It can be hard to know if someone is really into you. Sometimes, you get hints a certain look or smile, a nervous blush or flirtation. Giraffes get none of that.
They have no set breeding season. They dont go into heat, like dogs or cats. They dont make mating calls or provide visual cues of sexual readiness. So how is a male giraffe to know his advances will be well-received? In short: pee, pheromones and a gentle nudge.
from the University of California, Davis, provides new insight into the unique sex life of giraffes, their reproductive behavior, and how their anatomy supports that behavior.
Animal attraction
The study, published in the journal Animals, describes how male giraffes test females for sexual receptivity.
First, the bulls provoke the females to urinate by nudging them and sniffing their genitalia. If the female is open to his invitation, she widens her stance and pees for about 5 seconds while the male takes the urine in his mouth. He then curls his lip, inhaling with an open mouth an act called flehmen that transports the females scent and pheromones from his oral cavity to the vomeronasal organ.
The study provides the most precise understanding yet of how flehmen occurs with giraffes anatomy. While flehmen is common among many animals, including horses and cats, most mammals wait until urine is on the ground to investigate. The giraffe, however, is not built for such explorations.
They dont risk going all the way to the ground because of the extreme development of their head and neck, said lead author , a 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis professor of population health and reproduction in the School of Veterinary Medicine. So they have to nudge the female, effectively saying, Please urinate now. And often she will. He has to elicit her cooperation. If not, hell know theres no future for him with her.
Straight from the Harts
Hart and her co-author and husband, Benjamin Hart, professor emeritus with the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, witnessed this behavior on multiple research trips to Namibias Etosha National Park.
Dotted among the parks western side were large watering holes, where dozens of giraffes would congregate. Lynette called it a dream come true for observing giraffes. So often you see a few in the distance, not an up-close view of what theyre doing, she said.
Benjamin Hart had studied how flehmen behavior worked within the anatomy of other animals, including goats. During their trips to East Africa, the Harts suspected a similar process was underway for giraffes.
This is part of their reproductive behavior, Benjamin Hart said. This adds to our understanding of what giraffes are doing as they accumulate around a water hole. People love watching giraffes. I think the more the public understands about them, the more interested theyll be in their conservation.
Calling bull, chewing bones and possibly grieving
The Harts also describe in the study previously undocumented giraffe behaviors, from chewing bones to potentially mourning their dead:
- Earlier studies noted that osteophagia, or chewing bones, was unusual for giraffes. But the Harts observed many instances of giraffes seeking and chewing bones, and sometimes getting them lodged in their mouths.
- After a giraffe had been killed by two lions, the Harts also witnessed for several days a steady procession of giraffes arriving to investigate the body.
- The Harts experienced another significant observation when they heard a bull emit a loud growl on different occasions. It was most likely a warning call, as it drove away most surrounding giraffes. Giraffes are typically very quiet and were once even thought to be mute.
The research received no direct external funding. Financial assistance for travel and accommodations was provided by 51勛圖窪蹋 Berkeleys University Research Expeditions Program.
Media Resources
Media Contacts:
- Lynette Hart, 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, lahart@ucdavis.edu
- Kat Kerlin, 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu
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