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Grevy's zebra


Adopt a cheetah, meerkat, or another African animal.

The National Zoo Store Online offers an array of books, educational games, and more related to the African Savanna.

Visit the Smithsonian's African Art Museum.

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Elephant Trails: A New Home for Asian Elephants

Raul, a new male dama gazelle at the National Zoo

The East African savanna, a dry tropical grassland, is home to a rich array of spectacular animals. Predators like lions and cheetahs prey on grazing and browsing animals like zebras and gazelles. Stately birds like kori bustards stalk smaller prey while rarely seen naked mole-rats inhabit burrows on the savanna. You can see these species and more without traveling to Africa. Just come to the Zoo or take a virtual visit.

Animals from many parts of Africa make their home at the Zoo. The Zoo's Cheetah Conservation Station is home to Grevy's zebras, scimitar-horned oryx, dama gazelles, cheetahs, and other animals.

Cheetah Cubs are Growing Up

Amani's cubs have moved! They're starting to move into their adult social groups. Read more in the latest keeper updates.

Celebrate the birth of the cubs—adopt a cheetah!

Dama Gazelle Born at the Smithsonian's National Zoo

A male dama gazelle was born to mother Fahima and father Raul early morning Sept. 4 in an off-exhibit area. The following day, Sept. 5, Zoo veterinarians performed a complete physical exam, which includes: listening to the calf's heart and lungs; checking his mouth, eyes, legs, feet, umbilicus and genital area; taking blood samples; and observing the calf's mobility. He appears to be healthy and strong. more

Two Cheetah Cubs Transferred to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo

Three weeks after their unconventional and rocky entrance into the world, two 3-week-old cheetahs were transported May 18 to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in good health, thanks to the hard work and swift actions of animal care staff at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Virginia. They are being hand-raised at the Zoo and will require around-the-clock care until they are ready to make their public debut late this summer. more

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Please note: The cheetah cubs' temporary new home does not have web cams.

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Can't see any animals?

The animal(s) in this enclosure may have moved out of view.

Spotting cheetahs: Six cheetahs (three brothers, one female, and two juveniles) live at the National Zoo's Cheetah Conservation Station. Cheetahs are the world's fastest land mammal, able to run as fast as 60 miles per hour.
Cheetah Fact Sheet | Adopt a Cheetah | Download the Zoo's app to watch this cam on your smartphone

Related Cams
     Naked Mole-rat
     Lions:   Lions | Lion Cubs 4W | Lion Cubs 5W | Lion Cubs 3W

Animal Enigma

This striped carnivore lives in many regions of Africa and is now on exhibit at the Small Mammal House. What is it?

Grasslands in Africa and Beyond

Africa's Sahel grassland, home to endangered scimitar-horned oryx and many other rare species, merges into the Sahara desert to the north and the savanna to the south. Mostly dry grasslands also cover southern Africa, home to cheetahs, Cape buffalo, black rhinos, and kori bustards also found in East Africa. Zoo scientists are working in all of these areas to help conserve the incredible biodiversity of Africa's grasslands.

North America's grasslands were once home to abundant black-footed ferrets, bison, and prairie dogs. On South America's plains, seriemas and maned wolves stalk prey. Parts of Asia, such as Mongolia, home of Bactrian camels, Mongolian gazelles, and Przewalski's horses, are covered with grasslands.