Hippopotamus
(Hippopotamus amphibius)

This study focuses on the Nile Hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibius, one of the two members of
the family hippopotamide. Hippos are amphibious mammals, remaining protected in the water during
day, and venturing nocturnally to forage on land, where a single individual may consume 40 kg in only five
hours of grazing. Hippos are very dangerous at this time, when they are estranged from the safety of the river,
and may attack any creature that interecpts their path to water.
They are one of the largest animals in Africa, with bulls weighing 1000-2500 kg, and the slightly smaller female weighing
1000-1700 kg.(5) The Nile Hippos have a barrel-shaped body and a broad, wide head. Their ears and eyes are located
dorsally, an adaptation that allows them to remain almost entirely submerged. Hippos have powerful jaws that open 150
degrees to reveal large canine tusks. Hippos are covered with thin hairless skin that is sensitive to the sun and rapidly
desicates. Several glands secrete a reddish fluid called "hippo blood" that functions to reflect UV radiation and reduce
dehydration. They are antiodactylous and their webbed four-toed feet leave distinct prints forming two small parallel
tracks on each path. Hippos reach sexual maturity between 6-8 years.
Hippos live together when in the water, but prefer to graze solitarily. The females form matriarchial social groups
led by a dominant male. The females have a gestation cycle of 230 days, and retreat in solitude to calve. The newborn
calves weigh between 22-55 kg at birth and remain alone with their mother for several weeks before rejoining the heard (5).
Hippos mark their territory by spraying feces onto bushes and grass along the paths with their broad paddle shaped tails.
There is evidence that territorality decreases as they move further from the water. In the past hippos have been brutally
hunted by humans but presently they are protected by CITES on the appendix I, which bans any hunting of hippos or sale
of their byproducts internationally.
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