cape rock sengi gift card
The Cape Rock Sengi is shown in rocky ground with scrub, open patches, and low cover. The envelope places it in the terrain it reads every day through scent, movement, and shadow.
It feeds mainly on insects and other small invertebrates, moving quickly between rocks and low vegetation. By feeding along the ground layer, it helps control small insect populations and becomes food for snakes, birds of prey, and small carnivores. Its role sits close to the soil, where many of the first signs of change in a habitat begin.
On the back of the card, its South African names are included with the work it does in nature and a map showing where it occurs.
Status: Least Concern (LC)
Scientific name: Elephantulus edwardii
South African names: Klaasneusklipkyker (Afrikaans), Cape Rock Sengi / Elephant Shrew (English), Titsengele (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)
The Cape Rock Sengi is shown in rocky ground with scrub, open patches, and low cover. The envelope places it in the terrain it reads every day through scent, movement, and shadow.
It feeds mainly on insects and other small invertebrates, moving quickly between rocks and low vegetation. By feeding along the ground layer, it helps control small insect populations and becomes food for snakes, birds of prey, and small carnivores. Its role sits close to the soil, where many of the first signs of change in a habitat begin.
On the back of the card, its South African names are included with the work it does in nature and a map showing where it occurs.
Status: Least Concern (LC)
Scientific name: Elephantulus edwardii
South African names: Klaasneusklipkyker (Afrikaans), Cape Rock Sengi / Elephant Shrew (English), Titsengele (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)
The Cape Rock Sengi is shown in rocky ground with scrub, open patches, and low cover. The envelope places it in the terrain it reads every day through scent, movement, and shadow.
It feeds mainly on insects and other small invertebrates, moving quickly between rocks and low vegetation. By feeding along the ground layer, it helps control small insect populations and becomes food for snakes, birds of prey, and small carnivores. Its role sits close to the soil, where many of the first signs of change in a habitat begin.
On the back of the card, its South African names are included with the work it does in nature and a map showing where it occurs.
Status: Least Concern (LC)
Scientific name: Elephantulus edwardii
South African names: Klaasneusklipkyker (Afrikaans), Cape Rock Sengi / Elephant Shrew (English), Titsengele (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)
The Cape Rock Sengi is shown in rocky ground with scrub, open patches, and low cover. The envelope places it in the terrain it reads every day through scent, movement, and shadow.
It feeds mainly on insects and other small invertebrates, moving quickly between rocks and low vegetation. By feeding along the ground layer, it helps control small insect populations and becomes food for snakes, birds of prey, and small carnivores. Its role sits close to the soil, where many of the first signs of change in a habitat begin.
On the back of the card, its South African names are included with the work it does in nature and a map showing where it occurs.
Status: Least Concern (LC)
Scientific name: Elephantulus edwardii
South African names: Klaasneusklipkyker (Afrikaans), Cape Rock Sengi / Elephant Shrew (English), Titsengele (XiTsonga)
♻️ PAP 21 (paper collection)