Things Are Looking Up for Niger’s Wild Giraffes
In desolate Niger, wild giraffes are making a comeback despite having to compete for resources with some of the world's poorest people
- By Jennifer Margulis
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
We watch the statuesque animals galumph forward in the bush. They are affectionate, intertwining necks and walking so closely that their flanks touch. They seem in constant physical contact, and I am struck by how much they seem to enjoy each other's presence.
I ask Ciofolo if she thinks giraffes are intelligent. "I'm not sure how to evaluate the intelligence of a giraffe," she says. "They engage in subtle communication with each other"—grunts, snorts, whistles, bleats—"and we have observed that they are able to figure things out." Ciofolo says a giraffe she named Penelope years ago (the scientists now designate individual animals less personally, with numbers) "clearly knew who I was and had assessed that I was not a threat to her. She let me get quite close to her. But when other people approached, she got skittish. Penelope was able to distinguish perfectly between a person who was nonthreatening and people who represented a potential threat."
A year later, in late 2007, I return to Niger and go into the bush with Jean-Patrick Suraud, a doctoral student from the University of Lyon and an ASGN adviser, to observe another census. It takes us only half an hour to find a cluster of seven giraffes. Suraud points out a male that is closely following a female. The giraffe nuzzles her genitals, which prompts her to urinate. He bends his long neck and catches some urine on his muzzle, then raises his head and twists his long black tongue, baring his teeth. Male giraffes, like snakes, elephants and some other animals, have a sensory organ in their mouth, called Jacobson's organ, that enables them to tell if a female is fertile from the taste of her urine. "It's very practical," Suraud says with a laugh. "You don't have to take her out to dinner, you don't have to buy her flowers."
Although the female pauses to let the male test her, she walks away. He does not follow. Presumably she is not fertile. He meanders off to browse.
If a female is fertile, the male will try to mount her. The female may keep walking, causing the male's forelegs to fall awkwardly back to the ground. In the only successful coupling Suraud has witnessed, a male pursued a female—walking alongside her, rubbing her neck, swaying his long body to get her attention—for more than three hours before she finally accepted him. The act itself was over in less than ten seconds.
Suraud is the only scientist known to have witnessed a peralta giraffe give birth. In 2005, after just six months in the field, he was stunned when he came upon a female giraffe with two hoofs sticking out of her vagina. "The giraffe gave birth standing up," he recalls. "The calf fell [six feet] to the ground and rolled a bit." Suraud smacks the top of the truck to illustrate the force of the landing. "I'd read about it before, but still, the fall was brutal. I remember thinking, ‘Ouch, that's a crazy way to come into the world.'" The fall, he goes on, "cuts the umbilical cord in one swift motion." Suraud then watched the mother lick the calf and eat part of the placenta. Less than an hour later, the calf had nursed and the two were on the move.
Though mother and calf stay together, groups of giraffes are constantly forming and re-forming in a process scientists call fission-fusion, similar to chimpanzee grouping. It is as common for half a dozen males to forage together as it is for three females and a male. In the rainy season, when food is plentiful, you might find a herd of 20 or more giraffes.
Unlike with chimps, however, it is almost impossible to identify an alpha male among giraffes. Still, Suraud says he has seen male giraffes mount other males in mock copulation, often after a fight. He's not sure what to make of the behavior but suggests it may be a type of dominance display, though there doesn't seem to be an overarching power hierarchy.
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Related topics: Ungulates Niger
Additional Sources
"West Africa's Last Giraffes: The Conflict between Development and Conservation" by I. Ciofolo, Journal of Tropical Ecology, 11:577-588, 1995









Comments (20)
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What is the volume number of this issue?
Posted by dj on January 19,2012 | 05:21 PM
While Africa may have as many as 100,000 giraffes, most of them live in wildlife reserves, private sanctuaries, national parks or other protected areas not inhabited by humans. That's quite sad really.
John
Posted by John Smith on April 2,2010 | 01:03 PM
Such a very fine article! Thanks to Smithsonian and Margulis for giving us such an extended gaze at these animals, these people and this landscape.
Posted by Kristin Ohlson on March 11,2010 | 10:28 AM
One of my best friends just recently came back from Safari in Africa and was talking about the amazing animals he saw. In particular he said the giraffe's were incredible and beautiful, so reading this article is kind of what he must have encountered too. I plan on going somewhere like Niger next year and can't wait to see the giraffe's. By far one of the most incredible animals.
Briany
http://www.woodstovestore.net
Posted by Briany Drake on November 12,2009 | 08:34 AM
I never knew that these aniamls were endangered. i have never been to Niger, but it looks like a beatiful place to see and all the things that go on over there. those animals are so beautiful and peiceful. this article has informed me about things that go on in other countries. I'm glad that these animals are not endangered
Posted by Max Mondelle on September 15,2009 | 10:40 AM
I have been to Niger on 5 missions trips working among the Songhai of Niger. We have been fortunate to walk among these endangered giraffes and get amazingly close to get some great pictures. They are so beautiful like the people there, they truly are an amazing example of God's blessing on such a dry land.
Posted by Joel Candler on April 20,2009 | 05:52 PM
For at least 20 years I have been enchanted by giraffes - my first expressed interest in them came during an adult education/sharing hour in my Congregational Church. We were asked what animal we most admired and would like to be our guardian. I immediately thought of and said the "Giraffe". When asked why by other persons in the group, I said because they are so majestic, can see above all other animals including people and seem to be so gentle.
I.also, over the years have collected and been given many giraffe objects - miniatures, stuffed animals. a giraffe lamp which I use with my computer, a giraffe stool, etc. When my sister was about 16 she oil painted three giraffes in their natural habitat - this painting now sits on the mantle above the fireplace in my apartment and before apartment living it rested on a large wall in the living room of my house. I continue to be interested in giraffes and am concerned about the continuance and care of this wonderful species. My sister subscribes to the Smithsonian magazine and sent me the article entitled "Looking Up". I loved it and as a result got on your web site. Thanks so much for an informative and educational article.
Posted by Sonya McCubrey on April 16,2009 | 09:26 PM
Thank you for this inspiring article about these Giraffes. With all the things going on in today's world, it is incredible how nature seems to always revitalize itself in grand fashion.
Scott
Posted by Scott on April 15,2009 | 08:57 PM
Excellent article and a big thank you. My son did a book report based on Africa and their endangered wild life and this article provided valuable information for him. Because of the in-depth information on Giraffes and how they are making a comeback, he scored an A on the report!
-Stephen
Posted by Stephen on April 8,2009 | 11:55 AM
This is a lovely article. I was also served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Niger from 2003-05. During our time in training, our training group was taken to the giraffe area where they roamed free. This was during rainy season around August 2003. We were fortunate to come across 20 or more of them. We must have spoked them. One moment they were relaxed and foraging, the next they broke into a run. It was a classic National Geographic moment that I will never forget. It was just lovely to see animals free in their natural habitat like this. My biggest regret was not taking a photo. Jennifer, thank you so much for focusing on not only the giraffes but spotlighing the people of Niger as well. It is rare to hear anything postive about this poverty stricken country aside from famine. I loved my time living and working in Niger and look forward to returning for a visit in the future. The people are just as lovely and graceful as the giraffes.
Posted by Vivian Nguyen on January 8,2009 | 11:02 PM
The writer's eyes "LOOKING UP" penetrate beyond the predictable; with lightening suddenness she forces our attention on the lasting and the meaningful in Niger's stark landscape of the Sahel. Nabakov listed three criteria of literature. His fellow authors were admonished to inform, to enchant and to tell a story. And Jennifer has done so with a mature version of the empathy, grace and insight she has shown since before she began to speak and write full sentences. Here environmental problems of the peralta giraffe's bang-down birth of tall babies and the Nigeriens who follow their lives into the bush have become our own. My pride in her work and love for my daughter is unconditional.
Posted by Lynn Margulis on December 27,2008 | 09:18 PM
Elephants get all the attention when it comes to African animals. They are beautiful and great creatures but giraffes are so much more interesting! All legs and neck, it is such an unusual form of life. Most curious! Thanks for the very informative article. Mary Ellen Fornsel P.S. I really enjoy your magazine!
Posted by Mary Ellen Fornsel on November 17,2008 | 01:02 PM
I am so happy that Smithsonian did an article on this great animal of Africa. The giraffe is my favorite wild animal. The Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle has a wonderful exibit of the Savanna animals from Africa. I have gone several times to feed the giraffes. What an experience it is each and every time. I told friends about my experience and brought them to the zoo with their kids. The giraffes have given me happiness for some unknown reason, but it is delightful. As the villager said "Giraffes bring happiness here." I confirm the saying here on the North American continent too. I hope there is continued progress in Niger for the Giraffes and the other sub species that have habitat lose in different parts of Africa. If we can bring the North American Buffalo back from near extinction, it can be done with other species as well. Thank You Smithsonian for bringing this magnificant creature to the front.
Posted by Keith Hass on November 15,2008 | 12:21 AM
MY SONS AND I WERE LOOKING AT THE PICTURES AND THEY WERE AMAZED AT HOW BIG THEY ARE. MY 4 YEAR OLD SON LOVES GIRAFFES, HE HAS A STUFFED ANIMAL GIRAFFE THAT HE SLEEPS WITH AND CARRIES WHERE EVER HE GOES, IT'S THE CUTED THING EVER.
Posted by JULIA on November 10,2008 | 10:03 PM
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