Skip to content
The 2025 Impact Report is here. See how your support is saving giraffes right now. Read the Report
Save Giraffes Now
Save Giraffes Now
  • Silent Extinction
  • Our Impact
    • Rescue & Rewildling
      • Rescuing Nubian (Rothschild’s) Giraffe
      • Increasing Genetic Diversity
      • Emergency Giraffe Rescue in South Africa
      • Establishing Giraffe Rescue Centers
      • Improving Snare Wound Protocols
    • Coexistence
      • Improving Water Accessibility
    • Anti-Poaching
      • Olosira Conservancy Scouts
      • Maanzoni Scouts
      • Mobile Anti-Poaching Support Rangers
      • Milgis Trust Community Scouts
      • EarthRanger Monitoring Software
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Home
  • Get Involved
    • Donate Now
    • What Else You Can Do
  • Resources
    • News
    • Movies and Books
    • Giraffe Fun Facts
    • They Are Just Like Us
    • Disclosures
    • Annual Report
  • Contact Us
  • DONATE NOW

How Many Vertebrae Do Giraffes Have?

how many vertebrae do giraffes have
  • March 1, 2026
  • Giraffe News
Share on X (Twitter) Share on Facebook Share on Pinterest Share on LinkedIn Share on Email

Giraffes have seven cervical vertebrae, the same number of neck bones as humans and most other mammals. Despite their extremely long necks, they do not have extra vertebrae.

What makes a giraffe’s neck so tall is not the number of bones, but the length of each one. Over millions of years, those seven vertebrae became dramatically elongated, creating the height that defines the species today.

Key Takeaways

  • Giraffes have seven cervical vertebrae, the same number as humans and most other mammals.
  • Their long necks result from the elongation of each vertebra, not from having extra bones.
  • Most mammals follow the “seven vertebrae rule,” with rare exceptions such as sloths and manatees.
  • In addition to the neck, giraffes typically have 14 thoracic and 5 lumbar vertebrae, along with fused sacral and tail vertebrae.
  • The structure of the giraffe spine reflects evolutionary constraints that favor modifying bone length rather than bone count.
Post Banner

How Many Neck Vertebrae Do Giraffes Have?

Giraffes have seven neck vertebrae, known scientifically as cervical vertebrae. This number is consistent across nearly all mammals, including humans, dogs, whales, and horses.

Each cervical vertebra in a giraffe is greatly elongated compared to those of most other animals. In adult giraffes, a single vertebra can measure more than 10 inches in length. The number of bones remains unchanged, but their size creates the dramatic extension of the neck.

This pattern follows what biologists call the “mammalian rule,” which states that most mammals have seven cervical vertebrae regardless of neck length. Giraffes are an extreme example of how evolution can modify bone structure without altering bone count.

If Giraffes Only Have 7 Vertebrae, Why Is Their Neck So Long?

As stated above, the length of a giraffe’s neck comes from the elongation of each individual vertebra, not from adding more bones. Over millions of years, natural selection favored giraffes with longer cervical vertebrae, gradually increasing overall neck length.

Each of the seven vertebrae stretches far beyond what is typical in other mammals. Instead of increasing the number of segments, evolution modified the size and shape of existing ones. This allowed giraffes to maintain the standard mammalian structure while dramatically increasing height.

Research also shows that the boundary between the last neck vertebra and the first thoracic vertebra has shifted slightly in giraffes. This change increases neck flexibility and function without technically adding an extra cervical bone.

The result is a neck that appears structurally different but still follows the same basic anatomical blueprint shared by most mammals.

Do Giraffes Have More Vertebrae Than Other Animals?

Giraffes do not have more neck vertebrae than most other mammals. Like humans, horses, and dogs, they have seven cervical vertebrae.

This consistency is common across the mammalian class. With only a few rare exceptions, such as sloths and manatees, mammals almost always have seven neck bones regardless of how short or long the neck appears.

The difference lies in proportion, not count. In a human, each cervical vertebra is relatively small. In a giraffe, each one is dramatically elongated.

How Many Vertebrae Do Giraffes Have in Total?

Like other mammals, their spine is divided into several regions: cervical (neck), thoracic (upper back), lumbar (lower back), sacral (pelvic), and caudal (tail).

In addition to 7 cervical vertebrae, giraffes typically have 14 thoracic vertebrae and 5 lumbar vertebrae. The sacral vertebrae are fused to form part of the pelvis, and the number of tail vertebrae can vary.

While the total vertebral count may differ slightly between individuals, the cervical region remains constant at seven. The rest of the spine supports the giraffe’s large body, distributes weight across long limbs, and allows flexibility during movement.

How Vertebrae Support a Giraffe’s Body

The giraffe’s vertebrae form the structural framework that supports a body weighing up to 3,000 pounds. Long cervical vertebrae allow giraffes to reach high vegetation, while the thoracic and lumbar regions help stabilize the torso.

Strong joints and dense bone structure distribute weight across the spine and into the limbs. This design allows giraffes to stand for long periods, walk efficiently across open landscapes, and maintain balance despite their height.

The spine also works closely with muscles, ligaments, and the cardiovascular system. Supporting such a tall body requires coordination between skeletal strength and blood circulation, especially when raising or lowering the head.

These adaptations demonstrate that giraffe vertebrae are not simply elongated bones. They are part of a highly specialized system built to support one of the tallest animals on land.

Help Us Protect the Giants Built by Evolution

Giraffes require expansive, secure landscapes to sustain their unique anatomy and daily feeding patterns. As natural habitats shrink or become fragmented, even the most physically adapted animals struggle to survive.

You can donate now to help fund habitat protection, anti-poaching efforts, rescue care, and long-term conservation programs through Save Giraffes Now. These actions reduce injuries, protect food sources, and provide giraffes with the conditions they need to survive at every stage of life.

Post Banner

Frequently Asked Questions

What animal has 7 vertebrae?

Most mammals have seven cervical (neck) vertebrae, including humans, giraffes, dogs, cats, horses, and whales. This pattern is consistent across nearly all mammalian species despite large differences in neck length.

How many vertebrae are in giraffes?

Giraffes have seven cervical vertebrae in their neck. In total, they typically have 7 cervical, 14 thoracic, and 5 lumbar vertebrae, along with fused sacral vertebrae and multiple tail vertebrae. The exact total can vary slightly between individuals.

Which mammal has the most vertebrae?

Whales generally have the highest total number of vertebrae among mammals. Some large whale species can have over 60 vertebrae, primarily due to an extended number of thoracic, lumbar, and tail vertebrae.

Do all mammals have 7 cervical vertebrae?

Nearly all mammals have seven cervical vertebrae, regardless of neck length. Rare exceptions include sloths and manatees, which can have fewer or more due to unique evolutionary adaptations.

Share on X (Twitter) Share on Facebook Share on Pinterest Share on LinkedIn Share on Email

Recent Posts

  • Aggrey Visits the US! 🦒 May 5, 2026
  • Why Giraffes Matter: The Ecological Role of the World’s Tallest Land Animal April 30, 2026
  • How Do Giraffes Protect Themselves? April 20, 2026

Categories

  • Feature News Home
  • Giraffe News
  • Newsletter

For Media Inquiries

kaylaw@savegiraffesnow.org
214-760-6000

get social

DONATE SAVEGIRAFFES NOW

© Save Giraffes Now. All Rights Reserved. | Non-Profit Organization Dedicated to Saving Giraffes
SAVE GIRAFFES NOW is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, IRS Charitable Organization Number 83-4423842.
8333 Douglas Avenue, Suite 300, Dallas, Texas 75225

© 2026 - Website Designed by LOGO-img