Giraffe Facts & Photos
Giraffes tower over
Africa's plains. These tall animals are identified by their long necks, equally
long and spindly legs, and spotted coats. Most giraffes have a tan, white or
yellow coats that are spotted with brown, square shapes.
Size
Giraffes are the
tallest living animals in the world, according to the Smithsonian National
Zoological Park. A giraffe's neck alone is 6 feet (1.8 meters) long and weighs
about 600 lbs. (272 kilograms). The animal's legs are also 6 feet long.
Females grow up to 14
feet (4.3 m) tall and weigh up to 1,500 lbs. (680 kg), while males grow up to
18 feet (5.5 m) tall and weigh up to 3,000 lbs.
With such a massive
body, it makes sense that the giraffes' organs and other body parts are equally
huge. Their tongues are a substantial 21 inches (53 centimeters) long, and
their feet are 12 inches (30.5 cm) across. According to the San Diego Zoo, a
giraffe's heart is 2 feet (0.6 m) long and weighs about 25 lbs. (11 kg). Their
lungs can hold 12 gallons (55 liters) of air. In comparison, the average total
lung capacity for a human is 1.59 gallons (6 liters).
Habitat
Giraffes live in
savannas throughout Africa. They like semi-arid, open woodlands that have
scattered trees and bushes, making the savannas perfect for these animals.
Habits
Giraffes are so social
that they don't have territories. A group of giraffes is aptly called a tower,
according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Towers typically have 10 to 20
members. Who lives in the tower can vary. Some towers consist of all females
and their young, or all male or mixed genders. Member are free to come and go
as they please, according to the Animal Diversity Web.
Giraffes only sleep
around 20 minutes or less per day, according to PBS Nature. Staying awake most
of the time allows them to be constantly on alert for predators. They usually
get their sleep in quick power naps that last just a couple of minutes.
Every giraffe has two
hair-covered horns called ossicones. Male giraffes use their horns to playfully
fight with one another. They also spar by swinging their heads at one another
and entwining their necks, which is called "necking."
Diet
Giraffes are
herbivores, which means they eat only plants. Their long necks allow them to
reach leaves, seeds, fruits, buds and branches high up in mimosa and acacia
trees. They can eat hundreds of pounds of leaves per week, according to
National Geographic.
Though these animals
eat a lot, giraffes can go without drinking for weeks at a time. They get most
of their moisture from the vegetation they eat.
Offspring
As in cattle, female
giraffes are called cows, while the males are called bulls. After mating, the
cow will have a gestation period of around 14 months. Baby giraffes are called
calves. During birth, the calf will drop to the ground, since mother giraffes
give birth standing up. The fall can be as far as 5 feet (1.5 m), according to
National Geographic.
New calves are quite
large, at 6 feet tall (1.8 m), 100 to 150 lbs. (45 to 68 kg), according to the
San Diego Zoo. They are also agile. At just an hour after birth, they can stand
up and walk around.
Giraffe mothers often
take turns watching over the calves. Sometimes, though, the mother giraffe will
leave the calf by itself. When this happens, the infant will lie down and wait
for its mother to return.
Calves are weaned at
around 12 months, according to the University of Michigan. At 3 to 6 years old,
calves are fully mature. The animals can live 10 to 15 years in the wild and 20
to 25 years in captivity.
Classification/taxonomy
In the Giraffidae
family, there are two genera: Giraffa and Okapia. The okapi is sometimes called
the forest giraffe. The Giraffa genus has recently had a shake-up after a
recent study recognized four species, not just one.
The 2016 study was
published in the journal Current Biology. Researchers from the Giraffe
Conservation Foundation (GCF) collected and analyzed DNA from skin samples
representing 190 giraffes from across Africa, the first such analysis to
include data from all nine formerly accepted subspecies. [Related: 1 Long Neck,
4 Species: New Giraffe Diversity Revealed]
The new taxonomy of giraffes, according to the GCF, is:
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Bilateria
Infrakingdom:
Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum:
Gnathostomata
Superclass: Tetrapoda
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Theria
Infraclass: Eutheria
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Giraffidae
Genus: Giraffa
Species:
Giraffa giraffa
(southern giraffe), with two subspecies: G. g. angolensis (Angolan giraffe) and
G. g. giraffa (South African giraffe)
Giraffa camelopardalis
(northern giraffe), with three subspecies: G. c. antiquorum (Kordofan giraffe),
G. c. camelopardalis (Nubian giraffe) and G. c. peralta (West African giraffe)
Giraffa reticulate
(reticulated giraffe)
Giraffa tippelskirchi
(Masai giraffe)
Conservation status
Recognizing four distinct giraffe species
should be a game changer for conservation plans, the GCF researchers said in
the study.
Fewer than 100,000
giraffes remain in the wild, down from an estimated 150,000 that roamed the
savannas 30 years ago. And because the species don't interbreed, population
numbers for all African giraffes won't accurately represent whether each group
is doing well. Using this new information about giraffe genetics, governments
and biologists can create more focused efforts to ensure that all four species
will be neck and neck in their race toward future success, the scientists said.
Giraffe populations are
challenged because of poaching and shrinking habitat. The animals' tails are
made into good-luck bracelets, fly whisks and thread for stringing beads,
according to the African Wildlife Foundation. As agricultural settlement
expands, the giraffe's main source of food, the acacia tree, is being cut down.
Other facts
Just like human
fingerprints and zebra stripes, the coat pattern of a giraffe is unique to that
animal.
The pattern and the
small hump on a giraffe's back are similar to those of a leopard. Years ago,
many people thought the giraffe was a combination of a camel and a leopard, and
they called these animals "camel-leopards."
You will often see
giraffes walking around with birds on their backs. These birds are called
tickbirds, or oxpecker birds (Buphagus africanus). They eat bugs that live in
the giraffe's coat and alert the animals to danger by chirping loudly.
Even if you spent a lot
of time with giraffes, you would never hear them make a noise. This is because
giraffes communicate using noises that are too low for humans to hear,
according to PBS Nature.
Thanks to their long
legs, giraffes are very fast. They can run 35 mph (56 km/h) in short bursts and
run for longer stretches at 10 mph (16 km/h), according to National Geographic.
Giraffes are even-toed
ungulates, which means they have two weight-bearing hooves on each foot, and
are in the order Artiodactyla, which also includes antelopes, cattle, goats,
sheep, caribou, moose, hippos and pigs.
source:
https://www.livescience.com/27336-giraffes.html
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