Habitat
Japanese serows live
on steep, thickly wooded hillsides above 3,300 feet (1,000 m). Where
serows and their close relatives, gorals, share habitat, serows stay
mainly in dense brush above timber line. Gorals inhabit more precipitous
and barren slopes. |
Length and Shoulder Height
Adult length: 39-71 inches (100-180 cm) Adult shoulder height: 28-43 inches (70-110 cm) |
Weight
56-309 pounds (25-140 kg); mainland serows are
much larger and heavier than Japanese and Taiwanese serows. |
Life
Span
Life span in the wild is unknown; serows
live over 10 years in zoos. |
Diet
Ungulates cannot manipulate food
with their forelimbs, so their lips, teeth and tongues are
modified to take food directly from the plant or ground and
grind vegetation like a mill. Serows, like all Bovidae, are
specialized herbivores called ruminants.
In the wild: Serows
are predominantly browsers with selective food habits. They
eat herbs, leaves of trees or shrubs, shoots, twigs and grasses.
At the zoo: Herbivore
pellets, alfalfa, timothy grass hay and seasonal browse, some
fruits and vegetables. |
Reproduction
Mating
takes place in fall or winter. After a gestation period of 200 to 230
days, a single kid weighing about 8 pounds (3.5 kg) is born during the
months of May to September. The kid will reach full size and leave the
mother's territory at 12 months and
become sexually mature by 3 years.
Life Cycle
Serows, especially males, are usually solitary
but sometimes are found in pairs or family groups of up to seven. Both
sexes mark territories by rubbing onto rocks and branches a secretion
from their preorbital glands. The territory of a solitary individual
may be only three acres (1.2 ha), while that of a family group may
be up to 54 acres (22 ha).
Although they are less agile and move less rapidly
than gorals, serows are sure-footed, clambering easily along well-defined
trails on mountain slopes. They feed at dawn and dusk. During the
heat of the day, they take shelter in favorite resting places among
rocks, in caves, under overhanging rocks or cliffs, or in dense underbrush,
hidden from predators such as bears, tigers and wolves. Their smell,
vision and hearing are acute.
Bearded
Ladies
Serows are larger and stronger than gorals and better adapted to humid air.
Their long, mule-like ears are narrow, pointed and tasseled, and usually longer
than their short, black horns. Both males and females have cheek beards extending
from the corners of their mouths to the bases of their ears. Coat color varies
greatly by region.
Mainland serows have short beards, a long, heavy
mane and less bushy tails than Japanese and Taiwanese serows. Japanese
serows have conspicuous white cheek beards, but thin or no manes.
With longer, thicker and more woolly coats and shorter ears than
Mainland serows, they can tolerate lower temperatures and heavier
snowfall. Their black, blackish-gray to dark or reddish-brown hairs
can be 4 inches (10 cm) long. Their underparts are whitish and their
legs are blackish-brown.
Resource Defenders
Serows are resource defenders and reflect the ancestral body plan
of all Caprinae. Resource defenders are more primitive, tend to be
solitary and territorial, and live in small areas of highly productive
and diverse habitats which are easily defended. Fossil Caprinae dating
back 35 million years closely resemble serows. During the ice ages,
most Caprinae species increased in body and horn size, adapted to more
severe climates and land forms, and became grazers, roaming over larger
areas in cooperative herds. The more familiar goat antelope, the mountain
goat Oreamnos americanus, may have evolved from serow-like ancestors
in a glacial environment.
|
Fascinating
Facts
- Serows are the most primitive living Caprinae.
Their fossils appear in the late Pliocene of 7 to 2 million
years ago!
- Serows can be aggressive and will attempt
to fight off predators, even Asian black bears, with their
dagger-like horns!
- Serows will swim between the small islands
near the Malay Peninsula!
|

Japanese serows can be viewed
in the Temperate Forest. The male and female were donated by Kobe
City Oji Zoo to Woodland Park Zoo in 1992 and produced three offspring
through 1997.

Once numbering
as few as 2,000 to 3,000, the Japanese Government in 1955 designated
the serow a "special national monument." This
designation ended a long period of overhunting. Japanese serows in
the wild number about 100,000 today, so are no longer considered
endangered. However, all other serow species are vulnerable or endangered
due to loss of their wild habitat through logging and conversion
into farmlands and plantations. Woodland Park Zoo's experience
with Japanese serows will help to refine husbandry and management
techniques that may be used to benefit other endangered animals.
How You Can Help!
The effort to save threatened and endangered species often requires
cooperation and support at the regional, national and international
levels. You can help in this cause. Join and become active in Woodland
Park Zoo and other conservation organizations of your choice. Please
do not buy products made from wild animal parts. Contact your elected
representatives and express your views about conservation of endangered
species and wild habitats.
Contact
Woodland Park Zoo at webkeeper@zoo.org to find out
ways you can support conservation programs at the zoo. Learn other
ways you can help conserve wildlife and the habitats they require
for survival by visiting our How You Can Help page.
Sources and Suggested
Reading
Macdonald, David, ed. 1993. The Encyclopedia
of Mammals. Facts on File, Inc., New York, NY. 895 p.
Nowak,
Ronald M., ed. 1991. Walker's
Mammals of the World. 5th Edition. The John Hopkins University
Press, Baltimore and London. 1,629 p.
For Kids!
Ricciuti, Edward R. 1979. Wildlife of the Mountains. Harry N. Abrams,
Inc., New York, NY. 232 p.
More
References
* Taxonomic classification varies between
references. Classification information used in this fact sheet
was taken from Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic And Geographic
Reference, edited by Don E. Wilson and Dee Ann M. Reeder, Second
Edition, 1993.
**Woodland Park Zoo identifies an animal
or plant endangered if it is listed as endangered (in any part
of its range) on the federal list of Endangered and Threatened
Species, or if is listed on Appendix 1 of the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). |