Scimitar Oryx For Sale | Texas Scimitar Oryx Hunts | Texas Scimitar Oryx Hunting | Eight Point Ranch
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Eight Point Ranch
650 CR 468
Elgin, TX 78621

Bobby Girling
Phone: (512) 423-0362

Scimitar Oryx

Eight Point Ranch has Scimitar Oryx for sale in Texas. Centrally located 8 Point Ranch is 45 minutes from Austin in Elgin. To arrange your Scimitar Oryx hunts in Texas call EPR. Eight Point Ranch offers some of the finest and most consistent year around Kudu hunting in Texas. Contact 8 Point Ranch for your next Scimitar Oryx order for delivery.

Scimitar Oryx Facts:

The Scimitar Oryx, or Scimitar-Horned Oryx, (Oryx dammah) is a species of oryx which formerly inhabited the whole of North Africa. Today conflicting reports exist as to whether it is extinct in the wild, or whether small populations survive in central Niger and Chad.

The Scimitar Oryx is just over a metre at the shoulder and weighs around two hundred kilograms. Its coat is white with a red-brown chest and black markings on the forehead and down the length of the nose. The horns are long, thin and parallel and curve backwards (like a scimitar) and can reach a metre to a metre and a quarter on both sexes, male and female.

Scimitar Oryx natively inhabit steppe and desert where they eat leaves, grass and fruit. They form herds of mixed sex containing up to seventy animals. Formerly they would gather in groups of several thousand for migration. Scimitar Oryx can survive without water for many weeks, because their kidneys prevent loss of water from urination and they can modify their body temperature to avoid perspiration.
Scimitar Oryx were hunted for their horns, almost to extinction. Where once they occupied the whole Sahara, they are now considered to be extinct in the wild, although there have been unconfirmed sightings in Chad and Niger.

A global captive breeding programme was initiated in the 1960s. In 1996, there were at least 1,250 captive animals held in zoos and parks around the world with a further 2,145 on ranches in Texas. A herd exists in a fenced nature preserve in Tunisia, and is being expanded with plans for reintroduction to the wild in that country .

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