A Tapir Page

[IMAGE of two tapir]

tapir, a nocturnal, herbivorous ungulate animal of the jungles of Central and South American and Southeast Asia. Tapirs have a thick skin and a long, flexible snout. Adults are about 3 feet high and 6 or 8 feet long. The tapir seldom travels far from water and plunges in when pursued. Its flesh is palatable.

tapir n, pl tapir or tapirs [of Amerind origin]: any of several large inoffensive chiefly nocturnal hoofed mammals of tropical America, Malaya, and Sumatra that have long flexible snouts and are related to horses and rhinoceroses. tapir: Any of several large perissodactyl ungulates of the family Tapiridae, all but one of which (the Malayan) inhabit South or Central America. They have a heavy, sparsely hairy body, a snout prolonged into a short mobile proboscis, a rudimentary tail, stout legs, and four front and three hind toes. They are chiefly nocturnal, shy, and gentle, and frequent heavy forests in the vicinity of water. Their nearest living allies are the horses and rhinoceroses. The Malayan, or Indian, tapir (Tapirus malayanus ), of Sumatra and the Mayalan Peninsula, is blacking with a broad white area on the body. The others are uniform blackish brown when adult, but all are streaked and spotted with whitish when young. The common Brazilian tapir is T. terrestris (syn. americanus). T. roulini, or T. pinchaque, inhabits the Andes. Two Central American species (T. bairdi and T. dowi) form the genus tapirella (syn. E lasmognathus), distinguished by cranial characteristics.


The tapir is the unofficial symbol of the Stanford University Department of Philosophy , who caution you not to push the metaphor.

For more information on tapirs, check out The Tapir Gallery .
 

Eric Schulman,
Firstname.Lastname at Verizon dot Net