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Blue Wildebeest in North Africa?
Presently, Blue Wildebeest are only located within southern and eastern Africa. I need to know if they and/or their subspecies ever occurred in North Africa below the Sahara, and if so, when. I found this from a site regarding vanishing antelope, but I'm not sure if it's genuine:
"A century ago the Blue Wildebeest were the dominant herbivores in acacia savannah plains and ranged the entire continent except for deserts, forests and high mountains. Today there are none north of the Sahara. The Serengeti and south Sudan have the remaining massive herds that indicate their former abundance."
Thanks for any help.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.For those who grant interest, or may one day require answers as well, I found this from a PDF file:
"Lake Chad was, at one time larger in area than the Caspian Sea and is referred to as MegaChad during the period 10,000-8,000 years ago. The tsetse zone extended about 500 km further north than its present boundary, almost reaching the 18th parallel. Most of the present-day desert was grassland and the mammalian fauna was similar to the present fauna in East Africa. Elephants, Giraffes, Hippos, Rhinoceroses, and Wildebeest were only some of the large mammals which existed in the region at this time."
They did not distinguish the species of Wildebeest.