there would be alot of smellie dead bodys on the ground and tere would be historical bones evry were
That seems unlikely. Australia has many zoos, not a few of which contain giraffes but it is more likely that a country in southern Africa would have more because that is where giraffes are from. I would guess Kenya or Tanzania has the most.
I'm guessing that food was scarce near the bottom of trees, so giraffes with longer and longer necks generally outlived the giraffes with shorter ones.
Giraffes mate because God intended them to. They want to have babies, and so there will be more giraffes in the future!
giraffes are good with giraffes. can you make your question a bit more clear next time please?
Oxpeckers eat giraffes, I'm pretty sure they are onmivores.
More.
giraffes should not be teased its not like they are bad animals they actually are endangered now so if people want to tease the giraffes you would be better off not teasing giraffes
Yes. Romans would use animals, including giraffes, to act out mythological scenes.
Lamarck would have said that the ancestors of modern-day giraffes had short necks but stretched their necks as they tried to reach leaves in trees; so, their descendants were born with longer necks. Darwin would have said that in a population of ancestral giraffes, some had slightly longer necks than others; the long-necked giraffes were better able to feed on tree leaves and as a result produced more offspring. Over time, the proportion of longnecked giraffes in the population increased.
Giraffe roam a lot, so it's hard to be certain, but I would say there are more in Angola most of the time.
Both have the same number of neck bones but giraffes neck bones are longer
It is extremly rare for a mother giraffe to have twins, but is possible.