14 inches long
Yes an okapi can touch it's ear and it can even clean them!
The animal with a prehensile 18-inch tongue that can reach leaves 20 feet high on acacia and mamasa trees is the okapi. This unique creature, native to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, uses its long tongue to strip leaves and buds off trees as part of its diet.
Okapis' markings are said to help prevent their young babies from getting lost. Okapis' have very long, blue tongues which they use to reach out and eat the leaves. They have very long ears which they use to detect their predators, leopards.
The Okapi is an animal found on the African continent.
Okapi are native to the Congo rainforest of Africa. Sir Harry H. Johnson got his first okapi specimen from the Ituri Forest in what is now the northeastern section of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Johnson discovered the okapi in 1901.
the tongue is used for liking on other okapi so that, they could be clean. Answer by Arran Gill
Yes an okapi can touch it's ear and it can even clean them!
No. Just like its relative, the giraffe the Okapi tends to eat the leaves of a tree using its tongue.
how many times can a okapi get pregnant
there skin is brown and there legs are zebra striped however they are not related to the zebra
1045 years
an okapi sleeps for 5 minutes a day because they are scared of lions going to eat them.
Yes, the okapi does have a tail. It is generally 12 to 17 inches long (30 to 42 centimeters).
Yes. An okapi's tongue can extend up to 25 cm beyond it's snout!
The Giraffe and the Okapi have the same body shape and they both have long tongues to reach there food
1.5 meters
An African mammal beginning with "O" is an Okapi. Okapis are native to the Democratic Republic of Congo and are closely related to giraffes. They have a unique appearance with zebra-like stripes on their legs and a long blue tongue used for grasping leaves from trees.