Bovidae
Author
Don E. Wilson
Author
Russell A. Mittermeier
text
2011
2011-08-31
Lynx Edicions
Barcelona
Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 2 Hoofed Mammals
444
779
book chapter
58516
10.5281/zenodo.6512484
67b52095-db4b-43f8-a661-4aced0511111
978-84-96553-77-4
6512484
157.
Tiang
Damaliscus tiang
French:
Tiang
/
German:
Tiang
/
Spanish:
Tiang
Taxonomy.
Damalis tiang Heuglin, 1863
,
Sobat Valley,
Sudan
.
Formerly in the synonymy of
D. korrigum
. Monotypic.
Distribution.
Sudan
, E of the Nile, extending into W
Ethiopia
.
Descriptive notes.
Few measurements available. Shoulder height
127 cm
; weight
122 kg
. Color reddish-bay suffused with a reddish-purple bloom. Legs bright cinnamon. Shoulder and haunch patches are ash-gray, with reddish tinge. Facial blaze is blackish-gray, with reddish tinge. In skull and horn characters, the Tiang is slightly more extreme than the
Korrigum
(
D. korrigum
), with somewhat more sexual dimorphism. The sexual size difference in the horns is greater in the Tiang than in other taxa.
Habitat.
Like other large species of
Damaliscus
, the Tiang lives in edaphic grasslands.
Food and Feeding.
A grazer; in the Dinder National Park,
Sudan
, 98% of the dry season diet is grass, only 2% being forbs, with no shrub component. The favored grass species are Echinochloa, which are also favored by the sympatric Lake
Chad
Buffalo (
Syncerus brachyceros
), Defassa Waterbuck (
Kobus defassa
), and reedbucks (
Redunca
sp.), although there is much less overlap with the Roan
Antelope
(
Hippotragus equinus
) or
the Sudan
Oribi (OQurebia
montana
).
Breeding.
Seasonal; calving occurs at the end of the dry season, about the end of March. Gestation is about seven months.
Activity patterns.
There is no specific information available for this species.
Movements, Home range and Social organization.
Tiang migrate between arid and savanna zones. Annual migrations were recorded in March-April from Mongalla north toward the Sobat
River
.
Status and Conservation.
Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List (as
D. lunatus
tiang). In 2007, as many as 160,000 Tiang were reported in southern
Sudan
, east of the
White Nile
, centered on Boma National Park.
Bibliography.
Brocklehurst (1931), Hashim (1987).