Why Giraffes Matter
Giraffes aren’t just animals with long necks, but also are very important in ecology. Feeding on top of acacia trees, they make the savannah canopy more open and also spread the seeds in their dung. This is a part of nature’s process of bringing back dead habitats and making deserts smaller again.
On the other hand, giraffe numbers are declining rapidly: during the last 30 years, the population has been reduced by about 40 %.
In this way, when Born Free engages in giraffe conservation, it is not only the animal species that will benefit but also the entire ecosystem.
Meet the Giants: Reticulated Giraffes in Kenya
The Reticulated Giraffe (Latin: Giraffa camelopardalis reticulata) is one of the subspecies that is a major focus of the giraffe work. These animals are mainly located in the northern and northeastern parts of Kenya, with small populations also in Somalia and Ethiopia.
In the Meru Conservation Area, Kenya, there are about 1,400 reticulated giraffes, which represent around 10 % of the world’s total reticulated giraffes.
That’s why Meru, a critical stronghold for a species already under pressure, is a very important place for conservation efforts.
What Are the Threats?
Born Free points out some of the most significant dangers that giraffes face in their natural habitat:
- Habitat loss and fragmentation: human population growth, together with agricultural activities and livestock grazing, are encroaching upon the area where giraffes can still move around significantly.
- Poaching and snares: Wire snares intended for other games already set up can inadvertently catch and hurt giraffes.
- Human-wildlife conflict: The expansion of agriculture into the habitat of wild animals leads to situations where giraffes may destroy crops or fight for water with the farmers, which results in conflicts.
- Climate change and competition for resources: the changing weather patterns are making it hard for the giraffes to survive because there are fewer resources available due to droughts and rainfall changes.
Born Free’s Approach: Field Conservation in Action
The actions of Born Free are not only important as symbols but also on the ground. In their Meru project, the organisation has:
- Sent a specialist “Twiga Team” (the Swahili term for giraffe) to patrol the area where the habitat is located, to get rid of snares, and to keep an eye on the giraffes.
- Established a database of giraffes that have been identified individually, which will enable the team to follow the changes in the population, monitor births and movements, and threats to the giraffes.
- Human-wildlife conflict has been managed by collaborating with the communities, for instance, by providing protective fences and alternative livelihoods, and conducting awareness campaigns.
- Environmental degradation has been fought through fire risk management, preventing intrusion by livestock, and restoring the original habitat that had been degraded.
Why Community & Collaboration Are Key
The success of giraffe conservation by Born Free Foundation is based on cooperation with local residents, not their opposition. Here are some of the strategies:
- Training local Conservation Ambassadors from surrounding communities to observe and interact with wildlife issues.
- Opening Village Savings & Loan Associations (VSLAs) in the area to provide alternative sources of income so that nobody has to resort to poaching or land invasion.
- Creating “bee-fence” projects (apiaries around agricultural land) to keep away large plant-eating animals like elephants and giraffes from eating crops, thereby lowering the conflict.
- Through the union of conservation and livelihoods, the project is significantly more likely to be sustainable.
Born Free’s Stand on Zoos & Captivity
Born Free not only works in the wild but also fights against the captivity of animals. It is their opinion that giraffes in zoo enclosures are often deprived of good health and welfare, and that keeping them only for public viewing does not help in the conservation of the species in the wild. Their position, “Giraffes simply don’t belong in zoos”, is very clear in their reports. This indicates that their priority is in situ (in the wild) conservation, rather than ex situ (in captivity), as the main hope for the species’ survival.
How You Can Get Involved
There are a number of practical methods to lend a helping hand to the giraffe conservation work of Born Free:
- Adopt a Giraffe: By means of the adoption scheme of Born Free, you have an opportunity to adopt a giraffe (or a family) and get updates, newsletters, a certificate, etc. Your money assists the field teams in protecting and watching over the giraffes.
- Donate/Support field projects: Your money will be used right away in the field, whether you give the Twiga team first-aid kits or support the restoration of the habitat.
- Raise awareness: Informing about the stories of giraffe decline (“Giraffes in crisis”) and the need for habitat protection is one of the ways that help to pressure the government for wildlife-friendly policies.
- Choose ethical wildlife experiences: Take into account how your visits or spending might be beneficial for wild giraffes, not just for the ones in captivity. Born Free encourages everyone to support conservation in the wild instead of the zoo.
Final Thoughts
The giraffe might be a common sight in nature documentaries, children’s literature or dreaming about going on a safari, but the reality of its existence today is quite fragile. The number of wild giraffes left is less than ~100,000, and some subspecies are even further down the road to extinction; thus, it is very important to take conservation measures immediately.
Born Free has a model in the form of Kenya’s Meru region: it is the combination of monitoring, field protection, community engagement and habitat restoration. By supporting this work, you are making sure that giraffes are still roaming wild Africa, not just living in zoos.
In other words, to be an advocate for giraffes is to be an advocate for wild places, wild lives, and nature’s long-necked wonders.






