Lichtenstein's Hartebeest
Lichtenstein's hartebeest is a tawny, high-shouldered antelope of the miombo woodland of south-central Africa, a less common and prized cousin of the red hartebeest.
๐๏ธ Last reviewed: July 2026
Overview
Lichtenstein's hartebeest is a tawny, high-shouldered antelope of the miombo woodland of south-central Africa, a less common and prized cousin of the red hartebeest. Alert and fond of open woodland, it offers a classic woodland-savanna stalk.
Identification & Appearance
Lichtenstein's hartebeest are tawny to reddish with a paler rump, a high-shouldered sloping build, and shorter, sharply hooked ridged horns compared with the red hartebeest. A dark saddle often shows on the back.
Range & Habitat
They occupy the miombo and open woodland savanna of Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique and Malawi, favoring wooded grassland near water.
Behavior & Sign
They live in small herds, post a sentinel, and are alert and quick to run through the open woodland. Sign includes grazing, dung middens and tracks.
Hunting Seasons & Timing
Hunted on the dry-season safari calendar, roughly June through October, when water and grazing concentrate animals.
Hunting Methods
Spot-and-stalk and tracking through open miombo woodland, glassing for a mature bull and closing in the cover.
Gear & Optics
A .270 to .30 caliber with premium bullets and good glass suits the woodland ranges; hartebeest are tough for their build.
Shot Placement & Field Care
Broadside shoulder shot into the heart-lung area; hold for the vitals lower than the high shoulder suggests. The tawny cape makes a fine mount.
Meat & Eating Quality
Good venison, used in camp and for biltong.
Common Mistakes
Aiming too high on the sloping shoulder and undergunning a tough animal.
Regulations & Conservation
Hunted under strict safari quotas in its woodland range. Confirm CITES and import rules. This is a reading guide, not legal advice.
FAQ
How is it different from red hartebeest? Shorter hooked horns, miombo woodland habitat, and a more limited range.
Where is it hunted? Tanzania, Zambia and Mozambique.