Another day, another thread ... so to speak! 
Giraffes have always elicitted frank and open responses among the zoo going public. They are impressive mega vertebrates and look cuddly enough (obviously ... that is far from the truth). Their lifestyle on the savannah is semi nomadic in loose female bonded groupings with territorial males of whom only the dominants mate the females.
In European zoos we have an amalgamation of several giraffe subspecies (I herewith categorically state that the recent BBC news item of US based research on giraffe taxonomics is most definitely not the end debate on redefinition or individual (sub-)species status). Alas a large number (72.117) of hybrid giraffes exists. EAZA zoos are thankfully actually phasing them out by careful studbook management of all giraffes in Europe. The policy is to gradually reduce their number in experienced giraffe holders and replace them with pure-bred animals from within the 6 individual EEP giraffe programmes. The hybrids will then be relocated to EAZA zoos interested in starting with giraffes to gain experience (that way we do not loose sight of these either and have the unfortunate real chance that these may blow back into any pure-bred giraffe programmes).
The main pure-bred breeding population is the Rothschildt's giraffe (90.139 in 2005), followed on by reticulated giraffe (52.49 in 2005) and Nigerien giraffe (19.38) in third. Small groupings of Angolan (5.12) and Cape giraffe (16.19) also exist. The Masai giraffe (3.4 in 2005) is in my belief on the way out and I would personally prefer these to go to US SSP for integration into the far larger Masai giraffe SSP herd (okapikpr will surely confirm that).
In the longterm I do hope EAZA will target only the Rothschildt's (critically endangered), reticulated (endangered, allthough no definite data on Somali/Ethiopian giraffes exist) and Nigerien (critically endangered) and monitor only the hybrids. Angolans, Capes and Masai should be integrated with other regions structured giraffe breeding programmes.
So far, a status update (all be it an 2005 definite one, but ISIS does not fully expose all giraffe listings in Europe as a considerable number of zoos are yet to join ... I hope with ZIMS it will be mega different!)
Giraffes have always elicitted frank and open responses among the zoo going public. They are impressive mega vertebrates and look cuddly enough (obviously ... that is far from the truth). Their lifestyle on the savannah is semi nomadic in loose female bonded groupings with territorial males of whom only the dominants mate the females.
In European zoos we have an amalgamation of several giraffe subspecies (I herewith categorically state that the recent BBC news item of US based research on giraffe taxonomics is most definitely not the end debate on redefinition or individual (sub-)species status). Alas a large number (72.117) of hybrid giraffes exists. EAZA zoos are thankfully actually phasing them out by careful studbook management of all giraffes in Europe. The policy is to gradually reduce their number in experienced giraffe holders and replace them with pure-bred animals from within the 6 individual EEP giraffe programmes. The hybrids will then be relocated to EAZA zoos interested in starting with giraffes to gain experience (that way we do not loose sight of these either and have the unfortunate real chance that these may blow back into any pure-bred giraffe programmes).
The main pure-bred breeding population is the Rothschildt's giraffe (90.139 in 2005), followed on by reticulated giraffe (52.49 in 2005) and Nigerien giraffe (19.38) in third. Small groupings of Angolan (5.12) and Cape giraffe (16.19) also exist. The Masai giraffe (3.4 in 2005) is in my belief on the way out and I would personally prefer these to go to US SSP for integration into the far larger Masai giraffe SSP herd (okapikpr will surely confirm that).
In the longterm I do hope EAZA will target only the Rothschildt's (critically endangered), reticulated (endangered, allthough no definite data on Somali/Ethiopian giraffes exist) and Nigerien (critically endangered) and monitor only the hybrids. Angolans, Capes and Masai should be integrated with other regions structured giraffe breeding programmes.
So far, a status update (all be it an 2005 definite one, but ISIS does not fully expose all giraffe listings in Europe as a considerable number of zoos are yet to join ... I hope with ZIMS it will be mega different!)