Our News
Press Release - Satellite Collaring
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February 8th 2010 - Next week history will be made in Niger, West Africa when eight of the highly endangered West African Giraffe that roam there will be fitted with the very latest specifically-designed GPS satellite collars. The collars will enable resident research scientist Jean-Patrick Suraud (ASGN) and his team to monitor and study more closely the range over which these amazing animals roam. Specific data can be downloaded every hour from the collars, if necessary, in order to track all movements and, over time this will give the research team a better understanding of habitat need, enabling them to put measures in place to avoid human conflict. |
Giraffa - Newsletter of the IGWG now out! Volume 3, Issue 2 2009
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February 4th 2010 - The fifth newsletter of the IGWG contains interesting insight into the following: *The Ins and Outs of the Sivatherium snout *Brookfield Zoo giraffe program *Wildlife in Uganda *Faecal progesterone concentrations *Tall Tails—Updates from the giraffe world *Captive giraffe science *Recently published research *And much much more
Download the newsletter from:
http://www.giraffeconservation.org/newsletters.php |
Giraffe Comeback As the Giraffe population grows, ancient etchings reveal history of co-existence between livestock and Giraffes
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December 3rd 2009 -
Good news on the Giraffe front! Researchers from the Giraffe Conservation Foundation (GCF) — www.giraffeconservation.org for those who share my fascination with these animals — report that there has been a dramatic increase in the population of the highly endangered West African race of the Giraffe, Giraffa camelopardalis peralta. In historical times, this race ranged from the shores of the Atlantic in Senegal to the west bank of the White Nile, but because of habitat destruction, hunting and competition with domestic livestock, their numbers decreased dramatically. By 1996, the herds of thousands had been reduced to a tiny remnant population of just 50 near Niamey, the capital of Niger. Last month, the GCF announced that the population has quadrupled, numbering some 200 animals and still increasing. Good news indeed, but what does this have to do with Egypt? |
West Africa's last giraffes make surprise comeback
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November 8th 2009 - A crisp African dawn is breaking overhead, and Zibo Mounkaila is on the back of a pickup truck bounding across a sparse landscape of rocky orange soil. The tallest animals on earth are here, the guide says, somewhere amid the scant green bush on one side, and the thatched dome villages on the other. They're here, but by all accounts, they shouldn't be. A hundred years ago, West Africa's last giraffes numbered in the thousands and their habitat stretched from Senegal's Atlantic Ocean coast to Chad, in the heart of the continent. By the dawn of the 21st century, their world had shrunk to a tiny zone southeast of the capital, Niamey, stretching barely 150 miles (240 kilometers) long. The numbers of the Western subspecies dwindled so low that in 1996, they numbered a mere 50. Instead of disappearing as many feared, though, the giraffes have bounced miraculously back from the brink of extinction, swelling to more than 200 today. It's an unlikely boon experts credit to a combination of concerned conservationists, a government keen for revenue, and a rare harmony with villagers who have accepted their presence — for now. |
Dumbo feather: article with GCF's Julian Fennessy
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October 5th 2009 - Julian Fennessy loves Africa and its extraordinary wildlife and is determined not to let one of its most iconic, and yet least understood, species become extinct. It defies belief, but several sub-species of giraffe - yes, it’s giraffe (plural) not giraffes - are on the verge of extinction. While giraffe as a whole species are on endangered watchlists, Julian’s ground-breaking genetic research suggests that giraffe sub-species are so distinct that they need to be protected and conserved at that level. Julian is currently the Executive Director of the Kenya Land Conservation Trust, the current Chair (and founding member) of the International Giraffe Working Goup, and a founder and trustee of the Giraffe Conservation Foundation ... Df |
Inaugural Giraffe Professionals Conference: Phoenix Zoo Feb. 21 - 24, 2010
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September 23rd 2009 - Calling all Zookeepers, Veterinarians, Field and Zoo Researchers And Giraffe Conservationists! Mark your calendars for the Inaugural Giraffe Professionals Conference Held at the Phoenix Zoo Feb. 21 – 24, 2010 Keynote address by Julian Fennessy, Ph.D (Giraffe Conservation Foundation and IGWG)
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Giraffe speciation and conservation - two newly published papers
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September 14th 2009 - Two interesting pieces of work have been published Early Online with the African Journal of Ecology. The first is an in-depth analysis of the Namibian giraffe populations being genetically distinct from its previously assumed family in South Africa, whilst the other paper looks at the decline of the Rothschild's giraffe in Lake Nakuru NP. |
Spotted Ships of the Desert
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September 2nd 2009 - Giraffes in the desert? Now there's a thought. Surprisingly, giraffe are extremely well adapted to life in some of the most arid environments on the African continent including the oldest desert of them all - the Namib Desert. http://www.iucn.org/knowledge/news/focus/2009_drylands/ground/?3836/Spotted-ships-of-the-desert |
Introducing our founding patron, Lynn Sherr, TV journalist, author, Tall Blondes: A Book about Giraffes
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July 23rd 2009 - "I can't imagine a world without giraffes, and thanks to the Giraffe Conservation Foundation, I'll never have to. At last, an organization of their own to protect and preserve these magnificent creatures. I invite you to join us -- to read about what we're doing and learn how you, too, can help keep nature's tallest blondes safe." Lynn Sherr Patron Giraffe Conservation Foundation |
Giraffa - Newsletter of the IGWG now out! Volume 3, Issue 1 2009
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July 21st 2009 - The fourth newsletter of the IGWG contains interesting insight into the following:
* Population Habitat and Viability Analysis of the West
African giraffe
* Illegal hunting of giraffe in Tanzania
* Giraffes of the Garamba National Park, DRC
* The Advantages of Proactive Reinforcement Training with
Captive Giraffe
* The behaviour of reticulated giraffe in the Laikipia, Kenya
* And much much more
Download the newsletter from: http://www.giraffeconservation.org/newsletters.php |

