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  • 2020-03-12 (xsd:date)
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  • Was a Rare White Giraffe Killed by Poachers in Kenya? (en)
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  • In June 2017, according to The New York Times, a Kenyan villager spotted a white giraffe while herding animals near the Ishaqbini Hirola Conservancy in northeast Kenya. Conservationists and rangers, following up on reports of this sighting, later discovered the completely white female giraffe and her pale calf. Video of the encounter produced what was thought to be the first known video footage of white giraffes and went viral in September 2017: Later, a male white giraffe was discovered with the pair. The animals’ coloring, scientists say, came not from albinism — a condition that prevents pigmentation of the skin, other soft tissues, and eyes — but from leucism, a similar condition that leaves eyes unaffected. Mohammed Ahmednoor, manager of the reserve that contained the white giraffes, told CNN that the exceedingly rare giraffes were valuable not only because of the draw they had with tourists, but because of what could be learned from them about this rare condition scientifically. On March 10, 2020, the Ishaqbini Hirola Conservancy where the giraffes made their home announced on Twitter that both the female and her calf had been killed, apparently by poachers: Wildlife officials said that giraffes hadn’t been seen for some time and they estimated the remains had been in place for at least four months, according to CNN. The Conservancy reported that only one white giraffe, the male, remained after the attack: Because the organization that monitors these animals announced it themselves, we rate the claim that poachers killed the only female white giraffe and her calf in Kenya as True. (en)
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