Giraffes

The giraffe is up to 18 feet tall and is the tallest of the four-legged animals. On the pale yellow background, there are brown plaques of different sizes and sizes. Each subspecies (shared into 8 subspecies) has different shapes of markings. The color of the markings will become darker with age, while the abdomen color is light and without markings. They have fluffy tails and 1-2 pairs of horns on the head. They are the only animals that have horns at birth, and with increasing age, their horns can be as many as five. Their tongue is long, their eyes are large, their eyelashes are long, their neck and limbs are long, and the female has four breasts.

When the giraffe walks, the head and neck swing forward and backward, pushing the body forward, which can make the body which weighs one ton forward. A giraffe can runs at speeds up to 35 mph and the neck swings back and forth with the pace. Its body is so large that it is not easy to stand up in a lying position, so they usually stand and sleep.

Giraffes can eat a variety of different trees, but mainly eat acacia leaves. Giraffe’s stomach is divided into four rooms, the half-digested food is spat back to a ruminant, and each small piece of food is chewed 40 times. Giraffes are kind and timid to other animals. Although they may gather about 20 giraffes to get together, the group organizations are lax.

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