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  Hooved mammal Stock Footage

There are 171 stock footage source matches for 'Hooved mammal'.
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STOCK FOOTAGE DIRECTORY
Mule Deer
Native Light Productions
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Pronghorn Antelope
Native Light Productions
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Hippopotamus
The Film Vault
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Elk
Footage Bank
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Mustang
Footage Bank
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Camel
Rudewater
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Bison
Pawprint Productions
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Zebra
Global Cuts
Add some zip to your project with these striped beauties! They might all look alike at first, but their stripe patterns are as unique as fingerprints. Each of these six ""black and white"" clips shows a small heard of zebras, including two of them giving each other a sweet neck embrace.

The footage on The Zebras in Brief is shot with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
Rhinoceros
Global Cuts
The rhino has been around for millions of years, and it really looks the part, with its enormous size, thick skin and exotic horns. And if we're not careful, the rhino will join all those other animals on the extinction list. Between 1970 and 1990 its worldwide population declined by 90 percent. Here's a rhino you can keep, captured with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and is delivered in 720 x 576 DV-PAL QuickTime format. Visit Site
Hippopotamus
Global Cuts
Even though ""hippopotamus"" means ""river horse,"" this creature looks like no horse we've ever seen. That mouth...those teeth...that body...it's just pure hippo. And you get it here with this 9 clip sequence: a slice of daily hippo life in Limpopo Valley, South Africa.

Shot with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and delivered in 720 x 576 DV-PAL QuickTime format. Visit Site
Impala
Global Cuts
With its sleek reddish coat, long legs and curved horns, the Impala is perhaps the most elegant of all African antelope. Here, you get the impala doing all sorts of things: walking in a herd, drinking water, and having its coat and ears cleaned up by obliging birds.

This 15-clip sequence is shot with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
Kudu
Global Cuts
One of the most striking and beautiful of the antelopes, the Kudu has both grace and style. With its vertical markings and the male's spiral horns, it can reach up to 168 cm (5.5 ft) in length. For a healthy dose of African exoticism, you can't do much better than this Kudu sequence.

The footage is shot with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
Waterbuck
Global Cuts
Maybe this is why they're called ""waterbucks."" When the males want to fight each other, they do so the water (as you'll see in this sequence). We also caught these creatures on land, moving about solo and in a herd.

The footage is shot with a Sony DSR500 and supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
Giraffe
Global Cuts
Things are really looking up! Here's some terrific giraffe footage, and at only $18, you're paying just pennies per foot! We caught this beautiful creature munching on the treetops in Limpopo Valley, South Africa.

The footage on Giraffe in Brief is shot with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
African Buffalo
Global Cuts
How do you catch a herd of dangerous 1,500-pound African buffalo? Well, there's the hard way, and there's the Global Cuts way. For a mere 14 bucks, you can add one of Africa's ""BIG FIVE"" to your next production.

We captured this footage with a Sony DSR500 and will deliver it to you in 720 x 576 DV-PAL QuickTime format. Visit Site
Gazelle
Global Cuts
Discover a completely different meaning of ""running time."" Here, gazelles, giraffes and antelopes run through in Limpopo Valley, South Africa (not to mention the swimming crocodiles).

These 8 clips, lasting 1 minutes and 10 seconds are jam-packed with authentic African wildlife. Captured with a Canon XL1 camcorder and delivered in 720 x 576 DV-PAL format.

Keywords: Eland Antelope, Oryx Gazella, Giraffe, Nile Crocodile, Limpopo Riverbed, Kruger Park. Visit Site
Wildebeest
Global Cuts
There is no other antelope like the wildebeest. It looks like it was assembled from spare parts the forequarters could have come from and ox, the hindquarters from an antelope and the mane and tail from a horse. The antics of the territorial bulls during breeding season have earned them the name clowns of the savanna. The wildebeest is one of the few African antelopes to have extended its range in the last 50 years. They numbered about 250,000 in 1960 and are thought to number 1.5 million today. Wildebeest, or gnus, (pronounced 'news'), are noisy. They constantly emit low moans and if disturbed, snort explosively.

The Wildbeest footage is shot with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Wildbeest, Connochaetes Taurinus, Gnu, Antelope, Wildlife Footage, Wildlife Video, Kruger Park, Limpopo Valley, South Africa. Visit Site
Warthog
Global Cuts
Neither graceful nor beautiful, warthogs are nonetheless remarkable animals. They are found in most of Africa south of the Sahara and are widely distributed in East Africa. They are the only pigs able to live in areas without water for several months of the year. By tolerating a higher-than-normal body temperature, the warthog is perhaps able to conserve moisture inside its body that might otherwise be used for cooling. This clip is only 2 seconds of pig but we figure it's better than nothing.

The Warthog footage is shot with a Sony DSR500 camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Warthog, Phacochoerus Aethiopicus, Wildlife Footage, Wildlife Video, Kruger Park, Limpopo Valley, South Africa. Visit Site
Tapir
Global Cuts
Tapirs are forest animals that love water. Although they frequently live in dryland forest, tapirs with access to lakes or rivers spend a good deal of time in and under the water, feeding on soft marine vegetation and taking refuge from predators. The Brazilian Tapir, who lives in all parts of the Amazonas, often sinks to the bottom of a stream and walks along the riverbed to feed. In forests, they eat fruit, leaves, and berries. The Tapir closest relatives are the other odd-toed ungulates: horses and rhinoceroses. Although tapirs were once widespread, only four species endured into the modern world: three in Central and the warmer parts of South America and one in Southeast Asia.

The Tapir In The Amazon footage is shot with a 3CCD DVCAM camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in NTSC format dimensions, 720 x 480 pixels, at a frame rate of 30 fps.

Keywords: Brazilian Tapir, Chordata, Mammal, Mammalia, Perissodactyla, Tapiridae, Tapirus Species, Tapirus bairdii, Baird's Tapir, Tapirus terrestris, Brazilian Tapirm, Amazon Wildlife, Amazon Wildlife Footage, Amazon Forrest Wildlife Stock Footage, Peru, South America. Visit Site
Zebra
Global Cuts
The African Herds Aerials are shot from a Jet Ranger Vell 206 Helicopter using a JVC DV500 camcorder. It is supplied in flattened PAL or NTSC QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Zebra, Zebras, Eland, Antelope, Herd Aerial, Aerials, Aerial Footage, Aerial Stock Footage, Royalty Free Aerial Stock Footage, African Herds Aerials, African Heard, Heard, African Wildlife, South Africa. Visit Site
Hartebeest Antelope
Global Cuts
The Hartebeest stands almost 1.5 m (5 ft) at the shoulder and weighs anywhere from 120-200 kg (265-440 lb). Male Hartebeest are a dark brown colour while females are yellow brown. The horns found in both sexes curve outwards, then forewards, and then backward. They can reach a length of 70 cm (27 in).

Hartebeest live in grassland and open forest where they eat grass. They are diurnal and spend the morning and late afternoon eating. Herds contain five to twenty individuals but can occasionally contain up to three hundred and fifty.

The Hartebeest Antelope Aerials is shot with helicopter gyro mounted Digital Betacamcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Aerial, Aerials, Aerial Footage, Aerial Stock Footage, Royalty Free Aerial Stock Footage, Hartebeest Antelope, Running Hartebeest Herd, Karoo National Park, Little Karoo Desert, Swartzberg Pass, Gyro Stabilized Camcorder, Gyro Aerials, Helicopeter Footage, African Wildlife, South Africa. Visit Site
Burchells Zebra
Global Cuts
Unmistakably a member of the horse family the Burchells Zebra is the largest of the two distinct species inhabiting South Africas wild life domain. The Burchells' body stripes are less numerous and broader than that of the Cape Mountain Zebra, whereas body stripes extend around the belly.

Under attack from predators, Zebra males will compromise their own safety as they courageously take a protective rearguard position while the rest of the group flees. In very large herds Zebra stallions will also form a defensive line along the flanks. The Burchell's habit of keeping close to herds of grazing wildebeest is probably not coincidental: this strategy increases its chances of survival, as most predators prefer eating wildebeest.

The Burchells Zebra Aerials are shot from a Jet Ranger Vell 206 Helicopter using a JVC DV500 camcorder. It is supplied in flattened PAL or NTSC QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Aerial, Aerials, Aerial Footage, Aerial Stock Footage, Royalty Free Aerial Stock Footage, Burchells Zebra, Running Zebra Herd, African Wildlife, South Africa. Visit Site
Cape Mountain Zebra
Global Cuts
The Cape Mountain Zebra is one of the rarest mammals in the world and in the early 1950's a very real threat of extinction loomed over the remaing Zebras with the total number of them dropped as low as 91. It is considered the largest mammal in South Africa to have come so close to extinction. In 1986 total numbers were around 500, where 200 to 230 were in the Mountain Zebra National Park and about 90 in the Karoo National Park, where we found this small herd.

Cape Mountain Zebras have a slightly smaller body than their close relatives the Hartmann's Mountain Zebras from Namibia and southwest Angola. Mountain zebras never form the large herds characteristic of plains zebras.

The Cape Mountain Zebra footage is shot with Digital Betacam and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Aerial, Karoo National Park, Cape Mountain Zebra, Mountain Zebra, Zebras, Herd of Zebras, Little Karoo Desert, Swartzberg Pass, Gyro Stabilized Camcorder, Gyro Aerials, Helicopeter Footage, Wildlife Aerials, Wildlife Stock Footage, South Africa, Africa. Visit Site
White Rhinoceros
Global Cuts
The White Rhino differs from the Black Rhinoceros because of the shape of its mouth it is wide, for cropping large swaths of grass; the term ""White"" actually comes from the Afrikaans word ""weit"", meaning 'wide'. A White Rhino's skin color is quite similar to that of the Black Rhino. The White rhino is also called the Square-lipped rhinoceros and is one of the five species of rhinoceros that still exists.

The White-Rhinoceros Aerials are shot from a Jet Ranger Vell 206 Helicopter using a JVC DV500 camcorder. It is supplied in flattened PAL or NTSC QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Aerial, Aerials, Aerial Footage, Aerial Stock Footage, Royalty Free Aerial Stock Footage, White Rhinoceros Calf with Mother, White-Rhinoceros Aerials, White-Rhinoceros Stock Footage, African Wildlife, South Africa. Visit Site
Cape Buffalo
Global Cuts
In Africa, the water buffalo is represented by the African or cape buffalo. This bulky animal is one of the most dangerous mammals to be found anywhere. Weighing about 700 kg on average, with much larger individuals reported, the horn span of some mature bulls is more than a metre in width. It is said that more big game hunters have been killed by the Cape Buffalo than by any other African animal. Cape buffalo prefer areas of open pasture, close to jungle and swampy ground where they can wallow. Other than man, they have few natural predators and are capable of defending themselves against (and sometimes killing) lions, who will attack only old, sick, or immature buffaloes. The leopard is a threat only to newborn calves.

The Cape Buffalo Aerials are shot from a Jet Ranger Vell 206 Helicopter using a JVC DV500 camcorder. It is supplied in flattened PAL or NTSC QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Aerial, Aerials, Aerial Footage, Aerial Stock Footage, Royalty Free Aerial Stock Footage, Cape Buffalo, African Buffalo, Buffalo Herd, Herd of Buffalos, African Wildlife, South Africa. Visit Site
Eland Antelope
Global Cuts
The Eland is the largest of the African antelope. Its name comes from the Dutch 'eland', which means 'elk'. It stands from two to almost three and a half metres at the shoulder and weighs 300 kilograms to a tonne. Elands are remarkably fast, have have been recorded running over 70 kmph / 42 mph. Despite their size, they are exceptional jumpers, easily clearing heights of 1.5 m / 5 feet.

The Eland Antelope Aerials are shot from a Jet Ranger Vell 206 Helicopter using a JVC DV500 camcorder. It is supplied in flattened PAL or NTSC QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Aerial, Antelope Aerial, Aerials, Aerial Footage, Aerial Stock Footage, Royalty Free Aerial Stock Footage, Eland Antelope, African Wildlife, South Africa. Visit Site
Springbok Antelope
Global Cuts
The Sprinbok is the most common Antelope on the African continent, and you will see huge heards of them on both commercial farmland and in designated game parks. The Spingbok is also one of the fastest antelopes, and derive it's name from a stiff legged bouncing motion - called pronking. A leaping springbok can clear 3.5 m, and can reach speeds of 90 km/hr, bounding 15 metres in a single leap.

The Sprinbok Antelope Aerials is shot with helicopter gyro mounted Digital Betacamcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps.

Keywords: Aerial, Aerials, Aerial Footage, Aerial Stock Footage, Royalty Free Aerial Stock Footage, Sprinbok Antelope, Running Sprinbok Herd, Karoo National Park, Little Karoo Desert, Swartzberg Pass, Gyro Stabilized Camcorder, Gyro Aerials, Helicopeter Footage, African Wildlife, South Africa. Visit Site
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