Zebras are black with white stripes, not white with black stripes. At first glance, these striped animals look like a walking optical illusion, but scientists have a surprisingly clear answer. Under all that flashy coat, a zebra's skin is black. The white stripes come from spots where pigment is switched off as the animal develops, making black the base color and white the pattern layered on top.
That little fact trips up almost everyone. It is one of the most-searched zebra questions out there, and the answer surprises plenty of guests when they spot our zebra herd on the Drive-Thru Safari. Stick around and we will explain how scientists figured this out, why those stripes exist in the first place and a few zebra stripe facts you can use to win your next trivia night.
Here is the short version before we get into the fun stuff:
It comes down to how the coat grows before a zebra is even born. Zebra embryos develop dark skin early in development. As the embryo develops, specialized cells called melanocytes distribute pigment throughout the body. In the stripe areas, those cells get a signal to switch off. No pigment means no dark color, which leaves a white stripe behind.
Because the dark color is the default and the white shows up only where pigment is blocked, biologists call black the base coat. If you were to shave a zebra (please do not try this) and you would find black skin underneath. That is the clearest proof that the answer to "are zebras white with black stripes" is no. They are black with white stripes.
Baby zebras make this even clearer. Foals are often born with reddish-brown and white stripes that gradually darken as they grow. They may look different from the bold-striped adults you picture, but the same process is already at work.
This is the question that keeps scientists busy, and there are a few strong theories. Nature rarely does just one thing at a time, which is why zebra stripes continue to fascinate researchers.
Biting flies appear to have difficulty landing on striped surfaces. Research led by Tim Caro at the University of California, Davis found that horseflies and tsetse flies have a hard time landing on striped surfaces. The pattern seems to mess with how the flies judge distance as they come in for a bite. Since these flies carry nasty diseases, a zebra with good stripes is a healthier zebra. In fly-heavy regions of Africa, zebras tend to have bolder stripes.
A few other ideas are still in play:
The fly-deterrence theory currently has the strongest scientific support, but nature loves to do more than one job at once. Those stripes are probably pulling double duty.
A few quick zebra stripe facts to keep in your back pocket:
Reading about zebra stripes is fun. Seeing them up close is even better. When you spot our zebra herd on the Drive-Thru Safari, you'll notice that every animal wears a slightly different pattern. Once you start looking closely, it becomes surprisingly easy to tell them apart.
At Wild Florida, our zebras roam the Drive-Thru Safari Park alongside watusi cattle, deer and other roaming animals, so you can spot those one-of-a-kind patterns from the comfort of your own car.
It is an easy, family-friendly adventure just outside Orlando and a chance to experience the wild side of Florida while learning more about some of the world's most recognizable animals. You may even catch a zebra trotting close enough to count its stripes.
Ready to see those stripes for yourself? Book the Drive-Thru Safari Park and meet our zebra herd up close.
Zebras are black with white stripes. Their skin is black underneath, and the white stripes form where pigment is blocked during development. The dark color is the base, so white with black stripes is the common myth, not the truth.
Yes. A zebra's skin is black all over, even where the coat shows white stripes. The white only appears in the hair, where pigment cells stopped adding color as the animal grew.
The strongest evidence points to bug defense. Biting flies struggle to land on striped surfaces, which helps zebras avoid the diseases those flies carry. Stripes may also help with cooling, confusing predators and recognizing herd mates.
Yes. Every zebra has its own stripe pattern, much like a human fingerprint. Scientists use these patterns to identify and track individual zebras in the wild.
Yes. While the black and white pattern appears in the hair, a zebra's skin underneath is black. The stripe pattern follows the animal's body all the way down, even though the visible colors come from the coat.
You can see zebras at Wild Florida's Drive-Thru Safari Park near Orlando. The herd roams a large open area, so you can watch them from your car alongside other free-ranging animals.