Shanghai Daily

Scientists discover two dwarf giraffes in Namibia, Uganda

- Tim Cocks

Being tall is the giraffe’s competitiv­e advantage, giving it the pick of leaves from the tallest trees, so scientists were stunned to find two giraffe dwarves on different sides of Africa.

“It’s fascinatin­g what our researcher­s out in the field found,” Julian Fennessy, co-founder of the Giraffe Conservati­on Foundation, said. “We were very surprised.”

Most giraffes grow to 15-20 feet (4.6-6.1 meters), but in 2018, scientists working with the foundation discovered a 2.5meter giraffe in Namibia. Three years earlier, they had also found a 2.8-meter giraffe in a Ugandan wildlife park.

They published their findings in the British Medical Journal at the end of last month.

In both cases, the giraffes had the standard long necks but short, stumpy legs, the paper said. Skeletal dysplasia, the medical name for the condition, affects humans and domesticat­ed animals, but the paper said it was rare to see in wild animals.

Footage taken by the foundation showed the Ugandan giraffe standing on thick, muscled legs in the dry savanna of Murchison Falls National Park in northern Uganda, while a taller animal with the usual long, stick-like legs walked behind it.

“Unfortunat­ely there’s probably no benefit at all. Giraffes have grown taller to reach the taller trees,” Fennessy said. He added that it would most likely be physically impossible for them to breed with their normal-sized counterpar­ts.

Numbers of the world’s tallest mammal have declined by some 40 percent over the past 30 years to around 111,000, so all four species are classified by conservati­onists as “vulnerable.”

“It’s because of mostly habitat loss, habitat fragmentat­ion, growing human population­s, more land being cultivated,” Fennessy said. “Combined with a little bit of poaching, climate change.”

But conservati­on efforts have helped numbers start to recover in the past decade, he added.

 ??  ?? A dwarf giraffe named “Nigel,” born in 2014, stands with an adult male giraffe at an undisclose­d location in Namibia. — Reuters
A dwarf giraffe named “Nigel,” born in 2014, stands with an adult male giraffe at an undisclose­d location in Namibia. — Reuters

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