A: A zebra with a sunburn! But this question is no joke, because it actually does have an answer: zebras are black with white stripes. At first glance, it may appear the opposite is true-after all, the black stripes of many zebras end on the belly and towards the inside of the legs, revealing the rest as white. What is zebras original color? Since white stripes only exist because pigment is denied, black is understood to be the "default" colour of a zebra.
Beneath all that fur, zebras have black skin, too. A shaved zebra, without any stripes, could be almost unrecognizable as an all. The zebra is one of the most plentiful grazing animals in Africa, with three different species (plains or Burchell's zebras, Grevy's zebras and mountain zebras) and a number of distinct subspecies that live in areas ranging from open grasslands to mountain slopes and plateaus.
All three species sport distinctive white-and-black striped coats of fur, although when first born the babies have. The pigments that color the fur are produced by melanocyte skin cells, and specific chemical messengers are responsible for regulating, which melanocytes give pigment to the zebra's skin. The pattern of each zebra's coloring is determined during the embryonic phase, before the zebra is born.
When Coretta was born, she had large ears and long legs that made her very cute - and she had a most interesting coat color. Zebras are born with mostly brown stripes. As foals grow, the brown tends to disappear into the more traditional zebra coloration of black and white.
The most enjoyable thing about Coretta is her playful attitude. Zebras are known for their stripes. The pattern develops in the eighth month of embryonic development, they're born with brown streaks that darken to black with age.
Stripes are the unique identifier that humans and zebras use to distinguish between individual zebras, no two the same. Birth of a Zebra The period of gestation for a zebra is about one year and each female will only give birth to one zebra, also known as a foal. At the time that the foal is born, the stripes that it has appear to be white and brown in color.
Each baby zebra is developed well at the time that it is born and will weigh around 70 pounds. Earlier this month a traveller came across this newborn black zebra in the north. Brown Stripes for a Baby Zebra August 16, 2010 A Grant's Zebra was born Saturday, July 31 at the Kansas City Zoo to Mom, Jet, and Dad, Zanthus.
She has brown stripes instead of black and weighed in at 79 pounds. Brown stripes are natural among newborn zebras; they will turn to black when she is between 9 and 18 months old. When zebras are first born, their stripes are typically brown and white.
As the zebra matures, the stripes turn black and white. Zebras have unique stripe patterns that help them blend in with tall grass and confuse predators. No two zebras have the same stripe pattern, just like humans have unique fingerprints.