New population of Okapi discovered – First ever photos of wild Okapi11/09/2008 10:42:38Strips on Okapi backsides are as individual as fingerprints. Copyright Zoological Society of London. Camera traps, set in Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), captured pictures of the mysterious okapi - proving that the species is still surviving there despite over a decade of civil conflict. The cameras were set up by ZSL and the Congolese Institute for Nature Conservation (ICCN). New population discovered Conservationists made the exciting discovery of the species' tracks in 2006, after they were last seen in the Park nearly 50 years ago, on the west bank of the Semliki River. The new ZSL-led survey has not only captured the first pictures of okapi roaming in the wild, but has also revealed the presence of a previously unknown population on the east side of the River. Only discovered in 20th century Okapis, which have a black, prehensile giraffe-like tongue and zebra-like stripes on their behind, were unknown to the western world until the early 20th Century when the British governor of Uganda and Fellow of ZSL, Sir Harry Johnston, sent a complete skin and a skull belonging to the creature to the Society. These remains enabled ZSL scientists to describe the new species in 1901 as the closest living relative of the giraffe. Dr Noelle Kumpel, ZSL's Bushmeat and Forests Conservation Programme Manager, said: "To have captured the first ever photographs of such a charismatic creature is amazing, and particularly special for ZSL given that the species was originally described here over a century ago. Okapi are very shy and rare animals - which is why conventional surveys only tend to record droppings and other signs of their presence." Camera trap image of Okapi in Virunga NP. Credit ZSL.
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