The
Arabian oryx (
Oryx leucoryx) lived in Jiddat al-Harasis until 1972 when it was considered extinct in the wild. In 1981 the San Diego Wild Animal Park, now the
San Diego Zoo Safari Park, sent five oryxes to the Oman Mammal Breeding Center (also known as Yalooni, where they were released into the wild. Five years later, the
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) proposed a national nature reserve in a section measuring . The Arabian oryx population at this site reached a high of 450 in 1996 but later dwindled due to
poaching and
habitat destruction; as of 2007 only 65 individuals were identified, including only four breeding pairs, making the future viability of this wild population uncertain. Other species recorded throughout are
caracal,
African wildcat and
honey badger;
hares and
hedgehogs are common, while the
Arabian wolf is rare.
Arabian red fox (
Vulpes vulpes arabica), Rüppell's sand fox (
Vulpes rueppellii) and
Nubian ibex are also reported. Reptile species recorded are
grey monitor lizard,
Uromastyx species,
horned viper,
carpet viper,
false cobra, sand snake
Psammophis longifrons,
cat snake,
skinks,
agamids, and
geckos.
Rodents are also present. Bird species comprise 22 breeding species, 15 migratory species and 104 migrant bird species; the latter are noted during spring and autumn season including the endangered
houbara bustard in the regions where saline and brackish springs exist. Resident and migrating
waders,
gulls (
Larus sp.),
terns,
flamingoes (
Phoenicopterus spp.),
herons and many species of
duck are seen during the winter season in the lagoons bordering Jiddat al-Harasis . ==References==