As of 2018, Rothschild's giraffe is classified as
near threatened. Very few locations are left where Rothschild's giraffe can be seen in the wild, with notable spots being
Lake Nakuru National Park in Kenya and
Murchison Falls National Park in northern Uganda. Their predators are
hyenas,
lions,
crocodiles, and
leopards. Three Rothschild's giraffes were electrocuted by low-hanging power lines in Soysambu conservancy in Nakuru, Kenya. Various captive breeding programmes are in place – most notably at the
Giraffe Centre in
Nairobi, Kenya – which aim to expand the
gene pool in the wild population of Rothschild's giraffe. , more than 450 are kept in
International Species Information System (ISIS) registered zoos (which does not include the Nairobi Giraffe Centre), making both it and the
reticulated giraffe the most commonly kept
phenotypes of
Giraffa. Breeding these giraffes are one of the large attempts to protect this species. Giraffe Centre, a conservation centre dedicated to protecting and expanding this giraffe population, releases these giraffes into the wild when they are approximately two to three years old. They are only released into the wild when they are thought to be independent enough to survive on their own. This center has released over 40 giraffes into the wild. == References ==