When I asked a keeper during my first trip to San Diego Zoo for a behind-the-scenes tour, I asked why zoos no longer house reticulated giraffes or maintain an SSP on them and the keeper said that any remaining reticulated giraffes were sent out to breeding programs in their native range since their numbers are so low (I'm thinking maybe that's the reason why San Diego Zoo doesn't have reticulates in their collection anymore).
I read somewhere that Binder Park, Busch Gardens Tampa, Cheyenne Mountain, Louisville, Maryland, and Omaha's Henry Doorly all have solely reticulated populations. White Oaks website says they maintain only reticulated giraffes.
I know that San Diego Safari Park has both Reticulated and Rothschild's (Baringo) giraffes, as one of their reticulates had a calf.
I think going forward whenever I do a full species list for certain zoos, I will say "Giraffe hybrid" and use the scientific nomenclature (Giraffa reticulata x camelopardis) if I see or hear that they aren't pure.
From what I've learned, reticulated giraffes look like they have brown with thin white lines breaking it up and looking more uniformed (I've noticed that white spots can show up in the middle of the large, polygonal patterns), whereas the Rothschild's has brown with either yellow-white or orange-white lines, with the lines looking thicker and the spots more irregularly shaped than that in the reticulates.
@TinoPup is correct. Any giraffe that you see at a zoo in North America that is not a Masai giraffe is going to be a hybrid to some degree (there are potentially a few purebred animals of the other two species knocking around but there are very, very few of them) due to historical interbreeding before different species/subspecies were more formally recognized. This is a topic that comes on ZooChat quite regularly as we get new members because most zoos still label their animals as "reticulated" giraffe (or sometimes less frequently, "Rothschild's"), essentially to keep face to the public. All of the giraffe in North America that are not Masai giraffe are managed as a single population, where they are commonly referred to on ZooChat and in the field as "generic" giraffe, hence the program is known as the Generic Giraffe SSP. These hybrid animals are managed as ambassadors for their species in the wild. More zoos are wanting to switch over to supporting the purebred Masai giraffe population as animals are available; however, zoos still want to have giraffe, which is why the generic animals are still bred.When I asked a keeper during my first trip to San Diego Zoo for a behind-the-scenes tour, I asked why zoos no longer house reticulated giraffes or maintain an SSP on them and the keeper said that any remaining reticulated giraffes were sent out to breeding programs in their native range since their numbers are so low (I'm thinking maybe that's the reason why San Diego Zoo doesn't have reticulates in their collection anymore).
I read somewhere that Binder Park, Busch Gardens Tampa, Cheyenne Mountain, Louisville, Maryland, and Omaha's Henry Doorly all have solely reticulated populations. White Oaks website says they maintain only reticulated giraffes.
I know that San Diego Safari Park has both Reticulated and Rothschild's (Baringo) giraffes, as one of their reticulates had a calf.
I think going forward whenever I do a full species list for certain zoos, I will say "Giraffe hybrid" and use the scientific nomenclature (Giraffa reticulata x camelopardis) if I see or hear that they aren't pure.
From what I've learned, reticulated giraffes look like they have brown with thin white lines breaking it up and looking more uniformed (I've noticed that white spots can show up in the middle of the large, polygonal patterns), whereas the Rothschild's has brown with either yellow-white or orange-white lines, with the lines looking thicker and the spots more irregularly shaped than that in the reticulates.