No, giraffes and zebras are not related.
Giraffes and zebras are related very distantly with no common ancestor for 54 million years. They are both mammals. Zebras are more closely related to rhinoceroses and giraffes to moose than they are to each other.
Zebras live in HERDS!!
yes.
with hand language
The lion shares its habitat with various animals such as zebras, giraffes, wildebeests, and elephants in the African savanna. They coexist in the same ecosystem, with each species playing a unique role in the food chain and ecosystem dynamics.
..........necking is how giraffes fight each other...................
no,elephants live grassland and forests and giraffes live in open woodlands and savannes
basically if hippos don't bother crocodiles they don't bother hippos
no, impala's dont eat giraffes! Impalas and Giraffes are both herbivores! They actually can sometimes work together in order to protect each other from predators. Giraffes use their long necks to see the predator whereas the impala have very good hearing and sense of smell in order to hear or smell the predator. They use these beneficial traits to warn and protect each other.
No, there spots are like our fingerprints their spots are all different from each other!!
they act very lazy but when being chased can run really fast
They communicate infrasonically (through low-pitched sounds), and by touch. As with horses, their skins are very sensitive; touch can relay messages throughout a herd. Giraffes also sometimes vocalize to one another by grunts or whistle-like cries. When alarmed, a giraffe grunts or snorts to warn neighboring giraffes of the danger. Mother giraffes can whistle to their young calves. Also, cows search for their lost young by making bellowing calls. The calves return their mother's calls by bleating or mewing. While courting an estrous cow, male giraffes may cough raucous.A giraffe relies on its height for vision. This height allows it to have continual visual contact with the rest of the rest, even from quite a distance. Giraffes also have acute eyesight: a giraffe can spot predators at a distance and can prepare to defend itself by kicking. Giraffes often scatter over a huge area in search of food or drink, and the herd only clusters together if threatened.