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Ungulate

Ungulates are hoofed mammals, a diverse group defined by the presence of hooves or the tips of their digits. Living ungulates are traditionally divided into two major lineages: Perissodactyla (odd-toed ungulates, including horses, rhinoceroses, and tapirs) and Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulates, such as cattle, sheep, goats, deer, antelope, pigs, camels, and giraffes). In modern taxonomy, cetaceans (whales and dolphins) are descended from the artiodactyls, and the broader clade Cetartiodactyla includes them; thus the term “ungulate” is often used to refer to non-cetacean hoofed mammals.

Anatomy and digestion vary across groups. Most ungulates are herbivorous, with diets ranging from grasses to

Ecology and behavior. Ungulates inhabit a wide range of environments, from savannas and grasslands to forests

Conservation and evolution. Ungulates originated in the Paleogene, with diversification linked to climatic shifts and grassland

leaves
and
fruits.
Many
artiodactyls
are
ruminants,
possessing
a
multi-chambered
stomach
that
fermentates
plant
material
before
digestion;
some
are
foregut
or
hindgut
fermenters.
Dentition
is
typically
adapted
to
grinding
vegetation.
Horns,
found
in
many
bovids
and
other
species,
are
keratinous
sheaths
over
bone
and
are
usually
permanent,
whereas
antlers
in
cervids
are
made
of
bone
and
shed
annually.
and
deserts.
They
play
key
roles
as
primary
consumers,
shaping
vegetation
and
serving
as
prey
for
large
carnivores.
Many
species
migrate
seasonally
or
form
large
social
groups.
Humans
have
domesticated
several
ungulates
for
food,
work,
or
transportation,
including
cattle,
sheep,
goats,
pigs,
horses,
camels,
llamas,
and
alpacas.
expansion.
Today,
many
species
face
threats
such
as
habitat
loss,
hunting,
and
disease,
prompting
conservation
measures
in
protected
areas
and
managed
landscapes.