Two Bucks and Doe
Two pronghorn bucks and a doe stand on the prairie.
Pronghorn Bucks
Known colloquially as an antelop, Antilocapra Americana, or pronghorn, are not a true Old World antelop.
Antilocapra Americana
The speedsters of the plains, pronghorn are the fastest land animal in North America.
Running Pronghorn Bucks
Speedsters of the Plains
First Legs
A newborn pronghorn fawn stands on wobbly legs for the first time. It will be running circles around mom in 48 hours.
Running Newborn Pronghorn Lamb
a pronghorn fawn will get its legs and walk within an hour of being born and is running within 48 hours or so.
Run Like the Wind
One of the fastest land animals in the world, two Pronghorn fawns run like the wind after only a week or two after birth.
Hidden I
A pronghorn fawn lies low, hidden by the grass, where its mother has left it for a while.
Hidden II
Newborn Pronghorn Fawns
Newborn Pronghorn twins stick very closely together.
Newborn Pronghorn Twins
Sparring Pronghorn Bucks
With a new subdivision in the background, two pronghorn bucks battle for dominance. As development continues to encroach, land is take that has been home to pronghorn and other animals for centuries.
Pronghorn Bucks Battle for Dominance
Pronghorn Buck Lying in Sagebrush
A pronghorn buck rests amongst sagebrush near Soda Butte Creek, Yellowstone National Park.
Portrait of a Pronghorn