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News: Colombia will launch a plan in the second half of 2026 to control its invasive hippopotamus population.
About Common Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus Amphibius)

- They are large, semiaquatic mammals native to sub-Saharan Africa.
- Scientific name: Their Scientific name is Hippopotamus amphibius.
- Sub-species: They are one of only two extant species in the family Hippopotamidae, the other being the pygmy hippopotamus (Choeropsis liberiensis or Hexaprotodon liberiensis).
- They are the world’s third-largest land mammals after elephants and white rhinos.
- Habitat: They live in waterbodies such as rivers, lakes, and mangroves.
- Distribution: Their current distribution is limited to sub-Saharan Africa.
- They range from Gambia and Senegal in the west to Ethiopia, South Sudan, and Somalia in the east, southwards to South Africa and Swaziland.
- Characteristics:
- Appearance: These muscular animals have round torsos and pinkish-brown bodies with thick, waterproof skin, and short, stout legs.
- Speed: They can reach speeds of up to 22 miles per hour on land over short distances.
- Their eyes, ears, and nostrils are placed high on the top of their skulls, allowing them to stay above water while the rest of the body remains submerged.
- They have teeth inside their huge mouths.
- Their molars are used for eating, while their long, sharp canines are for fighting.
- Their strong jaws can open to 180 degrees, and they have a strong bite.
- Size: Males can reach lengths of 10.8 to 16.5 feet, and weigh up to 9,920 pounds, while females weigh up to 3,000 pounds.
- Diet: They are herbivores (graminivores) and feed almost entirely on grass, with only minimal consumption of aquatic plants.
- Behaviour: They spend most of their day in the water or mud to keep cool, wet, and protect their delicate skin.
- When basking on the shore, they secrete an oily red sweat-like substance that moistens their skin, repels water, and protects them from the sun and germs.
- They cannot swim, float or breathe underwater. They walk or run along the bottom of the riverbed.
- They are social, nocturnal, and sedentary animals.
- They are highly territorial and use dung middens (an area where they repeatedly poop) to mark their territory and communicate with other hippos.
- Threats:
- Poaching for their meat, fat, and ivory teeth.
- Loss of habitat
- Animal-human conflicts.
- Conservation status:
- IUCN: They have been classified as vulnerable.
- CITES: They have been classified as Appendix III.




