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Cleveland鈥檚 Giraffe Herd Grows As Global Preservation Efforts Intensify

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Friday, June 21, marks the official start of summer, a nd since it's the longest day of the year, conservationists and wildlife protection groups use the occasion to bring awareness to an animal known for its long neck - the giraffe.

鈥淵ou know people have baby giraffes in nurseries,鈥 said Travis Vineyard, an animal curator with the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. 鈥淪o it's one of those animals that we learn about even as infants, and so I think there's this natural attraction and familiarity to such a great species.鈥

Vineyard plans and orchestrates logistics for moving animals in and out of the zoo. That includes one of the zoo鈥檚 newest arrivals 鈥 a male giraffe calf, born in April, and just christened Kidogo, a Swahili word meaning little.

鈥淭he calf was born at a very small weight,鈥 said Vineyard. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 sound small, but 101 pounds is small. The other calf that we have here that is about 1.5 years old, he was born at 154 pounds. So the most recent calf, we were quite concerned, but he just appears to be small in stature.鈥

Kidogo brings Cleveland's giraffe population to five. But while the herd increases here, the giraffe population in the wild remains cause for concern. The International Union for Conservation of Nature considers the giraffe vulnerable and at high risk of extinction in the wild. Giraffes currently inhabit 21 sub-Saharan African countries. The overall global population plummeted at least 30 percent over the last three decades. The biggest threats: habitat loss, human population growth and poaching.

In April, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced it would consider listing the giraffe as an endangered species. It now begins an in-depth review of the giraffe population to determine merit. But those working closest with the giant creatures say a label won't change their work to bring about awareness and conservation action.

鈥淚 think most people that have been on a safari or have any experience in Africa have seen giraffe,鈥 said zoo director Chris Kuhar. 鈥淪o you don鈥檛 get the sense that giraffes are in trouble. But the reality is, there are only about 110-111,000 giraffe left in the wild. And when you compare that to animals we know are in crisis mode, like elephants鈥 there鈥檚 some estimates that there鈥檚 450,000 elephants left and that鈥檚 a terrible number. But there鈥檚 a quarter of the giraffe left in the world than there are elephants.鈥

Julian Fennessy is co-director and founder of the , an organization focused on conservation and management of giraffes in the wild. He came to Cleveland to meet his partners at the zoo and provide an update on the foundation鈥檚 work, which spans 15 African countries.

He said cooperation with local governments and residents is critical.

鈥淪o in Uganda we鈥檝e seen the population double in the last five years by working there, setting up new populations,鈥 said Fennessy. 鈥淏ut in other countries, we do have issues. We have problems with poaching鈥 local people who are trying to live life and at the same time, they鈥檙e eating and feeding on giraffe. Some of those places are a bit scary to go to, there鈥檚 bullets flying around. But in all honesty, if we are to save giraffe in some of these places, we have to get boots on the ground.鈥

Getting boots on the ground is supports GCF.

鈥淲e make a connection with those that are in the field doing the work, and then we help fundraise for them, we provide our resources,鈥 said Kuhar. 鈥淪o we鈥檝e sent veterinarians to help with giraffe translocations and study giraffe skin disease. We鈥檝e sent animal care staff to help with those translocations, so we鈥檙e providing our expertise for those people that are on the ground.鈥

Translocation is the term zoologists use when they physically move animals to places where they have gone extinct in order to re-establish populations. 

鈥淭ransporting a giraffe is the maddest thing you can do in the world,鈥 said Fennessy. 鈥淵ou know, to physically capture them is difficult, but then putting them in trucks, moving them fast distances. You鈥檙e talking about watering them. You鈥檙e talking about feeding them. But they stand almost the whole way.鈥

In 2018, the Giraffe Conservation Foundation established a new satellite population of West African giraffe in the Gadabedji Biosphere Reserve in Niger. Giraffes hadn't been seen in that area for nearly 50 years. The GCF hopes the new habitat will help giraffe numbers grow.

The group now better understands giraffe movements, thanks to a program called Twiga Tracker, which uses GPS satellite units to track the animals. The goal is to attach 250 units on all four species across Africa to help manage the populations.

To make an impact locally, Cleveland Metroparks Zoo emphasizes its role as the front door to conservation -- by engaging visitors as partners in what鈥檚 going on around the world.  

鈥淕iraffe are one of those great species where we can actually allow guests to feed animals,鈥 said Kuhar. 鈥淭hat connection, when you see a giraffe up close, and you see that tongue come out and grab the lettuce leaf.

We know now that making that connection with animals is really important to inspire any sort of action, any sort of willingness to engage in conservation.鈥

A contest to name the newest giraffe is one way to the zoo tries to engage the public with conservation issues. Anyone who made a financial contribution to protecting giraffes in the wild could vote.

 

stephanie.jarvis@ideastream.org | 216-916-6340