WHAT IS A CARIBOU OR HOW DID WE COME UP WITH THIS NAME?
Caribou, North American deer of the same species as the reindeer of
Eurasia. Caribou range in height from 87 to 140 cm (34 to 55 in) at the
shoulder and weigh from 60 to 318 kg (130 to 701 lb). Both males and females
have antlers, but the female's are smaller and simpler. Two principal groups
exist: the Barren Ground, or Arctic, caribou and the woodland caribou.
Barren Ground caribou are native to the tundra regions of northern
Canada, Greenland, and Alaska. Historically, the Inuit (Eskimo) living
in arctic regions have depended on these animals for survival, using every
part of the body for food, implements, or clothing. The caribou usually
live in small herds of cows and calves and a few bulls. Most of the older
bulls stay in separate small bands, except during rut, and travel on the
fringes of migrating herds. Breeding takes place in September and October,
and the calves are born in May and June. These caribou have a gray or light
brown summer coat and a white winter coat. In winter they gather in large
herds and migrate south to warmer Canadian forests, sometimes traveling
5000 km (more than 1900 mi), then return north in springtime. The staple
diet of caribou is lichens, but they also eat grasses, shrubs, tree shoots,
and mushrooms. Plans for oil- and gas-pipeline construction in Alaska and
Canada were altered, through environmentalist efforts, so as not to interfere
with caribou migration.
Of less economic significance are the woodland caribou, which are darker
and stockier and have heavier antlers than Barren Ground caribou. At one
time they were common from Maine to Montana, but they have since been exterminated
in most parts of the United States.
Scientific classification: The caribou belongs to the family Cervidae.
It is classified as Rangifer tarandus.
"Caribou," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 96 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1995 Microsoft
Corporation. All rights reserved. (c) Funk & Wagnalls Corporation.
All rights reserved.