Duboisia santeng or Dubois' antelope is an extinct antelope-like bovid that was endemic to Indonesia during the Pleistocene. It went extinct during the Ionian stage of the Pleistocene, about 750.000 years ago. Duboisia santeng was first described by the Dutchpaleoanthropologist and geologist Eugène Dubois in 1891.[2][3]
It was a small to middle-sized antelope, with body mass estimates ranging from 32 kg to 84 kg, with an average value of 54 kg.[3] Both sexes had horns, which were subtriangular at base and ranged from 6 cm to 9 cm in length.[5]
Behaviour and habitat
Duboisia santeng was a forest-dwelling animal that preferred forest with a close canopy. Examination of this species tooth has shown that it was a browser, primarily feeding on leaves and occasionally on harder vegetation. The habitat ranged from moderately to very humid forests.[3]
^ abChristine Hertler/ Yan Rizal (2005): Excursion guide to the Pleistocene Hominid sites in Central and East Java, JW Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany/ ITB, Bandung, Indonesia
^ abcRozzi, Roberto (2013). "The enigmatic bovid Duboisia santeng (Dubois, 1891) from the Early–Middle Pleistocene of Java: A multiproxy approach to its paleoecology". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 377: 73–85. Bibcode:2013PPP...377...73R. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.03.012.