Believe it or not, the hyrax is the elephant’s closest living relative. (2024)

African Wildlife Foundation

Believe it or not, the hyrax is the elephant’s closest living relative. (1)
  • Overview
  • Challenges
  • Solutions
  • Habitats

What is a hyrax?

The hyrax is also called rock rabbit or dassie, is a small furry mammal. It looks like a robust, oversized guinea pig, or a rabbit with rounded ears and no tail. Hyraxes have stumpy toes with hoof-like nails; and four toes on each front foot and three on each back foot. The longer, claw-like nails on the inside toes and the back feet are used for grooming and scratching. The bottoms of the feet have a rubbery texture to assist in climbing steep rock surfaces and trees.

Of the three hyrax species, two are known as rock (or bush) hyrax, and the third as tree hyrax. In the field, it is sometimes difficult to differentiate among them.

The rock hyrax has the widest distribution in East Africa. Its coat is yellowish — or grayish-brown — and the dorsal spot (a bare scent gland on the back covered with longer hair) is covered with black or yellow hair. Its head is more rounded than other types of hyraxes, and the nose is blunt.

The yellow-spotted hyrax, or rock rabbit, is smaller in size and has a more pointed, rodent-like nose. Generally, it has a conspicuous white patch over the eye, and its dorsal spot is whitish or yellowish. It is sometimes seen in the company of other types of hyrax, but species do not interbreed.

Tree hyraxes, unsurprisingly, spend a lot of time in trees. In some areas, they are hunted for their thick, soft, long hair. They have a white or yellow dorsal spot.

Scientific name

Rock hyrax (Procavia capensis), Yellow-spotted hyrax (Heterohyrax brucei), Tree hyrax (Dendrohyrax dorsalis), Bush hyrax (Heterohyrax brucei)

Weight

About 4 to 5 kilograms (8 to 11 pounds)

Size

About 30 to 50 centimeters in length (11 to 20 inches)

Life span

Up to 12 years in the wild; average 8.5 years

Habitat

Dry savanna to dense rainforest to rocky outcrops

Diet

Herbivorous

Gestation

7 to 8 months

Predators

Leopards, lions, hyenas, pythons, large birds, servals, jackals, parasites

There are more than

5

recognized subspecies

Native to over

25

African countries

Live in colonies of

50

members

Believe it or not, the hyrax is the elephant’s closest living relative. (2)

Challenges

Humans are encroaching on hyraxes’ habitats.

As human populations are growing, people are expanding roads, settlements, and agriculture — an activity that is moving into wildlife’s living spaces. This habitat loss and habitat fragmentation make it more difficult for hyraxes to find mates, food, and shelters.

Solutions

Our solutions to protecting the hyrax:

Partners

Work with governments.

African Wildlife Foundation works with government entities to help propose and plan sustainable solutions that can foster growth while offsetting habitat fragmentation. AWF provides its scientists and researchers as resources to assist in proper planning to ensure a balance between modernization and conservation to avoid destruction of key wildlife habitats.

Develop conservation tourism.

Tourism improves livelihoods for people and encourages conservation. AWF works with communities and private investors to develop tourism. In Botswana, with AWF’s help, the local community was able to take over management of Santawani Lodge. Proceeds from the lodge allowed local people to improve their livelihoods and community services. In addition, the lodge serves as an incentive for the community to invest in conservation of local wildlife, like the hyrax. The lodge’s existence is tied to the conservation of about 20,000 acres of land.

Believe it or not, the hyrax is the elephant’s closest living relative. (3)

Believe it or not, the hyrax is the elephant’s closest living relative. (4)

Behaviors

Rock hyraxes do not dig burrows. They live in colonies of about 50 in the natural crevices of rocks or boulders. These groups typically consist of one territorial male and about 20 females and their young. Rocky hyraxes are active in the daytime and can be seen feeding or sunning themselves near the entrances to their shelters. The tree hyrax, on the other hand, is nocturnal and not as social as the rock hyrax. They are often found in pairs and will not form much larger groups.

They are potty­-trained.

Hyraxes regularly use “latrines,” in the areas they inhabit, conspicuous white deposits from their urine form on rock faces.

Hyraxes have a gestation period of seven or eight months, which is unusually long for an animal of its size. Infants are born so fully developed they can run and jump an hour after birth. Although suckled until they are 3-months-old, the young begin to eat vegetation by their second day. Rock hyraxes bear two or three young, while tree hyraxes have one, two at most.

Diet

Rock hyraxes spend several hours sunbathing in the mornings, followed by short feeding excursion. They eat quickly with the family group facing out from a circle to watch for potential predators, feeding on grasses, herbage, leaves, fruit, insects, lizards, and bird eggs. After biting off a mouthful of grass or leaves, the hyrax looks up and cautiously checks the vicinity. If the territorial male gives the shrill shriek of alarm, then the hyraxes jump or scuttle to cover where they remain frozen, without moving, until the danger has passed. They can go a long time without water, obtaining enough moisture from their food. Tree hyraxes feed primarily on leaves and fruits.

Habitats

Hyraxes are very adaptable. In East Africa, they are found at sea level and at altitudes of more than 4,000 meters (14,000 feet). Their habitats range from dry savanna to dense rainforest to cold Afro-alpine moorland.

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Believe it or not, the hyrax is the elephant’s closest living relative. (2024)

FAQs

Believe it or not, the hyrax is the elephant’s closest living relative.? ›

​The elephant's closest living relative is the Rock Hyrax

Rock Hyrax
rock badger (plural rock badgers) Any of species Procavia capensis of mammals with a rodent-like appearance, but not closely related, related instead to the elephant, found in Africa and the Middle East. An animal of this kind of the subpopulation found in Southern/South Africa.
https://en.wiktionary.org › wiki › rock_badger
, also called a rock rabbit or a dassie. You may be wondering how a creature that resembles a guinea pig is Bambi or Maia's closest cousin. Like elephants, hyraxes also have tusks growing from their incisor teeth.

Are hyrax closely related to elephants? ›

Though rock hyraxes resemble rodents, their closest living relatives are actually elephants and manatees.

What is the closest living relative to an elephant? ›

Two marine herbivores, dugongs and manatees, share a remarkable kinship with elephants and are elephants closest relatives. These aquatic mammals boast impressively lengthy lifespans of up to 70 years and employ prehensile lips, akin to an elephant's trunk, to forage on the sea floor.

How scientists know that elephants and hyraxes are related? ›

DNA evidence supports this hypothesis, and the small modern hyraxes share numerous features with elephants, such as toenails, excellent hearing, sensitive pads on their feet, small tusks, good memory, higher brain functions compared with other similar mammals, and the shape of some of their bones.

Which of these animals is a close relative of an elephant? ›

The rock hyrax is not the only unusual relative to the elephant. Other notable cousins include the subungulate “sea cows”: manatees (Trichechus manatus) and dugongs (Dugong dugon). Both of these aquatic mammals have tusk-like incisors and grey, thick skin¹².

Is the rock hyrax more closely related to the elephant or the groundhog? ›

Hyraxes, which are common in Africa and the Middle East, look like groundhogs but are more closely related to manatees and elephants.

Are we closely related to elephants? ›

"Although elephants are far more distantly related to us than the great apes, they seem to have evolved similar social and cognitive capacities making complex social systems and intelligence part of this picture.

What is the closest living relative to all animals? ›

The choanoflagellates are a group of free-living unicellular and colonial flagellate eukaryotes considered to be the closest living relatives of the animals.

What animal is the closest living? ›

The chimpanzee and bonobo are humans' closest living relatives.

What is the oldest relative of the elephant? ›

Eritherium is the smallest, oldest and most primitive elephant ancestor discovered. It grew to about 60cm, fed on wet vegetation and lived during the Paleocene epoch in what is now Morocco.

What is unique about hyraxes? ›

Hyraxes are unique in that the iris slightly protrudes over the pupil of their eye. This decreases the amount of light to the eye from above, serving as a built-in sun visor. Rock hyraxes are able to climb on steep rock surfaces because of physical adaptations on their feet.

How smart are hyraxes? ›

Dr Kershenbaum said that although the hyrax was not thought of as an intelligent animal, such as a chimp or dolphin, it could have developed complex language because it lives in large colonies, and communication is useful for animals living in groups.

What are elephants descendants of? ›

One of the early proboscideans that is speculated to be the ancestor of our extant elephant species is the Moeritherium which was a small, semi-aquatic hippo-like mammal that lived about 37-35 million years ago.

What is the closest living relative to the giraffe? ›

The okapi is the only living relative of the giraffe. Like giraffes, okapis have large, upright ears. These catch even slight sounds, helping okapis avoid trouble. They also have a long, prehensile tongue, just like a giraffe's.

How closely related are elephants and rhinos? ›

Elephants are sometimes called pachyderms, a term that also applies to rhinos and hippos, and refers to their thick skin. These other pachyderms are not closely related to the elephants, however. Rhinos are perissodactyls, related to horses, and hippos are artiodactyls, related to pigs and camels.

What elephant is closely related to the mammoth? ›

The Elephantidae. There are two living relatives of this group, the Asian Elephant (Elephas maximus) and the larger African Savanna Elephant (Loxodonta africana). These two elephants are closely related to the extinct mammoths that once roamed the planet.

Is the capybara related to the elephant? ›

No. The capybara is a rodent, while the elephant is a pachyderm. However! A rodent-looking animal called the rock hyrax IS related to the elephant.

Is a hyrax a marmot? ›

Although it resembles a marmot or a large guinea pig, the rock hyrax (Procavia capensis) is not a rodent. In fact, its closest living relatives are elephants and manatees. The highly social species, which lives in colonies of up to 50 individuals, is native to Africa and the Middle East.

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