The study estimates resource partitioning between impala, kudu, giraffe and elephant.
This implies that a stressed monosyllable like cat is developmentally equivalent to a disyllable like tiger but different from a cat or giraffe.
The creation of this reserve along with the development of some ecotourism necessitated this study of spatial behaviour of the giraffe population.
We quantified florivory and subsequent fruit set in the presence and absence of giraffes.
Below the elephants is a giraffe with a typically exaggerated neck.
Therefore, giraffes, human communities and domestic cattle move at the same time according to environmental constraints.
Given that giraffes were leaf-eaters and given that there was variation in neck length, we could predict selection for longer necks.
The overlap was lowest when giraffe was paired with impala.