Dictionary Definition
okapi n : similar to the giraffe but smaller with
much shorter neck and stripe on the legs [syn: Okapia
johnstoni]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Lese language in Africa; oka (to cut) + kpi(a kind of arrow design of the Efe, from the myth that it decorates its hindquaters with the designs, hence the stripes).Noun
- a large ruminant mammal, (Okapia johnstoni), found in the rainforests of the Congo, related to the giraffe, but with a much shorter neck, a reddish brown coat and zebra-like stripes on its hindquarters.
Translations
Large ruminant mammal
Extensive Definition
The Okapi (Okapia johnstoni) is a mammal living in the Ituri
Rainforest in the north east of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo in central Africa. Although it
bears striped markings reminiscent of the zebra, it is most closely related
to the giraffe.
Etymology
The genus name Okapia derives from the Lese Karo
name o'api, while the species' epithet (johnstoni) is in
recognition of the explorer Sir Harry
Johnston, who organized the expedition that first acquired an
okapi specimen for science from the Ituri Forest
in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
The name "Okapi" is a compilation of two Lese
words. Oka a verb meaning to cut and Kpi which is a noun referring
to the design made on Efe arrows by wrapping the arrow with bark so
as to leave stripes when scorched by fire. The stripes on the legs
of the Okapi resemble these stripes on the arrow shafts. Lese
legend says the okapi decorates itself with these stripes.
Characteristics and behavior
Okapis have dark backs, with striking horizontal
white stripes on the front and back legs, making them resemble zebras from a distance. These
markings are thought to help young follow their mothers through the
dense rain forest;
they also serve as camouflage.
The body shape is similar to that of the giraffe,
except that okapis have much shorter necks. Both species have very
long (approx. 30 cm or 12 inch), flexible, blue tongues that they
use to strip leaves and buds from trees.
The tongue of an okapi is long enough for the
animal to wash its eyelids and clean its ears: it is one of the few
mammals that can lick its own ears. Male okapis have short,
skin-covered horns called "ossicones". They have large
ears, which help them
detect their predator, the leopard.
Okapis are 1.9 to 2.5 m (8.1 ft) long and stand
1.5 to 2.0 m (6.5 ft) high at the shoulder. They have a 30 to 42 cm
(12 to 17 in) long tail. Their weight ranges from 200 to 270 kg
(465 to 565 lb).
Okapis are largely diurnal
and essentially solitary, coming together only to breed.
Okapis forage along fixed, well-trodden paths
through the forest. They live alone or in mother-offspring pairs.
They have overlapping home ranges of several square kilometers and typically occur
at densities of about 0.6 animals per square kilometer.
The home ranges of males are generally slightly
larger than those of females. They are not social animals and
prefer to live in large, secluded areas. This has led to problems
with the okapi population due to the shrinking size of the land
they live on. This lack of territory is caused by development and
other social reasons. However, okapis tolerate each other in the
wild and may even feed in small groups for short periods of
time.
Okapis have several methods of communicating
their territory, including scent glands
on each foot that leave behind a tar-like substance which signals
their passage, as well as urine marking. Males are protective of
their territory, but allow females to pass through their domain to
forage.
Okapis prefer altitudes of 500 to 1,000 m, but
may venture above 1,000 m in the eastern montane rainforests. The range of the
okapi is limited by high montane forests to the east,
swamp forests below 500 m to the west, savannas of the Sahel/Sudan to
the north, and open woodlands to the south. Okapis are most common
in the Wamba
and Epulu
areas.
Diet
Okapis are herbivores, eating tree leaves and
buds, grass, ferns, fruit, and fungi. Many of the plant species
fed upon by the okapi are poisonous to humans.
Examination of okapi feces has revealed that the
charcoal from trees
burnt by lightning is
consumed as well. Field observations indicate that the okapi's
mineral and salt requirements are filled primarily by a sulfurous, slightly salty,
reddish clay found near rivers and streams.
History
The okapi was known to the ancient
Egyptians; shortly after its discovery by Europeans, an ancient
carved image of the animal was discovered in Egypt. For years,
Europeans in Africa had heard of an animal that they came to call
'the African unicorn'.
In his travelogue of exploring the Congo,
Henry Morton Stanley mentioned a kind of donkey that the natives called
the 'atti', which scholars later identified as the okapi. Explorers
may have seen the fleeting view of the striped backside as the
animal fled through the bushes, leading to speculation that the
okapi was some sort of rainforest zebra.
When the British governor of Uganda, Sir Harry
Johnston, discovered some pygmy inhabitants of the Congo
being abducted by a German showman for exhibition in Europe, he
rescued them and promised to return them to their homes. The
grateful pygmies fed Johnston's curiosity about the animal
mentioned in Stanley's book. Johnston was puzzled by the okapi
tracks the natives showed him; while he had expected to be on the
trail of some sort of forest-dwelling horse, the tracks were of
some cloven-hoofed beast.
Though Johnston did not see an okapi himself, he
did manage to obtain pieces of striped skin and eventually a skull.
From this skull, the okapi was correctly classified as a relative
of the giraffe; in 1902,
the species was formally recognized as Okapia johnstoni.
The first live specimen in Europe arrived in
Antwerp in
1918. The first okapi to arrive in North
America was at the Bronx Zoo, via
Antwerp, in 1937. The first okapi born in captivity was at Brookfield
Zoo in Illinois, which directs the Okapi Species Survival Plan
for the
Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA).
References
Background
- BBC - Science & Nature - Wildfacts - Okapi
- Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Vol 15: Mammals IV, p.400.
News
okapi in Min Nan: Okapi
okapi in Bulgarian: Окапи
okapi in Catalan: Ocapi
okapi in Czech: Okapi
okapi in Welsh: Ocapi
okapi in Danish: Okapi
okapi in German: Okapi
okapi in Spanish: Okapia johnstoni
okapi in Esperanto: Okapio
okapi in French: Okapi
okapi in Korean: 오카피
okapi in Croatian: Okapi
okapi in Indonesian: Okapi
okapi in Italian: Okapia johnstoni
okapi in Hebrew: אוקפי
okapi in Swahili (macrolanguage): Okapi
okapi in Lithuanian: Okapija
okapi in Lojban: onkapi
okapi in Hungarian: Okapi
okapi in Dutch: Okapi
okapi in Japanese: オカピ
okapi in Norwegian: Okapi
okapi in Narom: Okapi
okapi in Occitan (post 1500): Okapia
johnstoni
okapi in Polish: Okapi
okapi in Portuguese: Ocapi
okapi in Russian: Окапи
okapi in Simple English: Okapi
okapi in Slovak: Okapia pásavá
okapi in Slovenian: Okapi
okapi in Serbian: Окапи
okapi in Finnish: Okapi
okapi in Swedish: Okapi
okapi in Turkish: Okapi
okapi in Ukrainian: Окапі
okapi in Chinese: 霍加狓