Genetic research on giraffes in 2016 determined that there are likely four separate species of giraffe rather than just one. The IUCN's Giraffe and Okapi Specialist Group has now accepted that there are four species of giraffes: the Masai giraffe, the
reticulated giraffe, the
northern giraffe, and the
southern giraffe.[3] The Masai giraffe has therefore been elevated to a full species, the research also established that the
Thornicroft's giraffe also known as the Luangwa giraffe, found in the Luangwa Valley region of Zambia, is a subspecies of the Masai giraffe (
Giraffa tippelskirchi thornicrofti). The Masai giraffe was
described and given the
binomial name Giraffa tippelskirchi by
German zoologist Paul Matschie in 1898, however, since 1758 giraffes had generally always been regarded as a single species, so the Masai giraffe was considered a subspecies of the giraffe,
Giraffa camelopardalis tippelskirchi. The Masai giraffe was named in honor of Herr von Tippelskirch, who was a member of a German scientific expedition in
German East Africa to what is now northern Tanzania in 1896. Tippelskirch brought back the skin of a female Masai giraffe from near
Lake Eyasi which was later on identified as
Giraffa tippelskirchi. ==Description==