It is hard to guess what a Nyala weights. But we have the answer:
An adult Nyala (Tragelaphus angasii) on average weights 87.31 kg (192.48 lbs).
The Nyala is from the family Bovidae (genus: Tragelaphus). It is usually born with about 5.54 kg (12.22 lbs). They can live for up to 16 years. When reaching adult age, they grow up to 1.94 meter (6′ 5″). Usually, Nyalas have 1 babies per litter.
As a reference: An average human weights in at 62 kg (137 lbs) and reaches an average size of 1.65m (5′ 5″). Humans spend 280 days (40 weeks) in the womb of their mother and reach around 75 years of age.
The lowland nyala or simply nyala (Tragelaphus angasii), is a spiral-horned antelope native to southern Africa as well as the Bale region of Ethiopia. It is a species of the family Bovidae and genus Nyala, also considered to be in the genus Tragelaphus. It was first described in 1849 by George French Angas. The body length is 135–195 cm (53–77 in), and it weighs 55–140 kg (121–309 lb). The coat is maroon or rufous brown in females and juveniles, but grows a dark brown or slate grey, often tinged with blue, in adult males. Females and young males have ten or more white stripes on their sides. Only males have horns, 60–83 cm (24–33 in) long and yellow-tipped. It exhibits the highest sexual dimorphism among the spiral-horned antelopes.The nyala is mainly active in the early morning and the late afternoon. It generally browses during the day if temperatures are 20–30 °C (68–86 °F) and during the night in the rainy season. As a herbivore, the nyala feeds upon foliage, fruits and grasses, with sufficient fresh water. A shy animal, it prefers water holes rather than open spaces. The nyala does not show signs of territoriality, and individuals areas can overlap each others. They are very cautious creatures. Old males live alone, but single sex or mixed family groups of up to 10 individuals can be found. These inhabit thickets within dense and dry savanna woodlands. The main predators of the nyala are lion, leopard and Cape hunting dog, while baboons and raptorial birds hunt for the juveniles. Mating peaks during spring and autumn. Males and females are sexually mature at 18 and 11–12 months of age respectively, though they are socially immature until five years old. After a gestational period of seven months, a single calf is born.The nyala’s range includes Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. It has been introduced to Botswana and Namibia, and reintroduced to Swaziland, where it had been extinct since the 1950s. Its population is stable and it has been listed as of Least Concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). The principal threats to the species are poaching and habitat loss resulting from human settlement. The males are highly prized as game animals in Africa.
Animals of the same family as a Nyala
We found other animals of the Bovidae family:
- Lechwe bringing 88.02 kilos (194.05 lbs) to the scale
- Pyrenean chamois bringing 30 kilos (66.14 lbs) to the scale
- Takin bringing 292.76 kilos (645.42 lbs) to the scale
- Nilgiri tahr bringing 73.94 kilos (163.01 lbs) to the scale
- Common tsessebe bringing 133.5 kilos (294.32 lbs) to the scale
- Saudi gazelle bringing 16 kilos (35.27 lbs) to the scale
- Peters’s duiker bringing 18.94 kilos (41.76 lbs) to the scale
- Steenbok bringing 11.64 kilos (25.66 lbs) to the scale
- Chinkara bringing 18.91 kilos (41.69 lbs) to the scale
- Red gazelle bringing 40 kilos (88.18 lbs) to the scale
Animals with the same weight as a Nyala
As a comparison, here are some other animals that weight as much as the Tragelaphus angasii:
- Walia ibex with a weight of 99.77 kilos (219.95 lbs)
- Buru babirusa with a weight of 92.33 kilos (203.55 lbs)
- Sloth bear with a weight of 99.45 kilos (219.25 lbs)
- Hirola with a weight of 79.13 kilos (174.45 lbs)
- Wild boar with a weight of 84.49 kilos (186.27 lbs)
- Ringed seal with a weight of 70.96 kilos (156.44 lbs)
- Juan Fernández fur seal with a weight of 95 kilos (209.44 lbs)
- Lesser kudu with a weight of 93.81 kilos (206.82 lbs)
- Persian fallow deer with a weight of 74.4 kilos (164.02 lbs)
- Baikal seal with a weight of 89.5 kilos (197.31 lbs)
Animals with the same size as a Nyala
Not that size really matters, but it makes things comparable. So here are a couple of animals that are as big as Nyala:
- Giant forest hog with a size of 2.03 meter (6′ 8″)
- Scimitar oryx with a size of 1.91 meter (6′ 4″)
- Northern fur seal with a size of 1.74 meter (5′ 9″)
- South American tapir with a size of 2.01 meter (6′ 7″)
- Sable antelope with a size of 2.04 meter (6′ 9″)
- Javan rusa with a size of 1.63 meter (5′ 5″)
- Kob with a size of 1.7 meter (5′ 7″)
- Anoa with a size of 1.73 meter (5′ 9″)
- Mountain nyala with a size of 2.25 meter (7′ 5″)
- Nilgai with a size of 2 meter (6′ 7″)
Animals with the same litter size as a Nyala
Here is a list of animals that have the same number of babies per litter (1) as a Nyala:
- Straw-coloured fruit bat
- Spectacled flying fox
- Long-tailed chinchilla
- Mountain cuscus
- Brazilian brown bat
- Maned rat
- Desert rat-kangaroo
- Rothschild’s woolly rat
- Tufted pygmy squirrel
- Montane fish-eating rat
Animals with the same life expectancy as a Nyala
Completely different animals, but becoming as old as a Nyala:
- Rock hyrax with an average maximal age of 14 years
- Common bent-wing bat with an average maximal age of 14 years
- Harnessed bushbuck with an average maximal age of 13 years
- Giant eland with an average maximal age of 16.17 years
- Weyns’s duiker with an average maximal age of 15.25 years
- Senegal bushbaby with an average maximal age of 17 years
- Common brushtail possum with an average maximal age of 14.67 years
- Pygmy marmoset with an average maximal age of 15.08 years
- Mountain gazelle with an average maximal age of 18.25 years
- Patagonian mara with an average maximal age of 14 years