Subscribe Now! National Geographic Magazine $15
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Pronghorns
Antilocapra americana

Photo: A pronghorn
A pronghorn
Photograph by Sam Abell

Pronghorns Profile

Fleet-footed pronghorns are among the speediest animals in North America. They can run at more than 53 miles (86 kilometers) an hour, leaving pursuing coyotes and bobcats in the dust. Pronghorns are also great distance runners that can travel for miles at half that speed.

Pronghorns are about three feet (one meter) tall at the shoulders. They are reddish brown, but feature white stomachs and wide, white stripes on their throats. When startled they raise the hair on their rumps to display a white warning patch that can be seen for miles.

Both sexes sport impressive, backward-curving horns. The horns split to form forward-pointing prongs that give the species its name. Some animals have horns that are more than a foot (30 centimeters) long.

Like other even-toed hoofed animals, pronghorns chew cud—their own partially digested food. The meal of choice for this speedy herbivore is generally grass, sagebrush, and other vegetation.

Pronghorns mate each fall in the dry, open lands of western North America. Bucks gather harems of females and protect them jealously—sometimes battling rivals in spectacular and dangerous fights. In the spring, females give birth to one or two young, which can outrun a human after just a few days.

Pronghorns are hunted throughout much of their natural range, but some subspecies are endangered.

Fast Facts

Type: Mammal
Diet: Herbivore
Average lifespan in captivity: 11 years
Size: Head and body, 3.25 to 5 ft (1 to 1.5 m), Tail, 3 to 4 in (7.5 to 10 cm)
Weight: 90 to 150 lbs (41 to 68 kg)
Group name: Band or Herd
Did you know? The pronghorn is the second fastest land mammal in the world, after the cheetah. It can attain speeds of over 53 miles (86 kilometers) per hour.
Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
Illustration of the animal's relative size

Multimedia

Pronghorn Features

Photo: Sitatunga antelope

Photo of the Day: Quick Dip

Watch a water-loving sitatunga antelope swimming in a lake in Gabon's Ivindo National Park.

Photo: Bighorn sheep

All Fired Up

Demand for natural gas in the United States is spurring a land-use battle in the West. Find out who's on which side in this multimedia feature.

Photo: Pronghorn antelope

Photo of the Day: Mountain Range

See the silhouette of a sturdy pronghorn antelope against a backdrop of the majestic mountains of Montana.

Photo: Bison

Reefs in a Prairie Sea

Discover the beautiful buttes and endless grasslands of South Dakota's Badlands in this feature.

Other Speedy Animals

Map: Locator map for the pronghorn antelope
 Pronghorns range

Special Advertising Sections

Photo: Isla Espiritu

Interactive Map

Find vacation spots and take a visual journey through Mexico.

Photo: People hiking at sunset

Sweepstakes

Walk into America and win a photography workshop for two!

Mammals Right Rail

Get the Latest Headlines

Photo: Grizzly bears

Make us your online news source.

Get Animal Pictures

Photo: Lion yawning

Get your daily dose of photos.

For Kids!

Photo: A cartoon dog

It's no stretch to find fun facts on our Kids site!

Dog Whisperer DVDs & Books

Photo: Dog Whisperer DVD cover

Be a pack leader. Check out our newest Dog Whisperer DVDs and books.

Six Degrees Book and DVD

Image: Six Degrees DVD and book

Get an eye-opening warning of the dangers of climate change, one degree at a time.