Online Encyclopedia

GIRAFFE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 43 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GIRAFFE  , a corruption of Zarafah, the Arabic name for the tallest of all mammals, and the typical representative of the

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family Giraffidae, the distinctive characters of which are given in the article PECORA, where the systematic position of the
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group is indicated . The classic
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term " camelopard," probably introduced when these animals were brought from North Africa to the
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Roman amphitheatre, has fallen into
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complete disuse . In
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common with the
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okapi, giraffes have skin-covered horns on the head, but in these animals, which form the genus Giraffa, these appendages are
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present in both sexes; and there is often an unpaired one in advance of the pair on the forehead . Among other characteristics of these animals may be noticed the
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great length of the neck and limbs, the complete absence of lateral toes and the long and tufted tail . The tongue is remarkable for its great length, measuring about 17 in. in the dead animal, and for its great
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elasticity and power of
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muscular contraction while living . It is covered with numerous large papillae, and forms, like the trunk of the
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elephant, an admirable
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organ for the examination and prehension of food . Giraffes are inhabit-ants of open country, and owing to their length of neck and long flexible tongues are enabled to browse on tall trees, mimosas being favourites . To drink or graze they are obliged to straddle the fore-legs apart; but they seldom feed on grass and are capable of going long without
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water . When
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standing among mimosas they so harmonize with their surroundings that they are difficult of detection . Formerly giraffes were found in large herds, but persecution has reduced their number and led to their extermination from many districts . Although in
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late
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Tertiary times widely spread over
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southern
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Europe and India, giraffes are now confined to Africa south of the
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Sahara . Apart from the distinct Somali giraffe (Giraffe reticulate), characterized by its deep liver-red colour marked with a very coarse network of
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fine white lines, there are numerous
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local forms of the ordinary giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis) .

The

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northern races, such as the Nubian G. c. typica and the
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Kordofan G. c. antiquorum, are characterized by the large frontal horn of the bulls, the white legs, the network type of coloration and the pale tint . The latter feature is specially
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developed in the Nigerian G. c. peralta, which is likewise of the northern type . The
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Baringo G. c. rothschildi also has a large frontal horn and white legs, but the spots in the bulls are very dark and those of the
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females jagged .. In the
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Kilimanjaro G. c. tippelskirchi the frontal hornis often developed in the bulls, but the legs are frequently spotted to the fetlocks . Farther south the frontal horn tends to disappear more or less completely, as in the
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Angola G. c. angolensis, the
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Transvaal G. c. wardi and the Cape G. c. capensis, while the legs are fully spotted and the colour-
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pattern on the
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body (especially in the last-named) is more of a blotched type, that The North
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African or Nubian Giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis) . is to say, consists of dark blotches on a fawn ground, instead of a network of
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light lines on a dark ground . For details, see a paper on the subspecies of Giraffa camelopardalis, by R . Lydekker in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of
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London for 1904 . (R .

End of Article: GIRAFFE
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