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  2. Giraffe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giraffe

    Multiple sinuses lighten a giraffe's skull. [49]: 103 However, as males age, their skulls become heavier and more club-like, helping them become more dominant in combat. [42] The occipital condyles at the bottom of the skull allow the animal to tip its head over 90 degrees and grab food on the branches directly above them with the tongue.

  3. Giraffidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giraffidae

    Both are confined to sub-Saharan Africa: the giraffe to the open savannas, and the okapi to the dense rainforest of the Congo. The two genera look very different on first sight, but share a number of common features, including a long, dark-coloured tongue, lobed canine teeth, and horns covered in skin, called ossicones.

  4. Masai giraffe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masai_giraffe

    The Masai giraffe (Giraffa tippelskirchi [2]), also spelled Maasai giraffe, and sometimes called the Kilimanjaro giraffe, is a species or subspecies of giraffe. It is native to East Africa. The Masai giraffe can be found in central and southern Kenya and in Tanzania. It has distinctive jagged, irregular leaf-like blotches that extend from the ...

  5. Giraffes are up next on the endangered species list, US ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/giraffes-next-endangered...

    The three subspecies of northern giraffe officials are proposing to be listed as endangered include the West African, Kordofan and Nubian giraffes, whose populations have plummeted by roughly 77% ...

  6. Listen and Find Out Why Giraffes Hum - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/listen-why-giraffes-hum...

    The best White Elephant gifts that everyone will be jostling for

  7. Okapi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okapi

    Morphological features shared between the giraffe and the okapi include a similar gait – both use a pacing gait, stepping simultaneously with the front and the hind leg on the same side of the body, unlike other ungulates that walk by moving alternate legs on either side of the body [30] – and a long, black tongue (longer in the okapi ...

  8. The rare giraffe born without spots now has a name - AOL

    www.aol.com/rare-giraffe-born-without-spots...

    A rare baby giraffe has no spots, but now she has a name.

  9. Tongue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongue

    Giraffe's tongue Extended proboscis of a long tongued Macroglossum moth. The muscles of the tongue evolved in amphibians from occipital somites. Most amphibians show a proper tongue after their metamorphosis. [22] As a consequence, most tetrapod animals—amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals—have tongues (the frog family of pipids lack ...