Arabian Oryx
Oryx leucoryx
The Arabian oryx (Oryx leucoryx) is a white desert antelope from the Arabian Peninsula, built for heat, glare, and sparse forage. Both sexes carry long, nearly straight horns, and the dark face markings give the animal a masked look against its pale coat. It feeds on grasses, herbs, roots, and desert shrubs, moving widely after rain. The species became extinct in the wild in the early 1970s, then returned through carefully planned captive-breeding and release programs.
Today Arabian oryx are managed in fenced reserves, breeding centers, and zoos, where herd structure, shade, hoof condition, and genetic records matter. They need dry footing, room to move, and diets that resemble low-richness desert browsing rather than lush pasture. Reintroduction work still depends on protected range, monitoring, and limits on hunting and disturbance. For private collections, they are specialized hoofstock rather than casual exotics, with legal, veterinary, and fencing requirements to match.
Colors: Black, Black and White, Brown, Cream, Gray, Red, Tan, White, Wild Type