From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Blackbuck
Antelope native to India and Nepal
Antelope native to India and Nepal
- A. c. cervicapra (Linnaeus, 1758)
- A. c. rajputanae Zukowsky, 1927 |Cervicapra|Sparrman, 1780 |Antilope bezoartica|Gray, 1850 |Capra cervicapra|Linnaeus, 1758
The blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra), also known as the Indian antelope, is a medium-sized antelope native to India and Nepal. It inhabits grassy plains and lightly forested areas with perennial water sources. It stands up to 74 to high at the shoulder. Males weigh 20 -, with an average of 38 kg. Females are lighter, weighing 20 - or 27 kg on average. Males have 35 - long corkscrew horns, and females occasionally develop horns, as well. The white fur on the chin and around the eyes is in sharp contrast with the black stripes on the face. Both sexes' coats feature a two-tone colouration; in males, the majority of the body is dark brown to black, with white circles around the eyes, white ears and tail, and the belly, lower jaw, and inner legs also white. Females and juveniles are yellowish-fawn to tan and display the same white areas, only with more of a beige tone than the males. Females also feature a more pronounced horizontal white side-stripe, starting around the shoulder and ending at the rump. The blackbuck is the sole living member of the genus Antilope and was described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758. Two subspecies are recognized.
The blackbuck is active mainly during the day. It forms three types of small groups: female, male, and young bachelor herds. Males often adopt lekking as a strategy to garner females for mating. While other males are not allowed into these territories, females often visit these places to forage. The male can thus attempt mating with her. The blackbuck is an herbivore and grazes on low grasses, occasionally browsing as well. Females become sexually mature at the age of eight months, but mate no earlier than two years of age. Males mature later, at 1.5 years. Mating takes place throughout the year. Gestation is typically six months long, after which a single calf is born. The lifespan is typically 10 to 15 years.
The antelope is native to and occurs mainly in India, while it is locally extinct in Pakistan and Bangladesh. It was formerly widespread; today small and scattered herds are largely confined to protected areas. During the 20th century, blackbuck numbers declined sharply due to excessive hunting, deforestation, and habitat destruction.
The blackbuck has been introduced in Argentina, Australia and the United States, primarily on hunting ranches. In Argentina, the population is surviving well. In India, hunting of blackbuck is prohibited under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972. The blackbuck has significance in Hinduism; Indian and Nepali villagers do not harm the antelope.
Etymology
The scientific name of the blackbuck Antilope cervicapra stems from the Latin word antalopus ("horned animal"). The specific name cervicapra is composed of the Latin words cervus ("deer") and capra ("she-goat"). The vernacular name "blackbuck" is a reference to the dark brown to black colour of the dorsal part of the coat of the males. The earliest recorded use of this name dates back to 1850.
Taxonomy and evolution
The blackbuck is the sole living member of the genus Antilope and is classified in the family Bovidae. The species was described and given its binomial name by Swedish zoologist Carl Linnaeus in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae in 1758. Antilope also includes fossil species, such as Antilope subtorta and Antilope intermedia.
Antilope, Eudorcas, Gazella, and Nanger form a clade within their tribe Antilopini. A 1995 study of the detailed karyotype of Antilope suggested that within this clade, Antilope is closest to the Gazella group. A 1999 phylogenetic analysis confirmed that Antilope is the closest sister taxon to Gazella, although an earlier phylogeny, proposed in 1976, placed Antilope as sister to Nanger. In a more recent revision of the phylogeny of the Antilopini on the basis of sequences from multiple nuclear and mitochondrial loci in 2013, Eva Verena Bärmann (of the University of Cambridge) and colleagues re-examined the phylogenetic relationships and found Antilope and Gazella to be sister genera distinct from the sister genera Nanger and Eudorcas.
Two subspecies are recognised,
- A. c. cervicapra (Linnaeus, 1758), known as the southeastern blackbuck, occurs in southern, eastern, and central India. The white eye ring of the male is narrow above the eye and the neck is all black in the male and the white on the underside is largely restricted to the belly in both males and females. The black leg stripe is well defined and reaches all along the leg.
- A. c. rajputanae (Zukowsky, 1927), known as the northwestern blackbuck, occurs in northwestern India. Males have a grey sheen to the dark parts during the breeding season. The white on the underside extends up to half way on the sides of the body and the lower base of the neck of males is white. The white eye ring is broad all around the eye with the leg-stripe going only down to the shanks.
Genetics
The blackbuck shows variation in its diploid chromosome number. Males have 31–33, while females have 30–32. Males have an XY1Y2 sex chromosome. Unusually large sex chromosomes had earlier been described only in a few species, all of which belonged to Rodentia. However, in 1968, a study found that two artiodactyls, the blackbuck and the sitatunga, too, showed this abnormality. Generally, the X chromosome constitutes 5% of the haploid chromosomal complement, but the X chromosome of the blackbuck this percentage is 14.96. Portions of both peculiarly large chromosomes show delayed replication.
A 1997 study found lower variation in blood protein polymorphism in Antilope in comparison with Antidorcas, Eudorcas, and Gazella. This was attributed to a history of rapid evolution of an autapomorphic phenotype of Antilope. This might have been aided by a particularly strong selection of a few dominant males due to their lekking behaviour.
Characteristics

The blackbuck has white fur on the chin and around the eyes, which is in sharp contrast with the black stripes on the face. The coats of males show two-tone colouration; while the upper parts and outsides of the legs are dark brown to black, the underparts and the insides of the legs are all white. Darkness typically increases as the male ages; females and juveniles are yellowish fawn to tan. In Texas, blackbuck moult in spring, following which the males look notably lighter, though darkness persists on the face and the legs. On the contrary, males grow darker as the breeding season approaches. and albinism have been observed in wild blackbuck. Albino blackbuck are often zoo attractions as in the Indira Gandhi Zoological Park.
The blackbuck is a moderately sized antelope. It stands up to 74 to high at the shoulder; the head-to-body length is nearly 120 cm.
Blackbuck bear a close resemblance to gazelles, and are distinguished mainly by the fact that while gazelles are brown in the dorsal parts, blackbuck develop a dark brown or black colour in these parts.
Distribution and habitat

The blackbuck is native to the Indian subcontinent and inhabits grassy plains and thinly forested areas where perennial water sources are available for its daily need to drink. Herds travel long distances to obtain water. The British naturalist William Thomas Blanford described the range of the blackbuck in his 1891 The Fauna of British India, including Ceylon and Burma as: Today, small, scattered herds are largely confined to protected areas.
In Pakistan, the blackbuck occasionally occurred along the border with India until 2001. A few blackbucks are present in the Indian Institute of Technology Madras campus.
The blackbuck is considered locally extinct in Pakistan and Bangladesh.
Introduced populations
The blackbuck was also introduced into Argentina, numbering about 8,600 individuals as of the early 2000s.
In the early 1900s, blackbuck were introduced to Western Australia. In either the late 1980s or the early 1990s, they were also introduced to Cape York in Far North Queensland, although the population was subsequently eradicated. In 2013, an antelope that appeared to be a blackbuck was sighted at Kakadu National Park in the Northern Territory. In 2015, a blackbuck was sighted near Warrnambool, Victoria, which was later captured and sent to Mansfield Zoo. The blackbuck is a declared pest in Queensland In Victoria, blackbuck and American bison are considered both "regulated pest animals" and livestock.
The antelope was introduced in Texas in the Edwards Plateau in 1932. By 1988, the population had increased and the antelope was the most populous exotic animal in Texas after the chital.
Ecology and behaviour
_(19726308174).jpg)
The blackbuck is a diurnal antelope, though is less active at noon when summer temperatures rise. It can run at a speed of 80 km/h.
Group size fluctuates and seems to depend on the availability of forage and the nature of the habitat. Large herds have an edge over smaller ones in that danger can be detected faster, though individual vigilance is lower in the former. Large herds spend more time feeding than small herds. A disadvantage for large herds, however, is that traveling requires more resources. Herd size reduces in summer.
Males often adopt lekking as a strategy on the part of males to garner females for mating. Territories are established by males on the basis of the local distribution of female groups, which in turn is determined by the habitat, so as to ensure greater access to females. The males actively defend resources in their territories, nearly 1.2 to in size; While other males are not allowed into these territories, females are allowed to visit these places to forage. The male can attempt mating with visiting females. Lekking is a demanding strategy, as the males often have to bear injuries – thus it is a tactic typically adopted by strong, dominant males. Males may either defend their mates or try to forcibly copulate with them. Weaker males, who may not be dominant, might choose the second method.
The blackbuck is severely affected by natural calamities such as floods and droughts, from which it can take as long as five years to recover. Old rutting bulls might be especially vulnerable prey. The golden jackal hunts juveniles. Village dogs are reported to kill fawns, but are unlikely to successfully hunt and kill adults.
Blackbucks in Great Indian Bustard Sanctuary show flexible habitat use as the resources and risks change seasonally in the landscape. They use small patches in the area of about 3 km2. Human activities strongly influenced the movement of herds, but the presence of small refuges allowed them to persist in the landscape.
Diet
The blackbuck is a herbivore and grazes on low grasses, occasionally browsing as well. It prefers sedges, fall witchgrass, mesquite, and live oak and was occasionally observed browsing on acacia trees in the Cholistan Desert. In Velavadar Black Buck Sanctuary, Dichanthium annulatum comprised 35% of the diet. Digestion of nutrients, especially crude proteins, was poor in summer, but more efficient in the rainy and winter seasons. Crude protein intake in summer was very low, even below the recommended value. Blackbuck consumed less food in summer than in winter, and often foraged on the fruits of Prosopis juliflora. Prosopis becomes a significant food item if grasses are scarce. Water is a daily requirement of the blackbuck.
Reproduction
Females become sexually mature at the age of eight months, but mate no earlier than two years. Males mature at the age of one-and-a-half years. Mating takes place throughout the year; peaks occur during spring and fall in Texas. Rutting males aggressively establish and defend their territories from other males, giving out loud grunts and engaging in serious head-to-head fights, pushing each other using horns.
Gestation typically lasts six months, after which a single calf is born. Newborns are a light yellow; infant males may have a black patch on the head and the neck. Young are precocial, they can stand on their own soon after birth. Females can mate again after a month of parturition. Juveniles remain active and playful throughout the day. Juvenile males turn black gradually, darkening notably after the third year. The lifespan is typically 10 to 15 years.
Threats

During the 20th century, blackbuck numbers declined sharply due to excessive hunting, deforestation and habitat degradation. Some blackbucks are killed illegally especially where the species is sympatric with nilgai.
Until India's independence in 1947, blackbuck and chinkara were hunted in many princely states with specially trained captive Asiatic cheetahs. By the 1970s, blackbuck was locally extinct in several areas.
Conservation
The blackbuck is listed under Appendix III of CITES. In India, hunting of blackbuck is prohibited under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972. It inhabits several protected areas of India, including
- in Gujarat: Velavadar National Park, Gir Forest National Park;
- in Bihar: Kaimur Wildlife Sanctuary;
- in Maharashtra: Great Indian Bustard Sanctuary;
- in Madhya Pradesh: Kanha National Park
- in Rajasthan: Tal Chhapar Sanctuary, National Chambal Sanctuary, Ranthambhore National Park
- in Karnataka: Ranibennur Blackbuck Sanctuary;
- in Tamil Nadu: Point Calimere Wildlife and Bird Sanctuary, Guindy National Park.
- in Punjab: Abohar Wildlife Sanctuary A captive population is maintained in Pakistan's Lal Suhanra National Park.
In culture

The blackbuck has associations with the Indian culture. The antelope might have been a source of food in the Indus Valley civilisation (3300–1700 BCE); bone remains have been discovered in sites such as Dholavira and Mehrgarh. The blackbuck is routinely depicted in miniature paintings of the Mughal era of 16th to 19th centuries depicting royal hunts often using cheetahs. Villagers in India and Nepal generally do not harm the blackbuck. Tribes such as the Bishnois revere and care for most animals including the blackbuck.
The blackbuck is mentioned in Sanskrit texts as the Kṛṣṇamṛga. In Tamil Nadu, the blackbuck is considered to be the vehicle of the Hindu goddess Korravai. In Rajasthan, the goddess Karni Mata is believed to protect the blackbuck.
In the Yājñavalkya Smṛti, Sage Yagyavalkya is quoted stating "in what country there is black antelope, in that Dharma must be known", which is interpreted to mean that certain religious practices including sacrifices were not to be performed where blackbuck did not roam.
The hide of the blackbuck is deemed to be sacred in Hinduism. According to the scriptures, it is to be sat upon only by brahmin priests, sadhus and yogis, forest-dwellers and bhikshu mendicants. Blackbuck meat is highly regarded in Texas. In an analysis, blackbuck milk was found to have 6.9% protein, 9.3% fat, and 4.3% lactose.
In some agricultural areas in northern India, the blackbuck are found in large numbers and raid crop fields. However, the damage caused by blackbuck is far lower than that caused by the nilgai.
In 2018, Bollywood actor Salman Khan was sentenced to five years imprisonment for poaching a blackbuck in 1998.
|File:Barwani State coat of arms.png|Barwani coat of arms |File:Jaisalmer State CoA.png|Jaisalmer coat of arms |File:Jaora CoA.png|Jaora coat of arms |File:Malerkotla State CoA.png|Malerkotla coat of arms |File:Nawanagar State-coa.png|Nawanagar coat of arms |File:Radhanpur State-CoA392.jpg|Radhanpur coat of arms |File:Samthar State CoA.png|Samthar coat of arms
References
References
- IUCN SSC Antelope Specialist Group. (2017). "''Antilope cervicapra''".
- "''Antilope cervicapra'' (Linnaeus, 1758)".
- {{MerriamWebsterDictionary. Antilope
- (1904). "Index Generum Mammalium: A List of the Genera and Families of Mammals". Government Printing Office.
- {{MerriamWebsterDictionary. Cervicapra
- (1999). "Encyclopedia of Deserts". University of Oklahoma Press.
- {{MerriamWebsterDictionary. Blackbuck
- (1891). "The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma". [[Taylor and Francis]].
- (1999). "Walker's Mammals of the World". Johns Hopkins University Press.
- (2014). "Antelopes (Mammalia, Ruminantia, Bovidae) from the Upper Siwaliks of Tatrot, Pakistan, with description of a new species". Paleontological Journal.
- (1995). "Chromosomal evolution in gazelles". Journal of Heredity.
- (1999). "Phylogenetic relationships in the bovid subfamily Antilopinae based on mitochondrial DNA sequences". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.
- (1976). "Chromosome studies in the mammalian subfamily Antilopinae". Genetica.
- (2013). "A revised phylogeny of Antilopini (Bovidae, Artiodactyla) using combined mitochondrial and nuclear genes". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.
- (2008). "Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia". Wiley-Interscience.
- {{MSW3 Artiodactyla
- (2011). "Ungulate Taxonomy". Johns Hopkins University Press.
- (2012). "The 34,XY 1 ,der(13) Chromosome Constitution with Loss of Y 2 Is Associated with Unilateral Testicular Hypoplasia in the Endangered Indian Blackbuck Antelope (Antilope cervicapra)". Sexual Development.
- (February 1968). "Unusually large sex chromosomes in the sitatunga (''Tragelaphus spekei'') and the blackbuck (''Antilope cervicapra'')". Chromosoma.
- (1997). "Blood protein variation in blackbuck (''Antilope cervicapra''), a lekking gazelle". Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde.
- (2011). "Wildlife and Natural Resource Management". Delmar Cengage Learning.
- (2004). "Mammals of Texas". University of Texas Press.
- Smith, J. M.. (1904). "Melanism in black buck". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society.
- (11 July 2008). "Albino black buck attracts visitors to zoo". [[The Hindu]].
- (1980). "A note on geographic variation in the Indian blackbuck (''Antilope cervicapra'')". Records of the Zoological Survey of India.
- (2008). "People and blackbuck: Current management challenges and opportunities". The Initiation.
- "Black Buck IITM campus".
- (2016-04-18). "Blackbuck antelope".
- "Antelope sightings in Kakadu - ABC (none) - Australian Broadcasting Corporation".
- (2014-08-25). "Blackbuck captured in South West".
- "Antilope cervicapra".
- (2023-08-01). "Interstate livestock movements - Agriculture".
- (2011). "Encyclopedia of Biological Invasions". University of California Press.
- (2007). "Intraspecific variation in group size in the blackbuck antelope: the roles of habitat structure and forage at different spatial scales". Oecologia.
- (2004). "Female grouping best predicts lekking in blackbuck (''Antilope cervicapra'')". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
- (2006). "Scent marking by Indian blackbuck: Characteristics and spatial distribution of urine, pellet, preorbital and interdigital gland marking in captivity". Wildlife Biodiversity Conservation: Proceedings of the "National Seminar on Wildlife Biodiversity Conservation", 13 to 15 October 2006, A Seminar Conducted During the "bi-decennial Celebrations" of Pondicherry University.
- (2000). "Variation in lekking costs in blackbuck (''Antilope cervicapra''): Relationship to lek-territory location and female mating patterns". Behaviour.
- (1993). "Predation on blackbuck by wolves in Velavadar National Park, Gujarat, India". Conservation Biology.
- (1991). "Habitat and population dynamics of wolves and blackbuck in Velavadar National Park, Gujarat". Ph.D. dissertation.
- Ranjitsinh, M. K.. (1989). "The Indian Blackbuck". Natraj Publishers.
- (2016). "Wild Ungulate Decision-Making and the Role of Tiny Refuges in Human-Dominated Landscapes". PLOS ONE.
- (2013). "Antelope mating strategies facilitate invasion of grasslands by a woody weed". Oikos.
- (1997). "Seasonal effects on the nutritional ecology of blackbuck ''Antilope cervicapra''". Journal of Applied Ecology.
- (1988). "Hormonal and behavioural detection of oestrus in blackbuck, ''Antilope cervicapra'', and successful artificial insemination with fresh and frozen semen". Reproduction.
- (2002). "Black bucks of Abohar". [[The Tribune (Chandigarh).
- "Schedule I - Wildlife Protection Act". Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Government of India.
- (2001). "Antelopes: Global Survey and Regional Action Plans". International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources ([[IUCN]]).
- (2011). "A conservation success story in the otherwise dire megafauna extinction crisis: The Asiatic lion (''Panthera leo persica'') of Gir forest". Biological Conservation.
- (19 January 2017). "MP's Kanha park gets its blackbucks back".
- (2003). "Habitat separation among ungulates in dry tropical forests of Ranthambhore National Park, Rajasthan". Tropical Ecology.
- (2008). "The Ancient Indus Valley: New Perspectives". ABC-Clio.
- (2008). "Animals in Stone: Indian Mammals Sculptured through Time". Brill.
- (2013). "Animal Kingdoms: Hunting, the Environment, and Power in the Indian Princely States". Harvard University Press.
- (1987). "The Emperors' Album: Images of Mughal India". Abrams.
- (2013). "Paintings from Mughal India". University of Oxford Press.
- (2013). "Discovering Big Cat Country: On the Trail of Tigers and Snow Leopards". Island Press.
- Nanditha Krishna. (2014). "Sacred Animals of Krishna". Penguin UK.
- (2008). "Animals in Stone: Indian Mammals Sculptured through Time". Brill.
- (1918). "The Sacred Books of the Hindus". Sudhnidra Nath Vasu.
- (1996). "Hindu Scriptures". University of California.
- (1997). "Land of the Tiger: A Natural History of the Indian Subcontinent". University of California Press.
- (2009). "Jon Bonnell's Fine Texas Cuisine". Gibbs Smith.
- (1972). "Gross composition and fatty acid constitution of blackbuck antelope (''Antilope cervicapra'') milk". Canadian Journal of Zoology.
- (January 1993). "Damage to ''Sorghum'' crop by blackbuck". International Journal of Pest Management.
- (1990). "Crop damage by overabundant populations of nilgai and blackbuck in Haryana (India) and its management (Paper 13)". Proceedings of the Fourteenth Vertebrate Pest Conference 1990.
- (1989). "Problems of over-abundant populations of 'Nilgai' and 'Blackbuck' in Haryana and Madhya Pradesh and their management". The Indian Forester.
- (5 April 2018). "Blackbuck poaching case: Salman Khan gets 5-year jail term". The Economic Times.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Blackbuck — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report