Brown hyena: Difference between revisions
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The '''brown hyena''' ''Parahyaena brunnea'' is the only species within the genus '''''Parahyaena'''''. It has the most restricted range of the members of the [[biological family|family]] [[Hyaenidae]]. Current research is showing that the behaviour of this hyena is extremely variable. | The '''brown hyena''' ''Parahyaena brunnea'' is the only species within the genus '''''Parahyaena'''''. It has the most restricted range of the members of the [[biological family|family]] [[Hyaenidae]]. Current research is showing that the behaviour of this hyena is extremely variable. | ||
==Behaviour== | ==Behaviour== |
Revision as of 00:16, 30 January 2008
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Brown hyena (Parahyaena brunnea), Namibia.Template:Photo
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Parahyaena brunnea Thunberg, 1820 |
The brown hyena Parahyaena brunnea is the only species within the genus Parahyaena. It has the most restricted range of the members of the family Hyaenidae. Current research is showing that the behaviour of this hyena is extremely variable.
Behaviour
The brown hyena was previously believed to be strictly nocturnal. [2] [3]. Current research on the south west coast of Namibia shows that brown hyaenas are active all hours of the day and night. [4] Females give birth to 2-3 cubs at any time of the year [2]. They live in loose clan systems, which share a fixed home range, but forage alone.
Diet
Not an efficient hunter, in most of its range the brown hyena is primarily a scavenger and forages a wide range of food from vegetables and fruit to reptiles, birds and mammals. The lone exception to this is the populations living on the Namibian coast where they have been observed killing seal pups. They are capable of scavenging from the largest available prey in the region [5] They are known to collect vast quantities of faunal remains in their dens, said collections of bone are a direct reflection of the other species found in the region at the time of collection [5].
Geographical distribution
The range of brown hyena is limited to areas of Namibia, Botswana, South Africa, Zimbabwe and south west Angola. At one time their range extended all the way to Table Bay in the Western Cape of South Africa [3].