Scientific Classification
KINGDOM: Animalia
PHYLUM: Chordata
CLASS: Mammalia
ORDER: Artiodactyla
FAMILY: Giraffidae
GENUS: Okapia
SPECIES: O. johnstoni
Conservation Status
Like a giraffe, okapis have a bluish-gray tongue. This distinguished tongue is usually between 14 to 18 inches long! Not only does their tongue help them to get food, the okapi will also use it to groom themselves and their calves.
One way to differentiate male and female okapis apart is by their heads. Males have small skin-covered horns like a giraffe and females only have little bumps. The males use their horns mainly when competing for a female and will headbutt and charge other male okapis.
Okapis are so elusive that it wasn’t until the early 1900s that they were first discovered.
The okapi have scent glands on each foot. This allows them to mark their territory as this gland leaves behind a pungent, tar-like material. While females are able to pass through these barriers with no problems, males will become aggressive towards other males that wander into their territory.