This week let's learn about some astonishing giraffes and zebras that don't look like you'd expect!
Further reading:
See the Rare, Spotless Giraffe Born at a Tennessee Zoo
Giraffe Conservation Foundation
Brights Zoo
A tale of two zebras: South African photos used in misleading posts about Kenya's polka-dot foal
Zebra News: Spotted Tira, Zonkeys and Zorses
Further viewing:
The Mysterious Return of Tira the Spotted Dark Zebra in Masai Mara
Kipekee the spotless giraffe [pic is from the first link posted above]:
The picture posted on Facebook by Giraffe Conservation Foundation on Sept. 10, 2023:
Tira the spotted zebra as a baby in 2019:
Tira the spotted zebra is getting so grown up (or was in 2021)!
A DIFFERENT spotted zebra from South Africa:
Show transcript:
Welcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I’m your host, Kate Shaw.
I’m back from Dragon Con, where I had a great time as usual! I was careful and wore a mask while I was around other people, but masking works best when everyone wears a mask, which as we all know doesn’t happen very often right now. Luckily I didn’t get covid, but I did come down with an ordinary cold. I’m just about over it now, though, so hopefully I don’t sound too bad.
I live in Tennessee, and before I left for Dragon Con I kept seeing news reports about an unusual baby giraffe born in a Tennessee zoo. You may have heard about the giraffe calf too. As you probably know, giraffes have an elaborate pattern of markings called spots, although they’re not spots like a leopard’s spots. They look a lot like the cracks in a dried-up mudpuddle, where the muddy parts are dark brown or orangey-brown, and the cracks in between are tan or white. It’s sometimes called a web pattern, where the lighter design looks like a web overlaid on a darker coat.
Whatever you call it, all giraffes have these markings. But on July 31, 2023, a calf was born that didn’t have any spots at all. She’s completely brown. Also, very beautiful and cute as a little button.
The calf was born at Brights Zoo, which is near a community called Limestone in Tennessee. I’d never heard of the zoo, so I assumed it was in middle or west Tennessee, and I live in east Tennessee. But when I looked it up, it’s actually quite close to me. I will definitely be visiting as soon as I get a chance! (Its website says Google Maps has its address wrong, by the way, in case you plan to visit it too.) It’s a private zoo dedicated to education and conservation, and among the animals they care for are giraffes.
The calf in question is an endangered reticulated giraffe. Conservationists estimate that fewer than 9,000 reticulated giraffes remain in the wild these days, but it does well in captivity and is a popular animal in zoos. The reticulated giraffe was once common throughout northeast Africa, although its range is fractured into little areas now. It’s happy in a number of habitats, including rainforests and savannas.
The zoo came up with four name choices for their calf and invited people to vote for which name they liked best. The winning name was announced just a few days ago as this episode goes live, Kipekee. It means “unique” in Swahili, the official language of Kenya.
Kipekee is healthy and active, and the zoo reports she was immediately accepted by her mother and all the other giraffes as just a regular baby. I guess giraffes understand that what you look like isn’t nearly as important as how you act, and Kipekee acts like a curious little baby giraffe.
In a lot of news reports, you’ll hear that Kipekee is the only unspotted giraffe seen since 1972, when one was born in a zoo in Japan, and that she’s likely the only unspotted giraffe alive in the entire world right now. But then, only a matter of hours before this episode goes live, because I took forever to start working on it, the Giraffe Conservation Foundation dropped a post on their Facebook page.
This week let's learn about some astonishing giraffes and zebras that don't look like you'd expect!
Further reading:
See the Rare, Spotless Giraffe Born at a Tennessee Zoo
Giraffe Conservation Foundation
Brights Zoo
A tale of two zebras: South African photos used in misleading posts about Kenya's polka-dot foal
canada.com/horse-news/zebra-news-spotted-tira-zonkeys-zorses/">Zebra News: Spotted Tira, Zonkeys and Zorses
Further viewing:
The Mysterious Return of Tira the Spotted Dark Zebra in Masai Mara
Kipekee the spotless giraffe [pic is from the first link posted above]:
The picture posted on Facebook by Giraffe Conservation Foundation on Sept. 10, 2023:
Tira the spotted zebra as a baby in 2019:
Tira the spotted zebra is getting so grown up (or was in 2021)!
A DIFFERENT spotted zebra from South Africa:
Show transcript:
Welcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I’m your host, Kate Shaw.
I’m back from Dragon Con, where I had a great time as usual! I was careful and wore a mask while I was around other people, but masking works best when everyone wears a mask, which as we all know doesn’t happen very often right now. Luckily I didn’t get covid, but I did come down with an ordinary cold. I’m just about over it now, though, so hopefully I don’t sound too bad.
I live in Tennessee, and before I left for Dragon Con I kept seeing news reports about an unusual baby giraffe born in a Tennessee zoo. You may have heard about the giraffe calf too. As you probably know, giraffes have an elaborate pattern of markings called spots, although they’re not spots like a leopard’s spots. They look a lot like the cracks in a dried-up mudpuddle, where the muddy parts are dark brown or orangey-brown, and the cracks in between are tan or white. It’s sometimes called a web pattern, where the lighter design looks like a web overlaid on a darker coat.
Whatever you call it, all giraffes have these markings. But on July 31, 2023, a calf was born that didn’t have any spots at all. She’s completely brown. Also, very beautiful and cute as a little button.
The calf was born at Brights Zoo, which is near a community called Limestone in Tennessee. I’d never heard of the zoo, so I assumed it was in middle or west Tennessee, and I live in east Tennessee. But when I looked it up, it’s actually quite close to me. I will definitely be visiting as soon as I get a chance! (Its website says Google Maps has its address wrong, by the way, in case you plan to visit it too.) It’s a private zoo dedicated to education and conservation, and among the animals they care for are giraffes.
The calf in question is an endangered reticulated giraffe. Conservationists estimate that fewer than 9,000 reticulated giraffes remain in the wild these days, but it does well in captivity and is a popular animal in zoos. The reticulated giraffe was once common throughout northeast Africa, although its range is fractured into little areas now. It’s happy in a number of habitats, including rainforests and savannas.
The zoo came up with four name choices for their calf and invited people to vote for which name they liked best.