Live in small groups(from Habibi 1994 unless otherwise noted)
- Gregarious animals
- Live in an open system where individuals join and leave with little reaction from other group members (Habibi 1997)
- Group composition
- Mixed groups (males, females, and juveniles) (Habibi 1994; Habibi 1997)
- Males, females, and juveniles
- Males up to 3 years of age remain within mixed groups, in Israel (P Alkon personal communication)
- Group members typically remain clost to cliff edges
- Likely for predator avoidance
- Rely more heavily on high-quality herbaceous forage found near the cliffs as well
- Most common social group
- Large, adult males typically only within mixed groups during the seasonal rut (mating season) (Gross et al. 1995)
- Female-young groups
- Typically smaller than mixed groups
- All-male groups, small
- Young males (4-6 years of age) form small groups, in Israel (P Alkon personal communication)
- Breeding males
- Disperse during the rut
- No apparent hierarchy among individuals (P Alkon personal communication)
- Minimal agonism outside the reproductive (rutting) season (P Alkon personal communication)
- Range more widely than female based groups
- Solitary males, common during the rut
Group size(Habibi 1994; Habibi 1997)
- Group size fluctuates over time
- 2-36 individuals
- Smaller groups in regions with intense hunting pressure and habitat degradation (Alkon 2013; Habibi and Grainger 1990; Osborn and Helmy 1980)
- Larger groups in Israel, likely due to their protected status
- Female based-groups of >30 adults are common in the well-watered and lushly vegetated Ein Gedi Nature Reserved near the Dead Sea (P Alkon personal communication)
- Typically <10 individuals, mean c. 7; study of populations in Saudi Arabia
Social structure
- Mature females
- Typically lead as group escapes upslope when disturbed (Habibi 1997)
- Females with linear dominance hierarchy
- Stable hierarchy observed in one Negev population (Greenburg-Cohen et al. 1994)
- Characterized by high levels of subtle agonistic interactions