Monday, June 16, 2025
Khmer Daily Cambodia News
34 °c
Phnom Penh
  • LATEST
  • CAMBODIA
  • ASIA
    • JAPAN
    • SOUTH KOREA
    • TAIWAN
  • WORLD
    • CHINA
    • RUSSIA
  • BUSINESS CAMBODIA
  • TECHNOLOGY
No Result
View All Result
  • LATEST
  • CAMBODIA
  • ASIA
    • JAPAN
    • SOUTH KOREA
    • TAIWAN
  • WORLD
    • CHINA
    • RUSSIA
  • BUSINESS CAMBODIA
  • TECHNOLOGY
No Result
View All Result
The Khmer Daily
No Result
View All Result
Home World

Scientists surprised to discover 2 dwarf giraffes in Namibia, Uganda

January 10, 2021
in World
0
Scientists surprised to discover 2 dwarf giraffes in Namibia, Uganda
0
SHARES
12
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

JOHANNESBURG – Being tall is the giraffe’s competitive advantage, giving it the pick of leaves from the tallest trees, so scientists were stunned to find two giraffe dwarves on different sides of Africa.

“It’s fascinating what our researchers out in the field found,” Julian Fennessy, co-founder of the Giraffe Conservation Foundation, told Reuters in a videocall on Friday. “We were very surprised.”

Most giraffes grow to 4.5 – 6 metres, but in 2018, scientists working with the foundation discovered a 2.6-metre giraffe in Namibia. Three years earlier, they had also found a 2.8-metre giraffe in a Ugandan wildlife park.

They published their findings in the British Medical Journal at the end of last month.

In both cases, the giraffes had the standard long necks but short, stumpy legs, the paper said. Skeletal dysplasia, the medical name for the condition, affects humans and domesticated animals, but the paper said it was rare to see in wild animals.

Footage taken by the foundation showed the Ugandan giraffe standing on thick, muscled legs in the dry savanna of Murchison Falls national park in northern Uganda, while a taller animal with the usual long, stick-like legs walked behind it.

“Unfortunately there’s probably no benefit at all. Giraffes have grown taller to reach the taller trees,” Fennessy said. He added that it would most likely be physically impossible for them to breed with their normal-sized counterparts.

Numbers of the world’s tallest mammal have declined by some 40per cent over the past 30 years to around 111,000, so all four species are classified by conservationists as ‘vulnerable’.

“It’s because of mostly habitat loss, habitat fragmentation, growing human populations, more land being cultivated,” Fennessy said. “Combined with a little bit of poaching, climate change”.

But conservation efforts have helped numbers start to recover in the past decade, he added.

This article was first published in Asia One . All contents and images are copyright to their respective owners and sources.

Tags: #Wildlife conservation
Previous Post

Indonesia finds body parts, debris, detects emergency signal of crashed jet

Next Post

Japanese pray for end to pandemic in annual ice bath ritual at Tokyo shrine

Related Posts

Italy to pass ‘right to be forgotten’ law for cancer survivors

Italy to pass ‘right to be forgotten’ law for cancer survivors

by AsiaOne
June 15, 2023
0
25

ROME — Italy will pass a law on the "right to be forgotten" (RTBF) for cancer survivors, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni...

Bill Gates in China: Microsoft co-founder to meet Xi Jinping

Bill Gates in China: Microsoft co-founder to meet Xi Jinping

by AsiaOne
June 15, 2023
0
39

HONG KONG — Bill Gates, Microsoft Corp's co-founder, is set to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday (June 16) during his...

US judge temporarily blocks Microsoft acquisition of Activision

US judge temporarily blocks Microsoft acquisition of Activision

by AsiaOne
June 15, 2023
0
31

WASHINGTON - A US judge late on Tuesday (June 13) granted the Federal Trade Commission's (FTC) request to temporarily block Microsoft...

Most Popular

Failing to pay tax arrears in Cambodia within 15 days after notification will subject to 25% penalty

Failing to pay tax arrears in Cambodia within 15 days after notification will subject to 25% penalty

November 24, 2020
69
Japan jeers at ‘terrifying’ mascot for Osaka World Expo: ‘Who approved that monstrosity?’

Japan jeers at ‘terrifying’ mascot for Osaka World Expo: ‘Who approved that monstrosity?’

May 11, 2022
23
E-commerce in Cambodia may require a licence

E-commerce in Cambodia may require a licence

September 5, 2020
41

WING Bank Cambodia – A bank for every Cambodian, from dreams to reality

March 19, 2022
25
Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX) suspends, ‘market-maker’, SBI Royal Securities Plc

Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX) suspends, ‘market-maker’, SBI Royal Securities Plc

May 18, 2020
73
Wrapped in blanket, dumped in pond: Top South Korean livestreamer found dead in Cambodia

Wrapped in blanket, dumped in pond: Top South Korean livestreamer found dead in Cambodia

June 14, 2023
105

© 2020 By Khmer Daily News

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Cambodia
  • ASIA
  • World
  • Business
  • Tech

© 2019 The Khmer Daily.

error: Content is protected !!