Giraffidae - Giraffe, Okapi

Giraffes and okapis are both found in Sub-Saharan Africa in wooded savannas and open woodlands.

GIRAFFES

The giraffe is the tallest land mammal. Male giraffes can be 16-18 feet tall and weigh up to 2,000 pounds. Females are usually a few feet shorter than males.

The giraffe is tan with dark brown markings. Its front legs are slightly longer than its back legs. The longer front legs help the giraffe support its 6-foot-long neck. The giraffe’s neck has seven vertebrae, just like other mammals, but its vertebrae are very long. Both male and female giraffes are born with horns.

The giraffe is an herbivore; it browses for leaves and shoots high in the trees and uses its long, black, prehensile tongue to pull leaves into its mouth. The roof of its mouth has grooves on it that help strip the leaves from their branches. Giraffes eat up to 140 pounds of food a day. They are especially fond of the leaves of the acacia tree.

The leaves of the acacia tree contain a lot of water. The extra water helps the giraffe go for long periods of time without drinking water. This helps the giraffe survive. In order to drink water, the giraffe must spread its legs and bend its long neck down to the water. When it is drinking, it is difficult to spot approaching prey, and hard to run away if prey is spotted.

Giraffes live in herds of 10-20 individuals, although some herds can have as many as 100 giraffes.

The giraffe breeds throughout the year. The male mates with more than one female. The female gives birth to a single calf 14-15 months after mating. The calf stays close to its mother for a few weeks and then joins a crèche of other young giraffes. The calf will nurse for up to a year.

There are nine subspecies of giraffe that are identified by the pattern of the dark brown markings and by where they are found in Africa. For example, the Masai giraffe of Kenya has a pattern that looks like oak leaves.

OKAPI

The okapi is found in rainforests in the Democratic Republic of Congo in central Africa. It was not discovered by scientists until 1900. It is 5 to 6.5 feet tall and has black-and-white striped legs and hindquarters, a dark brown body, large ears, and a long tail. The stripes on the okapi’s legs help camouflage it in the rainforest.

Like the giraffe, it has a long, black prehensile tongue that it uses to strip leaves and buds off of trees and shrubs. Its front legs are longer than its rear legs, just like the giraffe.

The female okapi gives birth to a single calf. She hides the calf in the underbrush of the rainforest, and for the first two months, she only visits her calf to feed it. By staying away from the calf, except for when she feeds it, the mother protects the calf from being discovered by predators. When the calf is two months old, it joins it mother and browses for food.

Did You Know?

The giraffe is the tallest land mammal.
The giraffe is the tallest land mammal.
The okapi was not discovered by scientists until 1900.
The okapi was not discovered by scientists until 1900.

World Status Key

Status and range is taken from IUCN Redlist

Least Concern
Near Threatened
Vulnerable
Endangered
Critically Endangered
Extinct in the Wild
Extinct
Not Enough Data

U.S. Status Key

Status taken from US Fish and Wildlife

Threatened in US
Endangered in US
Introduced

NH Status Key

Status taken from NH Fish and Game

Threatened in NH
Endangered in NH
Breeds in NH (birds)

Location Key

Africa
Asia
Australia/Oceania
Europe
North/Central America
south america alt
South America

New Hampshire Species

No animals found.

Other Species Around the World

No animals found.

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