Plains zebra foal in Etosha National Park, Namibia
© Sharon Heald/Nature Picture Librar
Reading between the lines. Plains zebra foal in Etosha National Park, Namibia
Etosha National Park, Namibia, is not a place for soft starts, and the plains zebra foal in this image seems to get the memo. In a land this vast—nearly 22,300 square kilometres of salt pans and grassland—timing is everything, and hesitation is expensive. Lions, spotted hyenas, wild dogs, cheetahs and leopards constantly pressure the herd—especially the youngest—so zebras are born ready. Minutes after arrival, they're upright. Hours later, they're moving.
Those bold stripes aren't decoration; they disrupt vision and make it harder to isolate a single body. Each pattern is unique, yet together they form a moving puzzle predators struggle to solve. The strategy pays off. With hundreds of thousands spread across Africa, plains zebras have strong populations in protected areas like Etosha. The advantage lies in consistency: learn the pattern, read the space, stay close—and suddenly the odds look a lot better.
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