A Kudu bull (C)Flickr |
“If he is looked after, he can still be used for breeding for about three years,” Visser said by phone on Monday. “He was bought solely for his blood and genetics.”
Driven by growing demand from international hunters for exotic and large horned animals, South Africa’s game ranching industry is worth close to R12bn (about $884m) a year and is growing at about 10% annually, according to Barclays Africa Group. Mystery, a tuberculosis-free buffalo with a 1.35m horn span, was bought for R40m(about $3m) by a group including billionaire Johann Rupert in 2013, while Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa sold three white-flanked impala antelope for R27.3m last September.
Other breeds fetching high prices include golden gnus, where a recessive gene gives the normally blue-black wildebeest a yellowish coat.
Source: News24
So is it expensive because of the genes or because of the horns?
ReplyDeleteIf human beings are auctioned, would they be worth this much?
ReplyDeleteLovely animal though
ReplyDelete@Aniks, yes, the horns play a major role in the price. That 'length' is taller than lots of adult humans, and it's a desired genetic trait. Same applies to a Cape-Buffalo; characteristics of the horns mean a lot to game hunters' trophy collection.
ReplyDelete