



Need inspiration? Browse by category like reactions, trending topics, and more. You can also search by emoji to see the GIFs related to that emoji. Search Tenor’s millions of GIFs and videos to find the one that perfectly fits the moment.

Send the right GIF or video to express exactly what’s on your mind, directly from your keyboard! Everything syncs to your Tenor GIF Keyboard so you can take your stickers and GIFs everywhere GIFs are supported. Create packs of your favorite stickers and GIFs that you can easily share with friends and family. Create your own GIFs with your front or back camera and personalize them with text, a handwritten note or drawings. Press and hold on any GIF to create a sticker that you can drag and drop onto any text, image or GIF in iMessage. Get the same great browse and search experience as GIF Keyboard, including access to your favorites and uploads. Express the emotion, inside joke, or clever response you want to share. With Tenor’s GIF Keyboard for iPhone, iPad and iMessage discover or create the right GIF or video to visually sum up exactly what you’re trying to say, directly from your keyboard. Of greater interest to Dulude-de Broin and his fellow researchers than the odd nanny/bighorn faceoff? The general decline in the ridge's mountain-goat population: 164 in 2008, it's now at just 28 animals.Say more with GIF Keyboard by Tenor. Such interspecies interactions are an example of the interesting observations that accrue over years of fieldwork by dedicated (and hardy) biologists in a long-term study such as the Caw Ridge Mountain Goat Research Project, which has been monitoring Caw Ridge goats since 1988. "I saw one of the most subordinate nannies of Caw Ridge easily displacing sheep," Dulude-de Broin recalls, "so even if they are careful they are clearly more dominant." He speculates the difference lies in the fact that goats are well acquainted with one another's social rankings, whereas they may feel compelled to more energetically show the less-familiar bighorns just who's boss. "In most interactions that I witnessed, they walked slowly towards the sheep in an aggressive manner (arching their back to appear bigger or displaying horns) and then waited for the sheep to flee," Dulude-de Broin explains. Goats approach other goats directly, whereas there's a bit more of a ritualised production involved when they confront bighorns. "It is as if they are not used to interacting with sheep so they are more careful." "They don't seem as willing to bed and appear more vigilant if sheep are amongst them," says Dulude-de Broin. He and his colleague Florent Déry both emphasise that goats often appear somewhat on edge when sheep are nearby. Nannies may be on the belligerent side among their own kind and in dealings with bighorns, but Dulude-de Broin has noticed they exercise that belligerence differently depending on its object. More: Angry mountain goat confronts a hiker on the snowy slopesĭulude-de Broin says he's never seen a nanny engage with a big, "full-curl" bighorn ram – as with mature billies, the older rams tend to utilise different geographies on the Caw Ridge summer range – but he notes the goats have been observed asserting themselves over younger male sheep. (Incidentally, the same advice applies to mountaineers of the two-legged category: goats can be aggressive towards people, and a billy killed a hiker in the Olympic Mountains of Washington in 2010.) "If I was a bighorn facing a nanny, I would get out of the way!" " can severely injure conspecifics and predators, so they could also be a serious threat to sheep," he adds. (Caw Ridge nannies have been seen ramming wolves in defence of their young.) And their daggered horns are much more formidable than a bighorn's blunter headgear. " have higher rates of intraspecific aggression than any other female ungulate for which it has been measured," he says. Female goats, aka nannies, are the ones most often seen sharing space with sheep – and sometimes muscling them around – in the Caw Ridge study area billies here tend to spend the summer fattening up for the rut in an area isolated from bighorns and other goats alike.Īs Dulude-de Broin notes, the mountaintop hierarchy isn't especially surprising. The pecking order, as it turns out, is pretty clear-cut: mountain goats reliably dominate bighorns.
