Ovis dalli dalli

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Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Family:Bovidae
Ovis dalli dalli
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Subfamily: Caprinae
Genus: Ovis
Species:
Subspecies:
O. d. dalli
Trinomial name
Ovis dalli dalli
Nelson, 1884

Ovis dalli dalli, the Dall sheep or Dall's sheep, is a subspecies of thinhorn sheep. Like other sheep, they are large herbivores, feeding primarily on grass and other plants.[1] They are endemic to northwestern North America, in Canada and Alaska.[2][3][4]

These sheep are about 1.5 m high and can weigh up to 110 kg. The female sheep have small, tan horns and the male sheep have larger horns that become more twisted as they age. The wool of Dall's sheep is almost pure white.[5]

The sheep's horns grow fastest in warm weather and slowest in cold weather. This puts rings in the horns called annuli. The number of rings shows how old the sheep is.[3]

This type of thinhorn sheep can interbreed with stone sheep. These thinhorn sheep are sometimes called Fannin's sheep.[5]

Most Dall sheep live to be about 12 years old, but some ewes live to be 16 or even 19.[3]

Distribution

There are about 100,000 Dall sheep in the wild. They are found in Alaska in the Kenai Peninsula and Brooks Range. They live in Canada's Yukon and Northwest Territories in the Mackenzie Mountains, Kluane and Saint Elias Mountains ranges.[2]

Behavior

Like other thinhorn sheep, Dall sheep live in mountains. Because they do not have long legs or large feet, they cannot move easily in deep snow. They prefer places where the wind scours the snow away before it can accumulate in drifts.[1] Dall sheep climb onto rocks to escape predators.[2] They follow the same paths from summer places to winter places for generations.[5]

Dall sheep live in herds. Adult rams live together in bachelor herds, and the ewes and young sheep live in other herds. Male sheep leave the female herds when they are two or three years old.[4][6][2]

The sheep mate in November. Although younger rams can mate, it is principally the older rams who actually sire offspring.[2]

Before an ewe gives birth, she climbs to a rocky, inaccessible site called a "lambing cliff." She and her lamb stay there for a few days.[2] The lamb can eat grass by October.[3]

Predators

History

References

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