Goats are skilled climbers and are known to scale steep rock faces and mountains in search of food.
The goats are drawn to the fruit of the Argan tree, which ripens in June each year.
The Argan grows to 8-10 meters high and live up to 150200 years.
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The goats native to this region have cloven feet.
The animals also have two vestigial toes higher up their legs, called dewclaws.
Inside the nut contains one or two, small, oil-rich seeds.
The fruit takes over a year to mature, ripening in June to July of the following year.
Traditionally, the goats were a part of the oil producing business.
It is sold in Europe and North America where it has become a fashionable product.
Ironically, the argan oils popularity has threatened the very survival of this tree.
Trees are also felled for their wood or to make way for other crops.
Through the 1970s and 1980s about 600 hectares of argan forest per annum was lost.