A taxidermy study of a Burchell's zebra, prancing pose, late 20th century
A taxidermy study of a Burchell's zebra, prancing pose, late 20th century
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REFERENCE: A2098
N.B. THIS ITEM DOES NOT REQUIRE A CITES LICENSE TO BE SOLD. IT WILL, HOWEVER, REQUIRE AN ORDINARY EXPORT PERMIT IF IT IS BEING SOLD OUTSIDE THE EUROPEAN UNION (PLEASE REFER TO OUR F.A.Q. PAGE)
An African taxidermy Burchell's zebra in a prancing pose, particularly large and extremely well preserved, designed to be fixed on to a wall.
The plains zebra (Equus quagga, formerly Equus burchelli) is the most common, and has or had about six subspecies distributed across much of southern and eastern Africa. It, or particular subspecies of it, have also been known as the common zebra, the dauw, Burchell's zebra (actually the subspecies Equus quagga burchellii), Chapman's zebra, Wahlberg's zebra, Selous' zebra, Grant's zebra, Boehm's zebra and the quagga (another extinct subspecies, Equus quagga quagga).
This is a Burchell zebra and as such does not require a CITES License to be sold. It will, however, require an ordinary export permit if it is being sold outside the EU (please refer to our FAQ page)
Condition: excellent
Dimensions: 135cm high, 46cm wide, 102cm deep