|
Visit our new topic page about
zebra
|
zebra
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
zebra herbivorous hoofed African mammal of the genus Equus, which also includes the horse and the ass. It is distinguished by its striking pattern of black or dark brown stripes alternating with white. In size and body form it is intermediate between the larger horse and the smaller ass. It has a heavy head, stout body, short, stiff mane, and tufted tail. There are three living zebra species; a fourth species, the quagga , became extinct in the late 19th cent. Most zebras inhabit open plains or brush country, while mountain zebras favor rocky hillsides. Zebra herds on the Serengeti of E Africa can be as large as 200,000 individuals, but all are organized in family groups led by a stallion. The plains zebras usually mix with other grazing animals, such as wildebeest and antelopes. They are swift runners, achieving speeds of up to 40 mph. Some authorities believe that the stripes evolved as visual identification to reinforce social bonds with other zebras, rather than for disguise or insect protection. The zebra's natural enemies are the lion and the leopard. The plains zebra, Equus burchelli, is found throughout Africa S of the Sahara. It stands about 4 ft (120 cm) tall at the shoulder and has small ears. It has very broad stripes, which vary greatly in their pattern among the several races of the species, as well as among individuals of the same race. Grevy's zebra, E. grevyii, is a large zebra found in E Africa. It stands 4 1/2 to 5 ft (140-150 cm) at the shoulder and weighs about 600 lb (270 kg). It has large, rounded ears and numerous very narrow stripes. Most distinctive is the mountain zebra, E. zebra, with a donkeylike build, long ears, and a characteristic stripe pattern. Unlike any other member of the genus Equus, its throat has a dewlap. One race of the mountain species, Hartmann's zebra, found in the arid mountains and coastal plains of SW Africa, increased in numbers in the 1980s to an estimated 15,000 from about 7,000 in 1967. The other race, the endangered Cape mountain zebra, is rarely found outside a protected area in South Africa. Zebras have been hunted extensively for their flesh and skins, but the plains zebra and Grevy's zebra are still numerous. Zebras have been crossed with horses in an attempt to produce a draft animal, but the offspring have proved sterile and unreliable. Zebras are classified in the phylum Chordata , subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order Perissodactyla, family Equidae.
Author not available, ZEBRA.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Zebra zones
Natural History; 3/1/1998; Hack, Mace A; Rubenstein, Daniel I; 1700 words
; Of the many species of equids (horses, asses, and zebras) that dominated the world's grasslands for much of the last eight million years, only seven are left, three of them zebras. All three zebra species live on the savannas of eastern and southern Africa, all feed exclusively on grass, and all
Read more
|
|
Zebra's results miss mark.
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL); 7/28/2005; 491 words
; ... newspaper, go to http://www.chicagotribune.com. Copyright (c) 2005, Chicago Tribune Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-65 ...
Read more
|
|
Bar-code printer Zebra Technologies sees profits slip below expectations.
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL); 5/5/2005; 476 words
; ... sunk $3.32 or 7.3 percent Wednesday on the news, closing at $42.03, a 14-month low. The ... profit margin of 51.2 percent. In better news for shareholders, Zebra announced it plans ... Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content ...
Read more
|
|
Zebra Technologies: run with Zebra. (Special Advertisement).(Brief Article)
Frontline Solutions; 12/1/2002; 312 words
; Zebra Technologies delivers innovative and reliable on-demand printing solutions to businesses and governments the world over. Zebra's customers include more than 90 percent of the Fortune 500 and Global 2000. With international headquarters in Vernon Hills, Illinois, Zebra has an installed base of
Read more
|
|
The Zebra who didn't like his stripes.(Short Story)
Humpty Dumpty's Magazine; 5/1/2004; Quick, Ann; 429 words
; Once long ago there was a zebra who lived in a beautiful green jungle. He loved the jungle and all his friends, but he was very sad. More than anything else in the world, he wanted spots instead of stripes. Why can't I have spots instead of stripes? the zebra asked his mother. The leopard has
Read more
|
|
How Zebra earned its stripes
Chicago Sun-Times; 10/30/1996; HOWARD WOLINSKY; 711 words
; Thundering hooves usually mean horses. But in the world of bar codes, they mean Zebra. And industry-leading Zebra Technologies' herd is growing bigger as a result of a $680 million merger announced in mid-October between Vernon Hills-based Zebra and its rival, Simi Valley, Calif.-based Eltron
Read more
|
|
Zebra changes stripes, extending technology reach, market scope.(Company overview)
Manufacturing Business Technology; 1/1/2008; 620 words
; Staff As a global leader in bar-code printing, Zebra Technologies startled some market watchers in January 2007 with its $126-million cash acquisition of WhereNet, one of the largest and best-known suppliers of real-time location systems, or RTLS. 'When the WhereNet acquisition was announced, we
Read more
|
|
Zebra gets ready to earn its stripes: Stepping up for bar code buyouts.(Brief Article)
Crain's Chicago Business; 2/21/2000; JONES, SANDRA; 798 words
; Zebra Technologies Corp. is on a hunt for acquisitions. The world's largest maker of bar code label printers, used for everything from hospital patients' identification bracelets to shipping labels, is armed with $236 million in cash for expansion into new markets and emerging technologies. Two
Read more
|
|
IBM STRENGTHENS SOLUTIONS PORTFOLIO WITH MOBILE, BAR CODE AND RFID PRODUCTS FROM ZEBRA TECHNOLOGIES
Al Bawaba; 5/7/2006; 786 words
; Zebra Technologies Corporation (Nasdaq: ZBRA) announced today it has entered into an agreement with IBM Global Technology Services that incorporates Zebra's leading mobility, bar code labeling and radio frequency identification (RFID) printing/encoding solutions into the IBM Global Technology
Read more
|
|
ZEBRA'S PORTABLE BARCODE PRINTER QUALITY LASTS EIGHT HOURS.
Manufacturing Automation; 10/1/1998; 775 words
; Zebra Technologies (Vernon Hills, IL, 847-634-6700) introduced its new portable PA400 direct thermal printer at SCAN-TECH O98. It is the first portable printer engineered and manufactured by Zebra and is said to be the first portable barcode printer capable of consistent print quality throughout an
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
zebra
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... 120140 cm) tall. The Burchell's zebra, or bonte quagga (Equus quagga ), of eastern ... has wide, widely spaced stripes. Grevy's zebra (E. grevyi ), of arid areas in Kenya, Ethiopia ... stripes and a white belly. The small mountain zebra (E. zebra ), of dry upland plains in Namibia ...
Read more
|
|
zebra fish
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... genus Pterois (family Scorpaenidae). The zebra danio (Brachydanio rerio ), a popular ... longitudinal stripes. The distinctive saltwater zebra fishes (Pterois ), used in marine aquariums ... commonly known as lionfish and turkeyfish. zebra fish zebra fish zebra fish
Read more
|
|
zebra mussel
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... early 19th century and were carried (probably in ship water ballasts) to North America 1986; their invasion of all the Great Lakes has had devastating effects on the lakes' native mussel and fish populations. zebra mussel zebra mussel zebra mussel
Read more
|
|
quagga
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
, extinct type of zebra . It formerly inhabited open plains in ... its range overlapped that of the common zebra ( Equus burchelli ). Its coat was sandy ... almost certainly a variant of the common zebra rather than a separate species ( E. quagga ...
Read more
|
|
Pollution by Invasive Species
Water:Science and Issues
... potential of outpacing the highly invasive zebra mussel (whose population exploded after ... or "walk" short distances on land. The zebra mussel can survive out of the water for ... economies, and even the human environment. The zebra mussel, for example, colonizes not only ...
Read more
|