Blue Wildebeest
Connochaetes taurinus
The blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus), or brindled gnu, is a large African antelope of open savanna, grassland, and lightly wooded plains. It has a heavy forequarter, sloping back, black mane, beard, curved horns in both sexes, and a gray-brown coat that can look bluish in some light. Herds graze short grasses and may move long distances where seasonal rainfall creates fresh growth. In parts of East Africa, blue wildebeest are famous for large migrations shared with zebras and other grazers.
Blue wildebeest are managed in reserves, safari parks, game ranches, and zoos rather than as casual livestock. They need space, strong fencing, low-stress handling systems, and herd companions because panic and capture stress can cause injury. Managers monitor forage, mineral access, calf survival, parasites, and diseases that can move between wild antelope and domestic cattle in some regions. In conservation settings, their grazing helps maintain open habitat, but numbers, predator pressure, water access, and barriers to movement all affect how herds use a landscape.
Colors: Black, Black and White, Brown, Cream, Gray, Red, Tan, White, Wild Type