The great giraffe rescue Saving the Nubian giraffes

Sandra Markle

Book - 2023

"Long ago, Nubian giraffes roamed wild across Uganda. Over time, as people constructed roads and towns, giraffe habitat and populations shrank. By 2016, nearly all of the remaining Nubian giraffes in Uganda lived in the northern part of Murchison Falls National Park. Then a rich oil deposit was discovered there and companies made plans to start drilling, which put the giraffes at risk. The Ugandan government called on a team of scientists to find a new home site and move the giraffes. Can they do it in time to keep the giraffes safe?" -- Back cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Juvenile works
Informational works
Illustrated works
Published
Minneapolis, MN : Millbrook Press, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Sandra Markle (author)
Physical Description
40 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 26 cm
Audience
Ages 9-12
Grades 4-6
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 39) and index.
ISBN
9781728443218
  • Something amazing!
  • Start at the beginning
  • Follow those giraffes
  • Home new home
  • Operation Twiga begins
  • The big day
  • Operation Twiga continues
  • The rest of the story.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Imagine moving a herd of giraffes! This feel-good environmental story describes how members of a threatened giraffe species were safely transported across the Victoria Nile River to start a new herd in another part of Murchison Falls National Park in Uganda. Operation Twiga began in 2016, when it looked like oil drilling was imminent in the giraffes' grazing area. The Ugandan Wildlife Authority partnered with the Giraffe Conservation Foundation to find out the animals' current range and new locations where they might also thrive. The story of this project fits well into Markle's series of reports about animal rescues (The Great Bear Rescue, 2020) and is efficiently and engagingly told. She offers basic facts about Nubian giraffes, discusses the equipment and procedures used for keeping tabs on the animals, explains how experts decided which animals to move and to where, and recounts the actual move in considerable detail. Because one animal has an unusual jawline and a name, Melman, readers can track him through the story and even identify him in the photographs from a variety of sources that immerse youngsters within the scenes and show the diverse human team. Many of these images cross the fold comfortably, and the thoughtful design helps readers follow the text. There's a happy ending: This and subsequent translocations have been successful enough that the giraffes have produced calves. A welcome example of human efforts to salvage what's left of the natural world. (author's note, further information, glossary, source notes, find out more, index, photo acknowledgments) (Nonfiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.