Its diet consisted of grass, herbs and lichens (Caprinae Specialist Group 2000).
Rangemap The Pyrenean Ibex was native to the Pyrenees, a mountain range in Andorra, France and Spain. Probably, no so long ago, it should have been spread over the whole Pyrenees as well as in the eastern part of the Cantabrian Range (Cabrera, 1914).More recently the population was restricted to Parque Nacional Ordesa y Monte Perdido (Ordesa National Park), in the province of Huesca in the autonomous community of Aragon in Spain. The Pyrenean Ibex preferred a rocky, mountainous habitat. (Caprinae Specialist Group 2000)
Image: map with the geographic distribution of the Iberian ibex (based on Manceau et al. 1999). The recent distribution of the Pyrenean Ibex (C. p. pyrenaica) is coloured red, that of the also extinct Portuguese Ibex (C. p. lusitanica) is coloured yellow, that of the Gredos Ibex (C. p. victoriae) is coloured blue and that of the Beceite Ibex (C. p. hispanica) is coloured green. Created by Peter Maas for The Extinction Website. This image has been released under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives 3.0 licence.
Its diet consisted of grass, herbs and lichens (Caprinae Specialist Group 2000).
Rangemap The Pyrenean Ibex was native to the Pyrenees, a mountain range in Andorra, France and Spain. Probably, no so long ago, it should have been spread over the whole Pyrenees as well as in the eastern part of the Cantabrian Range (Cabrera, 1914).More recently the population was restricted to Parque Nacional Ordesa y Monte Perdido (Ordesa National Park), in the province of Huesca in the autonomous community of Aragon in Spain. The Pyrenean Ibex preferred a rocky, mountainous habitat. (Caprinae Specialist Group 2000)
Image: map with the geographic distribution of the Iberian ibex (based on Manceau et al. 1999). The recent distribution of the Pyrenean Ibex (C. p. pyrenaica) is coloured red, that of the also extinct Portuguese Ibex (C. p. lusitanica) is coloured yellow, that of the Gredos Ibex (C. p. victoriae) is coloured blue and that of the Beceite Ibex (C. p. hispanica) is coloured green. Created by Peter Maas for The Extinction Website. This image has been released under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives 3.0 licence.
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