Characteristics
Their size is large. The color is ochery or off-white, but never pure white.
The shadow stripes are usually well marked, and the leg stripes are absent or poor,
and almost never complete to hooves. The mane is well developed.
Range
Formerly the Burchell's zebra ranged north of the Vaal/Orange river system,
extending northwest via southern Botswana to Etosha and the Kaokoveld, southeast to
Swaziland and Kwazulu-Natal. Now extinct in the middle portion, but surviving at the
northwestern and souteastern end of the distribution.
Not Extinct
Like other plain zebras, Burchell's Zebras must have populated the African plains in
impressive numbers. Associations of thousands have been reported. The wild herds were
thought to have disappeared by 1910, and the last known captive individual died in the
Berlin Zoo in 1918. As European settlement spread northward from the Cape to colonial
Southern Rhodesia, this subspecies was thought to have been hunted to extinction.
However, Groves and Bell concluded in their 2004 publication that "the extinct true
Burchell's zebra" is a phantom. Careful study of the original zebra populations in
Zululand and Swaziland, and of skins harvested on game farms in Zululand and Natal,
has revealed that a small certain proportion shows similarity to what now is
regarded as typical "burchellii". The type localities of the subspecies Equus
quagga burchellii and Equus quagga antiquorum (Damara Zebra) are so close to each
other that the two are in fact one, and that therefore the older of the two names
should take precedence over the younger. They therefore say that the correct name
for the southernmost subspecies must be burchellii not antiquorum. The subspecies
Equus quagga burchellii still exists in Kwazulu-Natal and in Etosha: it is the
geographically intervening population that is extinct, not a distinct subspecies as such.

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