How One Giraffe Became More. Specifically, Four.
- Anna Mae
- Sep 15, 2016
- 1 min read

''Astronomers are lucky. When they uncover something weird, like a planet orbiting our nearest neighboring star, they can say, “Yes, but that pinprick was 40 trillion kilometers away.” When biologists make similar discoveries that turn convention on its head, the general reaction is “How did you not notice this?” When that discovery suddenly revises our understanding of a 20-foot-tall animal that’s strewn throughout a sizable chunk of a continent and that can weigh up to 2,600 pounds, “No, seriously ... how did nobody notice this?!” is a pretty valid question.
That’s the question researchers from the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Center and the Giraffe Conservation Foundation found themselves asking after they conducted some genetic tests and realized that what we’ve long thought of as “the giraffe,” is actually four distinct species. They’ve since renamed them, very creatively spinning off on the giraffe theme: the Masai giraffe, the reticulated giraffe, the southern giraffe, and the northern giraffe...''
by Ian Graber-Stiehl
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