Animal Life From Tigris – Euphrates River System
Wild pigs are common in the marshes and have spread into newly planted eucalyptus groves in other parts of the alluvial plain. Jackals, hyenas, and mongooses are found along the rivers in southern Iraq, and a large variety of Indian jungle cat reportedly still inhabits remote tamarisk thickets. Lions were last sighted along the Tigris in 1926. Foxes, wolves, and gazelles are common in the alluvial plain, and some of these range as far north as central Anatolia. Among the smaller animals are several species of gerbil, the jerboa (desert rat), hares, shrews, bats, the hedgehog, the river otter, and the Buxton’s mole rat, which covers the entrance of its riverbank burrow with a mound of clay.
Locally resident birds include babblers, bulbuls, scrub warblers, sand grouse, crows, owls, a variety of hawks, falcons, eagles, and vultures. In spring and fall, many birds migrating between Europe and Asia such as pelicans, storks, and various geese fly along the rivers’ courses, and the marshes provide a breeding ground for some migratory species.
There are several kinds of viper and a small cobra, as well as a variety of nonvenomous snakes. Lizards can reach lengths of nearly two feet. Frogs, toads, and turtles abound in the rivers and marshes. Members of the carp family are the dominant freshwater fish of the Tigris-Euphrates system. Barbels weighing as much as 300 pounds (135 kg) have been recorded. There are several varieties of catfish, as well as the spiny eel. Some saltwater species including anchovy, gar, and sea bream range upriver at least as far as Baá¹£rah, and the Ganges shark has been known to reach Baghdad.
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