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Family members look out for one another; if one becomes separated from the rest, the others search for it. The group adjusts its traveling pace to accommodate the old and the weak. The females within a family observe a strict hierarchical system. A dominant mare always wreck diving leads the group, while others follow her in single file, each with their foals directly behind them. the lowest- ranking mare is the last in line. although the stallion is the dominant member of the family, he operates outside the system and has no special diving place in the line. zebras are avid grazers. wreck both burchell''s and grevy''s zebras are in constant search of green pastures. in the dry season, they can live on coarse, dry grass only if they are within a short distance (usually no farther than diving 20 miles away) of water holes. grevy''s zebras are now mainly restricted to parts of northern kenya. the other is grevy''s wreck zebra, named for jules grevy, a president of france in the 1880s who received one from abyssinia as a gift, and now found mostly in northern kenya. (the third species, equus zebra, is the mountain zebra, found in southern and southwestern africa.) the long-legged grevy''s zebra, the biggest of the wild equids, is taller and heavier than the burchell''s, with a massive head and large ears. zebras have shiny coats that dissipate over 70 percent of incoming heat, and some scientists believe the stripes help the animals withstand intense solar radiation. the black and white stripes are a form of camouflage called disruptive coloration that breaks up the outline diving and wreck of the body. although the pattern is visible during daytime, at dawn or in the evening when their predators are most active, zebras look indistinct and may confuse some diving predators by distorting the true distance between them and their prey.
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