For most kids, the biggest concern about sleep is being told to go to bed before you want to. Things are different for animals. Unless animals are at the top of their food chain, most can’t afford to get a good night’s sleep. (Or a good day’s sleep, if they’re nocturnal.) Why? Because they have to worry about whether someone will try to eat them while they’re snoozing!
Animals have evolved different means to balance sleep needs with the need to stay alive. Because sleep can be measured only with a brain-wave test called an EEG, some “facts” about the sleep habits of animals are based on observation. After all, would you try to get a brain-wave test on a shark?
Dolphins have something called unihemispheric sleep. This means one side of the brain sleeps while the other is awake. (The higher brain functions of most complex animals are divided into left and right hemispheres.) When this takes place, one eye is open and the other is closed. It’s presumed dolphins do this so it’s easier to swim to the surface for air and to watch for predators.
Giraffes spend a lot of time foraging for food, and their only defense against predators is speed. (They can run up to 35 miles per hour.) It’s estimated that giraffes get about two hours of sleep in the form of short “naps.” Giraffe moms can go weeks without sleep after giving birth. Because giraffes are vulnerable during the time it would take to get up from lying down, they usually sleep standing up.