A previously read article about the migration of wildebeest in Africa

Updated on educate 2024-05-29
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Hehe. I've been looking for ...... for a long time

    I don't know if it's or not

    A total of two articles, published in Red Sleeves Fragrance.

    Address, you go and see. Wrong, wrong, just found the wrong one.

    This is definitely it.

    The Tale of a Wildebeest

    Here's a summary.

    My friend uses his long nose to not only suck water from the pond for drinking or rinsing, but also pick up tiny nuts. We talked for a long time, but he basically didn't move except for the rest of his nose, which seemed a little lazy. But he was unhurried

    Laziness is a worldview that you don't understand.

    Give you the address. That's right, hehe.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Gnu. Lives in central and southeastern Africa. During the rainy season (March to May), there is plenty of rain, the land is a stretch, and the vast grasslands are dotted with African wildebeests.

    But during the dry season (July-September), the African wildebeest has to leave in search of fresh forage, with a black face, tail, beard and markings, ranging in blue-gray to dark brown, and they gather in groups of up to 10,000 in search of food, covering 48 kilometres a day. in East Africa.

    In the Serengeti Plains, these African wildebeest migrate westward during the dry season. They plan to go to the riverside area to eat fresh grass.

    Extended information: In Kenya, Africa.

    There is the Mara River, which is the only way for wildebeest to migrate, and every year in October, millions of wildebeest attack from the Tanzanian Luja Yapai, 3,000 kilometers away.

    Migrated here.

    The main natural predators of wildebeest are lions and hyenas.

    and African hounds, but when the wildebeest crosses the Mara River, there is an animal that is bound to encounter the killer: the largest and most ** Nile crocodile in the world.

    Every year in October and March, the Mara River is marked by crocodiles hunting wildebeests.

    On July 26, 2015, in the Masai Mara National Park in Kenya, several wildebeest horses successfully landed across the river. In search of water and grass, millions of herbivores migrate from the Serengeti in Tanzania to the Masai Mara in Kenya, with some 1.5 million wildebeest being the main force. On the way, they need to cross the crocodile-infested Mara River, a spectacular spectacle known as the "Crossing of Heaven".

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    The African wildebeest migrates north in July and September, when the rainy season and dry season change from the East African savannah.

    The wildebeest is a herbivore that lives in pursuit of water and grass, and the water and grass are abundant and abundant, so they migrate to **. The wildebeest lives in the African savannah, and the savannah climate is divided into a distinct rainy season and a dry season, which makes the growth of grass plants appear distinctly seasonal. Wildebeest had to migrate in search of fresh forage.

    Wildebeest live most of the year in the Serengeti savannah, located in Tanzania, East Africa. The rainy season in the Serengeti savannah, from December to May. During the rainy season, hundreds of square kilometers of green grass are covered with grass along the way, and the wildebeest herd gradually advances along the grassland from north to south and from east to west, enjoying abundant water and food while giving birth to children and breeding offspring during this time.

    By June and July, the Serengeti rainy season is over, and the rain area has moved northwards and precipitation has decreased. With the advent of the dry season, the Serengeti grasslands have gradually become wasteland, and herbivores, including wildebeests, are facing a growing existential crisis. At this time, the Masai Mara Nature Reserve in northern Kenya is in the continuous rainy season, making it the "Garden of Eden" with abundant water and grass in the entire East African grassland.

    At this time, the wildebeest follows the pace of the rain, in July and October every year, day and night, to avoid the attacks of many predators, travel more than 40 kilometers a day, and migrate north to the Masai Mara in Kenya, a distance of about 3,000 kilometers.

    However, the Masai Mara, which is only about a tenth the size of the Serengeti, struggled to sustain the millions of wildebeest for three months, and when the grass along the way was eaten up, the wildebeest had to find new pasture. So, before the rainy season in Tanzania in November, the wildebeest began to leave the Masai Mara again, migrating south and returning to the Serengeti, once again a new migration cycle and reincarnation.

    Among this migratory army were not only wildebeests, but also zebras and gazelles.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    In search of water and grass.

    Wildebeest live in central and southeastern Africa. During the rainy season (March to May), the rain is abundant, the land is wide, and the vast grasslands are dotted with African wildebeests.

    But during the dry season (July-September), the African wildebeest has to leave in search of fresh forage, with a black face, tail, beard and markings, ranging in blue-gray to dark brown, and they gather in groups of up to 10,000 in search of food, covering 48 kilometres a day. In the Serengeti plains of East Africa, these wildebeest migrate westward during the dry season. They plan to go to the riverside area to eat fresh grass.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Yes. Hall calendar.

    The wildebeest lives in the secluded savannah climate zone of Africa, while Africa straddles the northern and southern hemispheres with opposite seasons. The climate of the savannah is divided into two seasons: dry and wet, the wet season is lush with vegetation and the dry season is withered and yellow. During the wet season in the northern hemisphere, the southern hemisphere is in the dry season, and the northern hemisphere is lush with vegetation and abundant food.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The Great Wildebeest Migration in Africa is closely related to seasonal variations in precipitation.

    The African wildebeest lives in the tropical Panchang grassland, and the savannah climate has a pronounced cold pole and rainy season throughout the year. Controlled by the equatorial depression to form the rainy season, the surface of the land is lush and green, and the wildebeest has abundant food, and in the dry season, the surface of the ground is yellow, and the wildebeest needs to migrate long distances from the northern hemisphere to the southern hemisphere or from the southern hemisphere to the northern hemisphere, because the rainy season and the dry season in the northern and southern hemispheres occur at opposite times. It's the dry season here, and the rainy season is good and there's plenty of food.

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