How the giraffe got its long neck

BYSARAH ZIELINSKI 2:30PM, OCTOBER 7, 2015

The neck of a giraffe isn’t all that different from any other mammal’s.

There are seven neck vertebrae, like those of humans, but they are much

bigger. (This is a different strategy than other long-necked creatures in history.

Marine reptiles called plesiosaurs, for instance,had 38 to 42 vertebrae to

lengthen their necks.)

How giraffes evolved their long necks has long been the subject of debate,

dating back to the early days of evolutionary theory. French naturalist

Jean Baptiste Lamarck, for instance, suggested that the giraffe neck

lengthened as the animals stretched to reach leaves high in trees, with a

“nervous fluid” flowing into the neck to make it longer. The giraffe’s offspring would inherit the longer neck, then stretch to reach even higher leaves, and that even longer neck would get passed on.

That’s not how evolution works, though. Animals that had longer necks had some sort of advantage, and they were able to pass on their genes, eventually resulting in super-long necked animals. Just what that advantage might have been is still unknown. Perhaps the feature let giraffes access more food resources high in the treetops. But since female giraffes prefer males with longer necks, sexual selection might also be involved.

But what did that evolution look like? And when did it happen? Insight

into those questions comes from astudypublished October 6 inRoyal

Society Open Science. Melinda Danowitz and colleagues at the New

York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine in Old

Westbury analyzed neck vertebrae from 11 species — nine that are

extinct, modern giraffes (of course) andokapi. (Okapi look like a cross

between a zebra and a deer, but they belong to the same family as

giraffes.)

Giraffes, it turns out, are not the first species in their lineage to have

a long neck — they just have the longest one. The species started off

with a shorter neck, 7.5 million years ago, when it first appeared on the

scene,after which the neck became even longer. But the lengthening

beganeven earlier in the giraffe’s lineage, the fossil analysis revealed.

The extinctGiraffasivalensisshares some of the elongation features

found in the modern giraffe. But even it wasn’t the beginning of the

journey. Two other extinct creatures from the giraffe family Giraffidae,

SamotherianandPalaeotragus, also show some of these features, as

does the primitive giraffidCanthumeryx. But what was surprising was

that the neck length appears to predate the giraffe family — an even

earlier species,Prodremotherium, which disappeared some 23 million

years ago, also showed neck elongation.

“Neck length, the most distinguishing and popular attribute ofGiraffa,

is apparently not a defining feature of the family,” the researchers note.

All living giraffes are considered to belong to one species,

G. camelopardis. But a2007 genetic studysuggested that the animal’s

many subspecies may actually be separate species. If that’s true, I’d be curious how the animal’s long neck — and unique bones — have continued to evolve within each of those groups.