Rothschild’s giraffe facts
· Mum Orla was born
on 17/03/2008 and is seven years old.
· Dad is five-years-old Meru, born 03/04/2010
· Kidepo was born at around 6:50am on
23/07/2015. Her first was Millie,
who was born at Chester Zoo on 02/03/2013
·
They are also known as the baringo or Ugandan giraffe
·
The species is
identified by its broader dividing white lines and has no spots beneath the
knees
·
Giraffe population figures are declining across Africa
· Rothschild’s giraffes are classed as endangered by the
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) with current population
estimates suggesting less than 1,100 remain in the wild
· With less than 1,100
individuals remaining in the wild the Rothschild's giraffe is more endangered
than species such as African elephants and giant pandas
· Roughly one-third of the surviving population of Rothschild’s
giraffes live in zoos where carefully co-ordinated breeding programmes are
creating a safety-net population for the species
· Once wide-ranging across Kenya, Uganda and Sudan, the
Rothschild’s giraffe has been almost totally eliminated from much of its former
range and now only survives in a few small, isolated populations in Kenya and
Uganda
·
The main threat to the species now is loss of habitat and
poaching for meat and hides
· In the past, giraffes
were hunted for their tails, which were used as good-luck charms, sewing thread
and even fly swats
· The species is one of the most
endangered of the nine sub-species of giraffe