Natural range Barbary sheep are
endemic to regions of Northern Africa primarily surrounding the barren center of the
Sahara Desert. Countries and territories where aoudad may be found include
Algeria,
Chad (north),
Egypt,
Libya,
Mali (north),
Mauritania,
Morocco,
Niger,
Tunisia and
Western Sahara. West of the
Nile, they can be found in
Sudan; east of the Nile, in the
Red Sea Hills. The now-extinct
Ancient Egyptian corkscrew-horned sheep (
Ovis longipes palaeoaegyptiacus) was also thought to be a subspecies of wild barbary sheep. Populations within its native range have been decreasing due to hunting, legal and otherwise, and destruction of habitat.
Introduced populations . Barbary sheep have been introduced to southeastern
Spain and the
Southwestern United States. They have become common in a limited region of southeastern Spain, since its introduction in 1970 to
Sierra Espuña Regional Park as a
game species. Its adaptability enabled it to colonize nearby areas quickly, and private game estates provided other centers of dispersion. The species is currently expanding, according to recent field surveys, now being found in the provinces of
Alicante,
Almería,
Granada, and
Murcia. The species is a potential competitor to native
ungulates inhabiting the
Iberian Peninsula, and has also been introduced to
La Palma (in the
Canary Islands), and has spread throughout the northern and central parts of the island, where it is a serious threat to
endemic vegetation. The aoudad has also been introduced in Croatia several times, where a population exists in
Mosor. During the winter of 1957-1958, 42 Barbary sheep were released in the
Palo Duro Canyon of Texas for the purpose of attracting hunters to the region. Although the species has not yet been recorded in
Australia, it is considered a pest species in
Queensland, with the potential to establish in the wild. == Taxonomy ==