Hippopotamus
\n| Hippopotamus |
\n |
\n |
\n |
\n\n| : | Animalia | \n| : | Chordata | \n| : | Mammalia | \n| : | Artiodactyla | \n| : | Hippopotamidae | \n| : | Hippopotamus | \n| : | amphibius | \n \n |
| Binomial name |
\n| Hippopotamus amphibius |
\n
\nThe
Hippopotamus (
Hippopotamus amphibius) is a large, plant-eating African
mammal, one of only two in the
family Hippopotamidae. (The other is the
Pygmy Hippopotamus.)
Hippopotamuses ('hippopotami' is also accepted as a
plural form by the
OED), also called hippos, are gregarious, living in groups of up to 20 animals. They spend most of the day up to their nostrils in the waters of tropical rivers, as their skin transpires much more moisture than most animals and they are extremely susceptible to
sunburn. They can close their nostrils and remain completely submerged for more than ten minutes. They are buoyant and very skilled and graceful in water. They feed on land mostly at night, consuming as much as 50 kg (approximately 120 pounds) of vegetation a day.
Despite the popular image of the animal being easygoing and peaceful, the hippopotamus is actually one of the most dangerous African animals, said to account for more human deaths than any other mammal. Its
canine teeth are 50 cm (20 inches) long, and it uses its head as a
battering ram. The animals stand 1.5 metres tall (5 feet) at the shoulder and weigh between 2,700 and 4,500 kg (6000-9900 lbs). They are approximately the same size as the
Black Rhinoceros; one or the other is the next-largest land animal after the three species of
elephants.
The word hippopotamus comes, by way of
Latin, from the ancient
Greek ιππος ποταμος (hippos potamos), which means river horse.
A dwarf species,
Phanourios minutis, existed on the island of
Cyprus but became extinct at the end of the
Pleistocene. Whether this was caused by human intervention is debated (see
Aetokremnos).
References
\n* Order Artiodactyla\n*: as of 2002-07-10\n*
http://www.awf.org/wildlives/140
\n\n \n\n\n