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Zane

The West African giraffe

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The West African giraffe (G. c. peralta) is endemic to southwestern Niger.[22] This animal has a lighter pelage than other subspecies,[38]:322 with red

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lobe-shaped blotches that reach below the hocks. The ossicones are more erect than in other subspecies and males have well-developed median lumps.[30]:52–53 It is the most endangered subspecies within Giraffa, with 400 individuals remaining in the wild.[22]

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Giraffes in Cameroon were formerly believed to belong to this species, but are actually G. c. antiquorum.[29] This error resulted in some confusion over its status in zoos, but in 2007, it was established that all “G. c. peralta” kept in European zoos actually are G. c.

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antiquorum. The same 2007 study found that the West African giraffe was more closely related to Rothschild’s giraffe than the Kordofan and its ancestor may

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have migrated from eastern to northern Africa and then to its current range with the development of the Sahara Desert. At its largest, Lake Chad may have acted as a barrier between the West African and Kordofan giraffes during the Holocene (before 5000 BC).[29]

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