sheep, animals that live in the mountains and often settle arguments with
fights that include ramming their heads into others. Not to be confused with
mountain goats, rams can be identified by their long, curved horns, long fur,
and split hooves. Bighorn sheep are bovines and are related to antelopes,
bison, buffalo, cattle and goats.
Size
Rams are typically 5 to
6 feet tall (1.5 to 1.8 meters) from head to tail, and weigh 262 to 280 lbs.
(119 to 127 kilograms), though they can grow to over 300 lbs. (136 kg). Rocky
Mountain bighorn rams have massive horns that weigh more than all of the bones
in their bodies. A set of horns can weigh 30 lbs. (14 kg). Ewes, or female
bighorn sheep, typically weigh 30 to 40 percent less than the rams, according
to the National Bighorn Sheep Center.
Habitat
Bighorn sheep live in
the Rocky Mountain region of North America, ranging from Mexico, northward
across the western United States and into Canada. They live in the rocky areas,
balancing on the boulders with their hooves, which are rough on the bottom to
give the sheep more traction. Thanks to their amazing balance, bighorn sheep
can stand on ledges that are only 2 inches (5 centimeters) wide. They can also
jump 20 feet (6 m) and can go up a mountain at a brisk 15 mph (24 km/h). The
only better mountain climbers in the animal world are mountain goats.
Desert bighorn sheep, a
subspecies, live in Death Valley, California, as well as Nevada, Texas and
northern Mexico. They can live on desert mountains as high as 4,000 feet (1,200
m). They get most of their water from eating plants to survive, according to
the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles.
Bighorn sheep Ovis
canadensis in Glacier National Park, Montana, USA. The sheep's horns are
similar to those of cows and goats.
Bighorn sheep Ovis
canadensis in Glacier National Park, Montana, USA. The sheep's horns are
similar to those of cows and goats.
Habits
Bighorn sheep have very
good eyesight, which allows them to judge distances accurately when jumping,
according to the University of Michgan's Animal Diversity Web (ADW). They also
watch animals as far as a mile away.
Herds are separated by
gender. Females live in nursery herds, with five to 100 members, which include
adult females and lambs of both genders. Male-only bachelor herds usually
contain five to 50 rams at one time, and they sometimes engage in homosexual
activity, according to ADW.
Rams fight to decide
who will be the dominant male in their group. During the fight, the males will
face each other, rear up on their back legs and crash their huge horns into
each other. Sometimes they charge as fast as 40 mph (64 km/h). Eventually, one
of the rams ends up submitting and the winner is the new leader. This process
can take hours.
Diet
Rams are herbivores.
They typically eat seeds, grass and plants. Their diet changes depending on the
season, though. In the summer, they eat grasses or sedges and in the winter,
bighorns eat woody plants, such as sage, willow and rabbit brush, according to
Defenders of Wildlife. What they eat also depends on the type of bighorn. For
example, desert bighorns eat plants found in their location, such as desert
holly and desert cactus.
One swallow of food
isn't enough for these animals. They will regurgitate their food into their
mouths. This regurgitated food is called cud. Then, they will rechew the food
and swallow it once again. This is part of their digestion process.
Offspring
The dominant ram earns
the right to mate with the females. Mating season, called the rut, is in the
autumn. Males are not usually strong enough to mate until they are at least 3
years old.
Female bighorns are
pregnant for about 175 days, or about 25 weeks. They usually have only one lamb
at a time. In the spring, the young are born on high ledges that protect them
from predators.
Lambs are dependent on
their mothers for the first four to six months of their lives, though they can
walk almost as soon as they are born. The mortality rate for lambs is quite
high. On average, 5 to 30 percent of lambs don't make it to adulthood,
according to ADW, though sometimes the death rate can be as high as 80 percent.
Rams typically don't
mate until they are around 7 years old. They can live from 10 to 19 years in
the wild.
Classification/taxonomy
The taxonomy of bighorn
sheep, according to the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS), is:
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Bilateria
Infrakingdom:
Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum:
Gnathostomata
Superclass: Tetrapoda
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Theria
Infraclass: Eutheria
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Subfamily: Caprinae
Genus: Ovis
Species: Ovis
canadensis
Subspecies:
Ovis canadensis
auduboni(Badlands bighorn or Audubon's bighorn sheep — extinct)
Ovis canadensis
californiana (California bighorn sheep)
Ovis canadensis
canadensis (Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep)
Ovis canadensis
cremnobates (Peninsular bighorn sheep)
Ovis canadensis
mexicana (desert bighorn sheep)
Ovis canadensis nelsoni
(Nelson's bighorn sheep)
Ovis canadensis weemsi
(Weems' bighorn sheep)
Conservation status
The International Union
for Conservation of Nature lists bighorn sheep as Least Concern, saying their
population is widespread and not declining at any rate close enough to qualify
for a listing in a threatened category. It is estimated that there are 15,500
to 15,700 bighorn sheep in Canada and more than 42,000 in the United States. It
is believed that there could be several thousand bighorns in Mexico. Almost all
bighorn populations are increasing or stable.
However, the U.S. Fish
& Wildlife Service does list the Peninsular bighorn sheep and the
California bighorn sheep (listed as a subpopulation of Sierra Nevada bighorns)
as endangered.
source:
https://www.livescience.com/27724-rams.html
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