Free Downloads on Central Somalia Rangelands

Free Downloads on Central Somalia Rangelands

Featured image: A village in Central Somalia

HE WALKED WITH ELEPHANTS–A TRIBUTE TO IAIN DOUGLAS-HAMILTON

HE WALKED WITH ELEPHANTS–A TRIBUTE TO  IAIN DOUGLAS-HAMILTON

By Ted Schmitt

Senior Director, Conservation at Allen Institute for AI (Ai2)

Iain Douglas-Hamilton has passed. He was a giant of conservation, a true visionary who, among so many things, saw the potential for technology to help us conserve wildlife. I had the great good fortune to get to know Iain well. 

Me posing with Iain and the Save The Elephants Cessna in Samburu Reserve, Kenya

I thought I knew elephants fairly well before this trip, but at Manyara Mr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton was able to show me a good deal more. He is a young Oxford zoologist who is making a study of the elephants in the park… his method of doing this is to live with them day by day, and to approach them so closely that he can identify every animal not only by its tusks and its shape but also by its moods and idiosyncrasies. He declares—and one hopes he is right—that they are also beginning to recognize him. You need faith for this close-up work. On my first evening with Douglas-Hamilton, he surprised me very much by turning our Land-Rover off the track and driving straight into the middle of a herd of females and their young that were grazing in thick scrub. As he turned off the engine, he explained that these particular animals were old friends. It did not seem to me to be entirely so. A half-grown beast about ten yards away ceased its grazing and…went through the full repertoire of its intimidations in order to drive us away… “A dummy rush,” Douglas-Hamilton explained. I have no experience in estimating rushes, but this one seemed very real. When the animal, with its uplifted trunk, was some four yards away, I found I could look right down into its pink gullet, and its quivering tricorne lip was very hairy. And then, I am bound to admit, it stopped short. It uttered a piercing scream, wheeled about, and vanished into the bushes with its companions at its heels.” 

I’m sure Dennis recognizes in this description the brash young elephant scientist he knew. look (Note by Dennis–Iain did have a reputation for putting himself into potentially dangerous situations. For instance, accompanied by a friend of mine, Iain, just as he did with Allen Moorehead, drove right up to a group of supposedly “safe” elephants. This time, however, the large animals turned on him, bashing and tusking his Land Rover, giving Iain’s passenger the scare of her life. Iain’s colleagues frequently advised him to be more careful, but to little avail. He was either extremely brave or defined “danger” differently than most people.)

I met Iain a full 48 years later in Kasane, Botswana at the kick-off meeting of the Great Elephant Census in late January 2014. 

Cohort of Scientists and aerial wildlife surveyors in Kasane, Botswana, January 2014

You can hear Iain elegantly explain in this video just why the Great Elephant Census was important. I remember Iain saying “Information is power. If you have the information, then you have the power to move mountains.” And we did. The results of Great Elephant Census was a key piece in ending the ivory crisis that occurred between 2009 and 2014 in which 30% of all African elephants were killed. The population in one park in Tanzania, the Selous Game Reserve, dropped from over 100,000 to just 17,000. Just one year after the Census results were published in 2016 China, the largest market for ivory, banned ivory trade.

Without Iain, there would be no EarthRanger. He was innovating at an age when most people have long retired. Iain and the Save The Elephants team came to Vulcan to talk about the importance of animal tracking and the potential for technology to do so much more than it was. One of those team members, Jake Wall, then a PhD candidate, was using tracking data and Google Earth Engine to understand in new ways how elephants used their landscape. His work built on the pioneering work Iain had done to use collars to track elephants to understand how they used the landscapes they lived in. As result of that meeting and discussions with park managers across Africa led directly to the development of EarthRanger, a tool which built on Jake’s work to understand and protect elephants and other wildlife. EarthRanger has revolutionized how parks are managed globally with close to 1,000 parks using it in nearly 90 countries. You can read a tribute to Iain from the EarthRanger team. Ten years on, Jake is now the leader of EcoScope, a free and open-source data analytics and reporting platform that is part of the EarthRanger family of products, designed to turn conservation data into action. EarthRanger, EcoScope, and so many other innovations are a direct outgrowth of Iain’s 50 plus years of work…and they represent only a fraction of his impact. It is no exaggeration to say that Iain directly inspired and informed the work of hundreds if not thousands of us working to protect wildlife. 

Iain looking on as Chris Thouless of Save The Elephants describes the potential meaning of elephant tracks in the precursor to EarthRanger at Lewa Conservancy in Kenya, February 2015

Iain’s passion was infectious. You could not meet him and not feel driven to do all you could and more than you thought possible to protect wildlife. He told many people about the time an elephant he knew well chased him round a tree and could have driven its tusk through him, but it walked away instead. He had many such stories, each reinforcing his wonder of other species. Once, when he and I were out in Samburu doing I don’t remember what, we watched a giraffe giving birth. With the joy of a child, he told me, “I’ve never seen this before”. It was a moment that captured everything for me about who Iain was, ever curious, ever learning, ever sharing, and ever loving the wonder of the other species we share the planet with.

A giraffe giving birth in Samburu Reserve, Kenya, August 2016

I have so many memories of Iain I will always cherish. I can imagine him now flying his beloved airplane using the Save The Elephants app as his compass to the nearest elephant and shouting out sitings to me, Jake, and Chris Jones, each with our assignments. And me doing my best to take photos while he spun a tight circle, so we didn’t miss anything. 

Flying with Iain, Jake Wall, and Chis Jones to spot elephants using the Save The Elephants app, February 2016 

You will be missed, Iain, but you will not be forgotten. Your legacy lives on in each of us touched by your science, innovations, passion, and belief, from those early days in Tanzania in the 1960’s, to the 2020’s in Kenya, across Africa and beyond, that anything, however difficult, is possible if we keep at it. 

CLOSE CALL WITH A LEOPARD–PART II

CLOSE CALL WITH A LEOPARD–PART II

This story is a continuation of the previous post (see below).

Featured image: Clary Palmer-Wilson. (Artist: Gregg Davies)

It was late in the afternoon and shadows were lengthening before Musa, Clary’s gun bearer, exhausted from his ordeal, stumbled into the house of Clary’s father in Tanga. “Your son has been attacked by a leopard and is close to death!” he gasped before sinking to the floor croaking for water. 

This was bad news. William knew of many leopard attacks, none of which had ended happily. Hastily, he assembled two long, stout poles, a heavy blanket, sheets, and some sisal rope to make a stretcher. Then, while selecting six strong men from his workers to be stretcher-bearers, he coaxed precise directions to the village from Musa who was too exhausted to make the return journey. The man had done well to make the perilous trek at such a fast pace. He would be well rewarded later.

Twende. Let’s go.” The rescue party set out into the fading light of the dying day. By the time they arrived at the edge of town, night had fallen. Hurriedly walking in the dark, they lost their way several times. But then they noticed the smell of smoke from the bush fire that had been lit during the leopard fight and, later, its yellow glow above the distant horizon. Finally, the pale light of the village’s only kerosene lantern, seen through an open window of the headman’s hut, guided William out of the darkness and straight to his son’s bedside. 

Drawn by this big event in their monotonous lives, villagers stared through every window and door of the hut as Clary, his pale face showing both agony and shame, narrated the incident to his father—agony from the unattended leg wounds, and shame at being outwitted and outdone by a wild animal. William, however, finding that he had arrived in time to find his son alive, was greatly relieved.  Clary was badly mauled, yes, but still conscious and alive.

Willing hands lifted Clary from the blood-soaked bed and placed him on the uncomfortable jerry-rigged stretcher. Then four strong carriers heaved it onto their shoulders.  Clary faced a long, jolting ride back to Tanga, and it wasn’t going to be easy for the porters either. They had to carry a heavy load on the thorn-strewn paths through the dark bushland crawling with wild game, slithering snakes, and biting insects. “Let’s go,” William motioned to the waiting carriers, and without a word, they set off.

Early the next morning, Clary’s father, red-eyed and dead tired, walked into the room, already brightly lit by the early morning sun, where Clary was sleeping. He was trailed by a Kanzu-clad servant carrying an enamel washbasin steaming with boiled water and a white towel folded over one arm. Uncorking a dark green bottle, “Doctor” William, poured tiny purple crystals into the hot water. Little whirls of violet smoke curled up from each grain, which darkened the water into a deep purple liquid. “Permanganate crystals”, said William, before his son could ask. “We must disinfect your wounds before gangrene sets in. Otherwise, both of your legs risk being amputated! Leopard claws are full of rotten meat from their kills, so washing out the wound with this solution is your only chance.”

Swahili and Arab in origin, the kanzu is a white or cream-colored, ankle or floor-length robe worn by men in East Africa, in this case, Uganda.

(Kayla Allan Benjamin. CCA-SA 4.0 International License)

Then, with the warning, “Son, this is going to hurt like hell,” William poured cup after hot cup of liquid over Clary’s legs, washing away dried blood, dirt, and yellow body fluid, and staining the towel a sickly blue-black color. A sound like a lion roaring with its jaws wired shut escaped through Clary’s clenched teeth as he struggled to control the tears welling up in his eyes.  However, his father wasn’t done yet. “The most painful part of your recovery is still to come,” he warned. Closing the door behind him, he left his son alone to rest and reflect on his ordeal and to contemplate his future… assuming he had one.

“My hunting days are over,” Clary internally moaned.  Who will trust me to guide them after this?  He could not understand how he had missed that leopard, which was lying right at his feet, or why the big gun did not fire at the critical moment when the angry cat was on him. He could not comprehend what had gone so terribly wrong, yet the deep red wounds on his torn legs were certain proof that indeed it had all gone wrong. 

With this on his mind, Clary asked a servant to bring him his 400 Jeffrey rifle, which he carefully examined, noting the leopard’s teeth marks and dried white saliva marking the ends of the barrels. But then he found something unexpected, the two triggers bent right back against the rear of the trigger guard. Then he checked the safety catch, which came off with a “click” that sounded more like an explosion as he suddenly realized what had gone wrong the day before: the gun had an automatic safety catch; open the breech and the safety is automatically pushed to “safe.”

Now he remembered! When he was lying on the ground under the bush fending off the leopard, he’d broken open the gun, reloaded, closed the breech, rammed the barrels into the leopard’s mouth, and, not realizing the safety catch was on, squeezed both steel triggers so hard he’d bent them back against the rear guard, rendering the gun useless. It would have to be repaired by a good gunsmith.

A double-barreled rifle. Being able to snap off two shots in quick succession was a boon to hunters caught in tight situations. The safety catch is visible at the far left. 

(Hmaag. C.C. A-S 3.0 Unported License)

For young Clary, the following three weeks were the most boring of his life. Confined to his bed where his slowly healing legs were cleaned daily, he did nothing except eat, sleep, read, talk, listen, and defecate. But that ended one morning when his father announced that Clary must start walking again before his damaged muscles settled into a new straight position. Otherwise, he would find walking upright difficult and painful and probably walk with a limp the rest of his life. 

William then lifted Clary into a sitting position on the bed with his legs dangling over the side, and from there into a standing position. With a loud yelp of pain, Clary pulled free and sat down again. Blood oozed from cracked black leg scabs that had torn open when he tried to stand.  “Son”, William said, “I warned you it would be painful. But if you don’t start walking now, you’ll be a cripple for the rest of your life.” So, several times each day, Clary practiced walking, one slow, painful step after another, until he could reach the bedroom door unaided by the African servant standing ready to lend a hand in case of a fall. 

A month or so later, Clary had improved to where, armed with a rifle and accompanied by his dog, Satan and a porter, he was taking daily walks into the countryside. Ambling down Tanga’s main road past the imposing German-era Kaiserhof hotel, they strolled beneath huge shady mango trees and between rows of swaying coconut palms into the bush beyond the railway station. Returning home in the cool evening, with the salty tang of the sea breeze in the air, Satan trotting at his heels, and a fat kill draped over the porter’s shoulders, Clary finally felt his world was in order. It only remained to deal with his shame about the leopard incident.

For days, storm clouds had gathered into huge, woolly towers far out to sea, signaling the coming of the rainy season. Nightly rumblings of thunder carried into the little room where Clary lay awake contemplating a return to the place of his mauling. He had to lay his mind to rest about how he’d missed a leopard only inches away from the gun’s muzzle. Furthermore, he must do it before the rains came to wash away all evidence of the incident. “I have to go tomorrow,” he told his father.

The next day, Clary was up before dawn. Breakfasting on tea and chapatis, he was out of town before first light, carrying his repaired 400 Jeffery’s Express rifle and accompanied by a young helper with a haversack containing water bottles, biltong (air-dried, cured meat) and a twist of tobacco as a gift for the village headman.  Satan, whining sulkily, was forced to stay safely at home, as leopards, should Clary meet any on the way, were partial to juicy dogs.

Chapatis are unleavened bread made from whole wheat flour, water and a little salt. (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thar_Desert. )

They did not stop until they reached the settlement by the old baobab trees where the villagers were pleasantly surprised to see him alive. Gratefully receiving the gift of tobacco, the headman informed Clary that the leopard had not been seen or heard of since the incident. Their goats were grazing peacefully once more. 

Clary only recognized the thicket because of the termite mound, the fire having turned the thicket into an untidy mass of blackened, tangled branches protruding from a grey-black carpet of charred leaves. He pushed his way through the tangle of burned branches and leaf ash until once more he stood atop the termite castle where the events of that fateful day came flooding back. Then, looking down, as he had done on that same afternoon many months before, he could hardly believe his eyes as he stared right into a hole in the side of the mound. It was a deep hole, large enough to hide a full-grown leopard.

Finally, Clary understood what had happened: The big cat had crouched inside this hole, shielded from Clary’s fusillade of 303 bullets. Then the mound’s earth walls had protected it against the blast from his double-barreled rifle fired at point-blank range. (Inches to one side of the hole – just where the leopard’s neck and shoulder would have been had it had been lying on instead of in the anthill – were two bullet holes where the slugs from the 400 had slammed into the dry earth.)

For the first time since the incident, Clary felt relief. No longer did he need to blame himself for not killing the leopard.  Admittedly, he’d forgotten to switch off the Jeffrey 400’s safety catch. However, Clary vowed, he would never do that again. And, having decided that, he realized with a thrill that he could be a professional hunter after all. 

Clary discovers the leopard’s lair

(Artist: Gregg Davies)

Immersed in thought, Clary didn’t realize how dark the sky had become. The first large raindrops began to plop down as he hurried to take the footpath back home, raising mushroom clouds of dust, perfuming the air with that unique smell of fresh rain on thirsty soil. The rains had finally started. 

And despite getting soaked, Clary didn’t mind a bit. He was too happy. 

CLOSE CALL WITH A LEOPARD

CLOSE CALL WITH A LEOPARD

INTRODUCTION

This is the story of Clary Palmer-Wilson, born in Nairobi, East Africa in 1907. At the age of 14 he began earning his livelihood as a hunter in the East African bush where dangers lurked everywhere and mistakes carried severe consequences. Unable to survive by hunting alone, he tried mining during a gold rush, became a car mechanic, farmed, and took on any other task that paid enough to keep him going. Eventually, he tried settling down to a normal life with a regular job, even though he still felt the call of wild. East Africa’s time as a wild game paradise was winding down. But Clary was too old to change. He lived to hunt. 

Clary Palmer-Wilson was a legend in his own time, credited with the world’s record buffalo and a massive elephant named The Crown Prince. Despite being asthmatic and allergic to over 150 substances, he became a sought-after hunting guide. 

(Artist: Gregg Davies)

From 1920 to 1973, during Clary’s hunting days, Tanganyika (now Tanzania) was a very different country. Beyond the towns and larger villages huge tracts of land teemed with wildlife. (In 1965, the country had 1,200,000 elephants.) Raw, untamed Africa started just beyond the front door, and the understaffed and overworked wildlife department was grateful for any help they could get in controlling marauding animals. Clary, a professional hunter, often assisted in game control measures but never shot an animal for sport, only for food or to earn his living. 

This is a historic account of one man living an unusual life in East Africa. Such a life would not be possible today.

Tanganyika (present-day Tanzania). Tanga is in the northeastern corner, opposite the island of Pemba. 

(Shakki. GNU Free Documentation license.) 

1924. Somewhere west of Tanga.

Clary Palmer-Wilson lay dying on a rickety wooden sisal-rope bed in the village headman’s mud and wattle hut.  Seventeen years-old and miles from medical help, his only comfort was the thatched-palm roof that kept the room dark and cool from the fierce African sun. Dark red blood oozed through his khaki shirt, which he had torn into strips to make temporary bandages for his shredded legs.  Outside the hut, a dozen natives gathered to witness the last moments of the young man who had tried to save their dwindling goat herd from a spotted devil—a leopard. Instead, he had become a victim himself. 

Clary’s gun bearer, Musa, however, still held out hope. Wearing only a tucked-up loincloth, he set off at a fast trot to fetch Clary’s father William in far-off Tanga.

It had all started few days previously in the coastal town of Tanga when a delegation from the village asked Clary for help. The game department had refused because it was too busy keeping buffaloes away from the local railway station and elephants from native shambas (gardens). (In one moonless night elephants could destroy a family’s entire season’s food crop.)  Intrigued, Clary accepted the challenge, although it was more for the love of hunting than for saving goats. Taking up his double-barreled 400 Jeffrey rifle and a war-surplus 303, he casually informed his father. “I’ll be back in a day or two. Make room for a leopard skin rug somewhere.”

Setting out at dawn, Clary and Musa (Arabic for Moses) reached the village in mid-morning. Soon thereafter, Clary found himself crawling through a small patch of dense thicket near the village, frequently stopping to crouch and tensely peer around. He had seen the leopard’s spoor entering the thicket. He could smell its pungent odor. But where was it? Eventually deciding the leopard was gone, Clary climbed atop a termite mound to see over the top of the thicket.  Holding the muzzle of his rifle in one hand and shading his eyes with the other he scanned across the surrounding grassland for other thickets that might harbor the large feline goat-killer. Then, out of the corner of his eye the young hunter saw an ear twitch, and suddenly there it was—yellow-eyes, black tipped ears, shiny dark nose above sharp teeth bared in a half snarl—leopard! At Clary’s very feet! 

Leopard–sleek, handsome, and dangerous.

(David Bygott)

Taken by surprise, Clary, still holding the gun by its muzzle, leapt backwards, landed on his back, jumped up and fought his way through the thicket into the open where he whirled to fire at the pursuing cat—which wasn’t there. Glancing at the villagers waiting nearby, he wondered what they were thinking. (Witnessing his wild rush from the thicket, his ragged hair standing on end and his khaki clothes littered with dry leaves and broken twigs, they were wondering if the devil leopard hadn’t taken possession of him, too.) 

“I´ll get that big cat out of there now, good and dead”, he said to himself, although loud enough for all to hear. 

Exchanging his heavy rifle for the 303, he tried to flush the cat out by firing into the bushes where he had last seen it. Shot after shot ripped into the thicket. However, none induced a single sound or movement from the leopard. Clary knew that, if wounded, the leopard would have growled loudly or charged. If dead, it was somewhere in the thicket. If alive, it was somewhere there and very annoyed. He also knew that he, the brave hunter, the village savior, had to go back in to settle the question.  Taking up the 400 Jeffery’s rifle, he nervously inched back into the thicket toward the termite mound. 

Lee-Enfield 303 rifle used in the First World War. It was capable of 20-30 shots per minute in the hands of a highly trained rifleman

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/.)

With his gun at the ready, he searched the bushes near the termite mound, circling it completely before climbing up to peer into the surrounding thicket. Dangling branches showed green gashes where they had been struck by 303 bullets.  Gouges in the fresh earth bore testimony to the same cause. But nothing else was noticeable and nothing moved. 

Suddenly, there it was again, that heart-stopping ear twitch of a live leopard!

And, once again, right at his feet, Clary saw an angry cat with flattened ears, fiery eyes, and a snarling mouth. But this time he was ready. Swinging the gun down, he pulled both triggers at once. “Boom! Boom!” Dust and sand exploded everywhere. He’d missed!  

With a short, guttural growl the enraged leopard leaped, knocking Clary off the mound to sprawl under a tangle of low-lying branches.  Fortunately, they blocked the savage cat from reaching his neck and face. Still on his back, he pulled the gun free of the bushes, reloaded, and jammed it through the branches into the leopard’s neck. Then he squeezed both triggers hard. To his horror, his rifle did not fire. Instead, the enraged cat seized the gun barrel in its jaws, at the same time clawing Clary with its razor-sharp claws, shredding his trousers and legs. 

In excruciating pain and high on adrenalin, he again squeezed both gun triggers, this time with all his strength, yet the only sound was leopard teeth breaking on gunmetal. The smell of fresh blood driving it on, the cat lunged closer to Clary’s jugular. Holding the animal at bay with the gun barrel, Clary screamed for help from the men outside. Jolted into action, they responded by lighting bunches of dry grass and hurling them into the bushes, setting fire to the dry underbrush. They threw Doum palm nuts in all directions.  They shouted like madmen. They beat the bushes with long sticks to cause maximum distraction. 

And their efforts paid off, causing the enraged leopard to retreat into the thick vegetation. However, danger was not yet over because the fire set by the villagers was moving with increasing speed and intensity towards Clary, who, severely wounded, could barely move. Yelling above the roar of the fire, he attracted the attention of the men who hacked a path through the bushes to where he lay. Lifting him up, they stumbled back to safe ground. Then, seeing his wounds, they took him to the headman’s hut. 

Doum palms

(Bernard DuPont. C.C. Attribution-share alike 2.0 Generic license)

RANGELANDS OF CENTRAL SOMALIA

RANGELANDS OF CENTRAL SOMALIA

REPORTS BY RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND RESEARCH, LONDON.

This announces the availability of free downloads for the first set of hard-to-obtain reports on the rangelands of Central Somalia. https://storiesofeastafrica.com/reports-on-the-rangelands-of-central-somalia/

This post includes surveys and maps carried out in 1979 by Resource Management and Research (RMR), London. Reports by other agencies will follow in future posts.

DIGITAL COPIES OF PUBLICATIONS ON THE RANGELANDS OF SOMALIA

DIGITAL COPIES OF  PUBLICATIONS ON THE RANGELANDS OF SOMALIA

(Featured image: Dr. Tom Thurow and Somalia National University students collecting rangeland composition data on the coastal plains of Central Somalia.)

Because Its rangelands are Somalia’s primary natural resource, a considerable amount of research has been carried out over the last several decades to determine their productive potential and how they may best be managed. Unfortunately, much of the resulting information was not widely published and is, therefore, now difficult to obtain. This post is the first of several to at least partially remedy this situation by making available digital copies of relevant publications and reports for free downloads

SPOTTED HYENAS: WILDLIFE OF NGORONGORO

SPOTTED HYENAS: WILDLIFE OF NGORONGORO

(Featured image: David Bygott)

Outside the house a prowling hyena whooped mournfully, waking me from my reverie. The fire which, last time I noticed, had been burning merrily away in the fireplace, was now.a bed of glowing coals. The short wave radio, having wandered off frequency, was whining and crackling with static. The feeble, slowly pulsating light from the Petromax lantern showed that it needed pumping. Again, the hyena whooped, but farther away this time. I looked at my watch and realized the lateness of the hour . . .

Buffaloes by My Bedroom: Tales of Tanganyika

Many years later, when I think about my nights at Ngorongoro, whether in the Crater Highlands, on the floor of Ngorongoro Crater, or somewhere on the Serengeti Plains, the first thing that comes to mind is the querulous oooo-WHUP (I am here) of a prowling spotted hyena.

The spotted hyena only occurs in Africa. (Graphic: Ngorongoro Hyena Project)

At the time I gave this little thought. But now, having investigated the matter, I know it was because the spotted hyena is not only Africa’s most abundant large carnivore, but also mostly hunts at night.

Something I did know, however, even then, was that the spotted hyena had an image problem. Less than handsome (although its small black cubs are cute), it has long been regarded as a skulking, slinking, nocturnal, weird-sounding, odd-looking, unclean scavenger too cowardly to prey on any but the weak and young. Furthermore, its role in disposing of human corpses encouraged the feeling that the animal is something of a living mausoleum. (Many East African tribes placed their dead, and in some cases, near-dead, in the bush for just this purpose.) Thus, it’s not surprising that the spotted hyena, whose behavior sometimes seems to verge on the demonic, also is associated with death and witchcraft. Consequently, it plays a more important role in African witchcraft than any other animal. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of_spotted_hyenas#:~:text=In%20the%20culture%20of%20the,branded%20with%20an%20invisible%20mark.)  

Where’s my public relations person?

(Photo: David Bygott)

That said, any spotted hyenas worried about their poor fan base can take heart from the fact that scientific research is casting them in a more positive light. Two attributes stand out: (a) high intelligence, and (b) speed and efficiency in utilizing prey carcasses. Together, these traits have made the spotted hyena a very successful carnivore. Details follow.

But first, two interesting spotted hyena facts.

Spotted hyenas look like dogs but are taxonomically more closely related to cats (most closely to genets and mongooses).

Hyenas are more closely related to mongooses than foxes, which, like dogs, are in the Suborder Caniformia.

(Graphic: Ngorongoro Hyena Project)

Dwarf mongooses.

(Photo: David Bygott)

Also interesting, and rather strange, is that males and females look so alike (females have a pseudopenis and false scrotum), that spotted hyenas were long thought to be hermaphrodites.

Female? Male?

(Photo by David Bygott)

Now, down to business:

Contrary to their reputation, spotted hyenas are highly intelligent, capable of outsmarting chimpanzees in laboratory problem-solving tests. Some everyday examples of this intelligence include (a) exceedingly cunning and suspicious behavior after escaping from traps, (b) use of deceptive behavior, and (c) an ability to plan for hunts of certain prey species in advance.

Regarding (b) and (c) above, Hans Kruuk, who studied spotted hyenas in Ngorongoro Crater and the Serengeti in the 1960’s, once observed a spotted hyena which upon finding a carcass, sounded the alarm call to keep other hyenas away, allowing it to keep the carcass for itself (Spotted hyena mothers sometimes show similar behavior by sounding alarm calls when other hyenas attempt ro kill their cubs). Hans also could often tell, from their behavior, when a group of hyenas had decided to hunt zebras, even when none were in sight and other prey were more easily available.

Other examples of spotted hyena intelligence occur throughout this report.

Complex behaviors reflect high intelligence, and spotted hyena behavior is the most complex of all African carnivores. An aspect to this is a high degree of behavioral flexibility. For instance, hyenas don’t always stick together, They may act communally, as when hunting dangerous prey, and defending clan territories, or individualistically (and highly competitively) as when caring for their young, foraging, and hunting smaller prey. This allows the species to exploit many different resources efficiently.

The spotted hyena social system differs from other social carnivores in that there is no communal sharing of food (or care of the young, each female caring only for her own).

(Photo: Bernard Dupont. CCAS 2.0 A license*)

Females rule. Larger than males (unusual in mammals), they take the lead in territorial marking exercises, group hunts, and battles with other packs. Females also remain in the clan / pack while males emigrate (at about two years of age). Males not only defer to females, but also play no parental role, and are often not even allowed near the otherwise communal dens, Less closely knit than wild dogs, spotted hyenas more often forage and hunt alone.

Darn females won’t let me in the house! “

(Photo: David Bygott.)

Complex behavior requires good communication. Spotted hyenas are excellent communicators. This is because every individual is, to another hyena, a potential competitor (even dangerous enemy) or collaborator, which makes the signaling of moods and intentions very important. Thus, the spotted hyena has an enormous array of calls (whoops, moans, grunts, giggles, whines, yells, growls), expressions, postures, and attitudes. This can lead to a massive amount of noise when they compete with one another over a carcass. Consequently,the spotted hyena is one of Africa’s noisiest animals.

(Check out https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNsWowelWbo.) for spotted hyena calls.)

Highly gregarious, the spotted hyena is the most social of all carnivore species, with the largest social groups. For instance, a spotted hyena clan may comprise 35 to 80 adults. (In contrast, the largest recorded pride of lions, the other major social large carnivore, is 30 animals, including cubs.)

Social group size, however, varies with the availability of food, as does the size of spotted hyena territories, and the degree to which the group (clan / pack) defends them. For instance, in the Kalahari Desert spotted hyena densities are so low that they forage and hunt within territories too large (500-2,000 sq. km / 193-772 sq. miles) to defend against other hyenas. In contrast, where wild ungulate prey is most abundant, as in Tanzania’s Ngorongoro Crater, hyenas are numerous, forming large social groups and aggressively defending territories less than 40 sq. km (15 sq. miles) in area. (The much larger Serengeti-Mara ecosystem, which includes the crater, is home to 7,200-7,000 animals, the largest spotted hyena population in Africa.)

Ngorongoro Crater’s large resident population of 25,000 ungulates supports high densities of from 380-470 spotted hyenas.

(Photo: David Bygott.)

One night in the Serengeti, two friends of mine, staying in a guest house, experienced at close hand the aggressive defense of a spotted hyena clan territory. Hearing hyenas, they went outside and played a recording of spotted hyena calls from another area. Minutes later they had to scramble atop a nearby Land Rover to escape a crowd of angry spotted hyenas. Hearing hyenas from another clan in their territory, they had rushed over to expel them.

Another example of the spotted hyena’s complex behavior is a greater plasticity in foraging and hunting behavior than exhibited by other African carnivores. for instance, spotted hyenas both scavenge and hunt, the former usually during the day because they use vultures as indicators of kills, and the vultures only fly during the day.

A spotted hyena waits for lions to finish eating before scavenging the remains.

(Photo: David Bygott)

However, when carcasses are scarce, spotted hyenas also hunt, usually at night, and, depending on the circumstances, either alone, in small parties, or in large groups. A common technique is to lope toward a herd or flock, forcing its members to flee, revealing easy to catch stragglers (weak, young, sick).

Wildebeest calves in Ngorongoro Crater and on the Serengeti Plains are a favorite prey of spotted hyenas. As they are easy to catch, they are hunted by single hyenas.

(Photo: David Bygott)

Like wild dogs, spotted hyenas simply run their prey to exhaustion, usually within 1.5-5 km (1-3 miles). A single hyena can catch and kill healthy prey the size of a bull gnu, but only as a last resort. When hyenas are numerous, other pack members may join in near the end of a chase to help pull down larger animals like wildebeests. However, usually led by a female, they also stage deliberate pack hunts of dangerous prey, such as zebra families guarded by sharp-hoofed stallions.

Zebras fight back, so spotted hyenas must hunt them in groups.

(Photo: David Bygott)

Often eating their prey alive, spotted hyenas, unlike wild dogs (https://storiesofeastafrica.com/2023/09/13/wild-dogs-wildlife-of-ngorongoro/), compete with other pack members by eating as much and as fast as they can, with individuals swallowing up to a third of their weight (A lion can only swallow a fourth of its weight). Twenty hyenas, and another group of 35, were recorded finishing off carcasses weighing 100 kg (220 lbs.) and 220 kg (485 lbs.) respectively, in 13 minutes. And they do this with remarkably little fighting. Instead, there’s lots of noise, which attracts other clan members (up to 65 seen on a kill in Ngorongoro Crater). Only then do all clan members ever come together. (These competitive scrambles are less common in the Serengeti where there is a better ratio of prey to hyena.)

When many spotted hyenas are on a kill, some quickly eat what they can before taking a chunk of meat and bone elsewhere for a quiet meal.

(Photo: David Bygott)

Spotted hyenas also excel in that they eat almost the entire carcass of their prey. They can, for instance, crack quite large bones, such as those of buffaloes and giraffes, noisily splintering them before they are swallowed. Furthermore, their digestive system can dissolve bones, and even teeth, within hours. (Dry hyena scats, composed of ground up bones, are a chalky white.). Thus, virtually everything is eaten except the rumen contents (Grass! Yuck!), and horn bosses of larger antelopes. The hair, and hooves, which cannot be digested, are disgorged. Probably no other carnivore utilizes vertebrate prey so efficiently. Other species waste up to 40% of their kills.

“The good stuff’s finished; time to eat the hide.”

(Photo: David Bygott)

Hans Kruuk found the spotted hyena to be a formidable predator. This to the extent that lions often scavenge hyena kills. Direct competitors with lions for food, spotted hyenas, unless present in large groups, generally give way to the larger carnivores, allowing them to appropriate their kills. In turn, spotted hyenas frequently steal kills made by cheetahs and wild dogs (although the latter, being more socially cooperative, are sometimes able to successfully defend themselves) and, given the opportunity, also kill their cubs, as do lions. In the Serengeti, lions and hyenas have exerted such pressure on wild dogs that they have pushed them into outlying parts of the greater Serengeti ecosystem.

A single hyena being harassed by a pack of wild dogs.

(Photo: Kruger sightings HD. CCA 3.0 U**)

Furthermore, spotted hyenas can be dangerous to livestock and people, especially when other food is scarce, but also when an opportunity arises for an easy meal, such as encountering an unattended child, or someone sleeping in the open. A relevant example (see below) recently appeared in my local newspaper.

The Seattle Times, Wed., Feb. 7, 2024.

On the other hand, spotted hyenas keep ungulate herds healthy by weeding out the weak. They also act as nature’s health police by disposing of carcasses left by other carnivores, droughts, disease epidemics (they even eat diseased carcasses), and humans. (For a video on the latter subject see (https://news.umich.edu/hyena-scavenging-provides-public-health-and-economic-benefits-to-african-cities/)

Furthermore, spotted hyenas are easily kept and trained. Witch doctors sometimes add to their persona by keep them as pets. Hans Kruuk and his wife, Jane, successfully raised a young hyena as a family pet in the Serengeti National Park, although they eventually put it in a zoo when it learned how to open doors and steal bacon from the chief park warden’s breakfast table.

Spotted hyenas: Complicated creatures. Just like us.

REFERENCES

Estes, R.D. 1992. The Behavior Guide to African Mammals: Including Hoofed Mammals, Carnivores, Primates. The University of California Press.

Fosbrooke, H. 1972. Ngorongoro–The Eighth Wonder. Andre Deutsch.

Herlocker, D.J. 2009. Buffaloes by My Bedroom: Tales of Tanganyika. iUniverse.

Kruuk, H. 1975. Hyaena. Oxford University Press.

Ngorongoro Hyena Project (https://hyena-project.com)

Check out the Ngorongoro Hyena Project webpage for excellent photos and videos, and for information about on-going research.

CCA ATTRIBUTIONS

*Creative Commons Attribution Share 2.0 Alike license.

** Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

WILD DOGS: WILDLIFE OF NGORONGORO

WILD DOGS: WILDLIFE OF NGORONGORO

Featured image: African wild dog pack, Kruger National Park, South Africa. Bart Swanson. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 unsorted license

“Wild dogs!” John yelped. Pointing out the right window of his Land Rover, he exclaimed “Over there–ten of them.” Then he really got excited: “And they’re chasing something! See how they’re trotting, strung out in a long line? Fantastic!” Abandoning our search for rhinos, we promptly sped off to follow the hunt.

It was 1965 and I, the assistant conservator (forests) for the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA), was temporarily without official transport because the NCA had prematurely exhausted its government-imposed monthly fuel allowance. For the time-being I would be unable to supervise the crew constricting a road around the western and northern rim of Ngorongoro crater or visit forest guards patrolling the Northern Highlands Forest Reserve; they were all too far away. What I could do, however, was accompany my neighbor, John Goddard, a Canadian biologist studying black rhinos, into the Crater. John had his own source of funding, which meant he was unhampered by government fuel allowances.

Rattling across the crater floor in John’s Land Rover, we followed the pack for about a mile before it brought down its prey, an adult Grant’s gazelle. Then, instead of resting from their exertions, the wild dogs immediately started ripping it apart; John and I arrived to find one dog pulling on a foreleg of the gazelle, another yanking the other direction on a hind leg, and two others tugging at its stomach while the rest of the pack danced about uttering excited twitters and whines. John quickly took several photographs, but then surprised me by leaving the vehicle to approach the frenzied melee taking place only thirty feet away. What was he thinking? They’ll eat him for dessert! But then another surprise: instead of aggressively defending their kill, the wild dogs warily backed away, allowing John to walk right up to it.

Wild dog pack tearing into a Grant’s gazelle in Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania.

In his 1972 book, Ngorongoro: The Eighth Wonder, Henry Fosbrooke remarks on how wild dogs in the crater always gave way when John approached. He did this, Henry said, to collect the prey’s mandibles–aging its teeth showed an animal’s age at death. John wanted undamaged specimens so he collected them as soon as possible after the wild dogs made their kill. However, in this case at least, there also was a fringe benefit: Returning with both the gazelle’s head and part of one of its hindquarters, John announced, “This takes care of dinner, tonight!”

My three years (1964-1967) at Ngorongoro exactly coincided with the presence of a wild dog pack in Ngorongoro Crater. Few were seen prior to this time and the pack left the crater in 1967. But then African wild dogs have a reputation for being rare and elusive. For instance, Henry Fosbrooke saw a wild dog only once during his 30 years of on and off acquaintance with Ngorongoro. George and Lory Frame, who studied cheetahs and wild dogs on the Serengeti Plains in the 1970’s, often spent days or weeks searching for dogs to study, then, having found a pack and studied it for a few days, woke up the next morning to find the dogs had vanished.

Where’d they go?”

Being rare and elusive makes the African wild dog difficult to study. Nonetheless, it’s worth the effort, and not just because the wild dog occupies its own taxonomic genus (Lyacon) differing from the genus Canis (jackals, wolves, coyotes, domestic dogs) by dentition highly specialized for a hyper-carnivorous diet, and in having four toes on each foot. Both attributes support survival, the first by enhancing the shearing of meat, which increases the speed at which prey is consumed (thereby lessening the chance that lions and hyenas can steal the kill), and the second increases an animal’s stride and speed, allowing long distance pursuit of prey.

To the average viewer, however, the African wild dog’s most distinctive features are its large, round ears, and a splotchy black, white, and brown (sometimes verging on yellow) body–hence its other name, the painted dog. Happily for those who study this species, each animal has its own unique, readily distinguishable coat color pattern. African wild dogs also apparently really stink, although, unlike John Goddard, I never got close enough to tell.

Painted dogs, Kruger National Park, South Africa. Unlike those pictured here, the wild dog in East Africa generally has a white-tipped tail. (The Maasai call it Oloibor kidongoi, the white-tipped one.)

Bernard Dupont. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License.

The African wild dog is a habitat generalist able to survive in a wide range of environments (An extreme, although undoubtedly short-lived, example is the sighting of a pack near the summit of Tanzania’s 19,341 ft Mt. Kilimanjaro). However, wild dogs are most commonly found in relatively open habitats which provide good views and running conditions.

Almost exclusively carnivorous, killing most of what it eats, the species is specialized as a pack hunter, concentrating on whatever medium-sized antelopes are most abundant. More enduring than its prey, it pursues the latter at up to 35 m/h (56 km/h), one dog leading , and the rest strung out behind, until the prey is exhausted, usually within 3 miles (5 km). Their ability to run their prey down without having to conceal their approach allows African wild dogs to be conspicuously colored, and like cheetahs, hunt only during the day.

African wild dogs chasing prey in Botswana’s Okavango Swamp.

Lip Kee. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License.

Probably one of the most successful African carnivores, African wild dogs are such effective hunters that when prey is abundant, a pack can regularly have both breakfast and dinner. For example, wild dogs in Ngorongoro Crater killed twice a day, catching 85% of the animals they chased. Even the lowest recorded success rate for this species (39%) exceeded those of all other large predators except cheetahs. Furthermore, the entire pack benefits from a kill because it is shared among them.

Wild dogs in the Serengeti primarily prey upon Thompson’s gazelles and, in season, wildebeest calves (pictured here).

One reason for their rare and elusive nature is that wild dog packs are frequently on the move, averaging 10 km (6 miles) / day, or when game is scarce, up to 40 km (25 miles) / day. In the latter case, hunting ranges can be huge, up to 1500-2000 sq. km / 580 – 770 sq. miles (The largest recorded range is greater than the total area of London), exceeding in area even those of cheetahs. However, a range can be smaller when prey is resident and numerous.

The African wild dog has specialized on an abundant food resource which it can only exploit efficiently by hunting in packs. In East Africa these typically consist of about 10 animals but can go as high as 20 or even 60. Social bonds are strong; when separated from its pack, an African wild dog becomes so depressed that it may die. Each pack has only a single breeding pair, composed of the dominant male and female, which needs assistance from the other adults to provision large litters of up to 10 pups during an extended (12-14 month) period of dependence. Food sharing, by regurgitation of meat obtained from a kill, is supported by an emphasis on submissive, begging behavior within a pack. Aggressive behavior is rare. In-breeding is prevented by the emigration of females to other packs whereas the males, related to one another but not the breeding female, remain.

Wild dog pups. Litter sizes , larger than any other canid, are enough to form a new pack every year.

David Bygott

Despite being such effective hunters, and having an exceptionally efficient reproductive system, African wild dogs are the least common large predator in Africa. Furthermore, their population is declining. With under 7,000 animals remaining in the wild (there are fewer wild dogs than cheetahs) and having disappeared from much of their former range, African wild dogs are the continent’s 2nd most endangered large carnivore, after the Ethiopian wolf. Reasons given include:

(a) infectious diseases: Wild dogs are highly susceptible to canine diseases spread by domestic dogs;

(b) competition from lions and spotted hyenas, which appropriate wild dog kills, and in the case of lions, also kill their pups and adults;

(c) habitat fragmentation and loss.

The fragmented continental habitat of African wild dogs. The full extent of the original habitat can be roughly approximated by the distribution of smaller relict ranges. (Approximately 700 wild dogs live in northern Botswana.)

IUCN. CCA-SA 4.0 International license.

The results are smaller, less efficient and viable wild dog packs. Once African wild dog packs are reduced to small sizes, and suitable habitats are fragmented and altered by humans, wild dog populations seldom recover.

Lions are bad news for wild dogs.

David Bygott

So are domestic dogs, which carry infectious diseases.

Bothar at English Wikipedia CCASA 3.0 Unported.

Thus, the most effective way to ensure the conservation of African wild dog populations is thought to be by creating and protecting areas connecting isolated habitats. A good example of the importance of extensive, connected, ecologically diverse wild dog habitats is provided by the Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem in Tanzania and Kenya. Probably due to a combination of disease and competition from lions, (the major source of wild dog mortality in the Serengeti), and from spotted hyenas, African wild dogs disappeared from the 5,700 sq. mile (14,763 km) Serengeti National Park in the early 1990’s. However, the wild dog populations survived by moving into other parts of the greater (15,444 sq. mile / 40,000 sq. km) Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem. These include Ngorongoro Crater where wild dogs have returned after a 30 year absence, but primarily the Loliondo Game Controlled Area where a more hilly habitat provides greater security from larger predators while the wild dogs are denning and raising their young. Currently, the Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem contains about 120 African wild dogs.

The Loliondo Game Controlled Area (dark green) lies east of the Serengeti National Park.

Abrah Dust. CCA-SA 4.0 International license.

REFERENCES

Estes, R.D. 1991. The Behavior Guide to African Mammals: Including Hoofed Mammals, Carnivores, Primates. The University of California Press. Fosbrooke,H. 1972.

Fosbrooke, H. 1972. Ngorongoro: The Eighth Wonder. Andre Deutsch.

Frame, G. & L. Frame. 1981. Swift & Enduring: Cheetahs and Wild Dogs of the Serengeti. E.P. Dutton.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_wild_dog

CHEETAHS: WILDLIFE OF NGORONGORO

CHEETAHS: WILDLIFE OF NGORONGORO

A cheetah cub purred as it chewed on a windshield wiper; another admired itself in the Land Rover’s fender mirror; a third, sitting on the roof, dangled its tail beside an open window . . . George and Lory Frame, who studied cheetahs and wild dogs in the Serengeti in the late 1970’s, recount how, one day, five large, playful cheetah cubs, members of a family they were studying, turned the tables on the two researchers and investigated them, instead. For the Frames it must have been a welcome break from their usual routine of hours and hours of careful observation and note-taking.

A nice patch of shade.

George and Lory certainly had an interesting animal to study: An inhabitant of wooded savanna, open plains, and desert, the cheetah is a striking cat: lightly built, with long, thin legs, small feet with blunt, unsheathed claws, and small rounded head, it’s built for speed–the field version of a greyhound, as one researcher put it. Capable of top speeds of 60-70 mph (90-112 kph), it’s the fastest animal in the world, a specialist in hunting small, but fast antelopes, such as Thomson’s gazelles (and hares), seldom killing animals larger than itself.

Built for speed. Photo by David Bygott.

However, becoming so speedy has involved tradeoffs. A sprinter with little stamina for chases beyond 300 m / 985 ft., a cheetah must use whatever cover (tall grass, shrubs, trees, ravines) is available to get as close as possible to its prey before attacking it. Furthermore, the cheetah has sacrificed not just stamina, but also the strength (it’s less than a fourth the weight of a full-grown lion) and weapons (note those dull claws) needed to protect itself from other predators. Consequently, cheetahs must avoid large predators, especially lions, which often kill cheetah cubs as well as steal kills. Hyenas also frequently appropriate prey killed by cheetahs. Therefore, cheetahs do not hunt at night, which is when lions and hyenas are most active.

Cheetahs also are unique in that males are social while females are solitary and shy (but still highly promiscuous). Furthermore, they have large home ranges, the largest, up to 400 sq. miles (1,036 sq. km), being those of individual females. Groups of males, called coalitions, defend smaller territories, 14-62 sq. miles (36-160 sq. km) in area, within female home ranges.

Cheetah stalking a Thomson’s gazelle, its favorite prey on the Serengeti Plains. The adult zebra and wildebeests in the background are too large. Photo by David Bygott.

Large home ranges, and mortality from larger predators so intense it limits cheetah numbers even when prey is abundant (less than half of all cheetahs live beyond three months), means that cheetahs never achieve high densities–they are always less abundant than other African carnivores. For instance, the 15,444 sq. mile (40,000 sq. km) Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem (see map at end of post), an area larger than the state of Maryland, and almost twice the size of Wales, has 275 cheetahs (the world’s highest density of these cats), but also 3,000 lions and at least 7,200 hyenas. (The Ngorongoro Conservation Area is part of the Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem.)

Two of the Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem’s 275 cheetahs. Photo by David Bygott.

Most other protected areas are too small to protect viable cheetah populations. Of the roughly 10,000 cheetahs in Africa, about 2/3 live in unprotected areas where. due to persecution and loss of habitat, their numbers are declining. Low populations, the need for young males to sometimes travel large distances to establish new territories, and an extraordinarily low degree of genetic diversity means that cheetahs, of all carnivores, are most vulnerable to habitat loss and fragmentation. (Low genetic diversity also raises the possibility that a disease could devastate wild populations.). Thus, steps are needed to conserve them outside protected areas.

Some conservationists see the cheetah’s future linked to the survival of traditional pastoral livestock management. This is because, historically, there has been little conflict between cheetahs and traditional pastoralists, who minimize stock losses to carnivores by seldom leaving their animals unattended during the day and corralling them at night in protected enclosures.

Traditional pastoralists seldom leave their livestock unattended. Photo by David Bygott.

MAPS

Vegetation of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania. Forest (darkest green–far right) is the poorest of these habitats for cheetahs. Graphic by David Bygott and Jeannette Hanby.

The seasonal movements of the Serengeti-Mara wildebeest populations occur within all or part of each protected area. Graphic by Abrah Eust. Creative commons 4.0 international license.

MAJOR REFERENCES

Estes, R.D. 1991. The behavior guide to African mammals: Including hoofed mammals, carnivores, primates. The University of California Press.

Fosbrooke, H. 1972. Ngorongoro: The eighth wonder. Andre Deutsch.

Frame, G. & L. Frame. 1981. Swift and enduring: Cheetahs and wild dogs of the Serengeti. E.P. Dutton.

Durant. S. 2004. Survival of the fastest: The cheetahs of the Serengeti. Africa Geographic. Pages30-32.

Zoological Society of London. Cheetah conservation in Africa. ZSL.org

MORE ABOUT LEOPARDS

MORE ABOUT LEOPARDS

Featured image by David Bygott

My previous post, LEOPARDS: WILDLIFE OF NGORONGORO, stimulated some comments worthy of sharing:

Yvonne Stephenson*

When Yvonne and her husband Steve lived in the Serengeti National Park “many moons ago,” Kay Turner had two pet serval kittens given her by a warden of Tanzania’s game department. His rangers had found them at the bottom of a six-foot-deep pit that poachers had covered with grass to trap passing animals. Kay raised the two servals for six months. Then, one night, while they were sleeping on her bed, a leopard crashed through the bedroom window’s wire mosquito screen and caught one. Luckily, Kay was in another room at the time, entertaining guests. (*The husbands of Yvonne and Kay were, respectively, chief, and deputy chief wardens of the park in the early 1970’s.)

Young serval cat.

Photo by Su Neko. Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 generic license.

On another occasion, Yvonne continues, “A ranger burst into our house to report that a leopard had been spotted up a tree with a cheetah, which it must have killed, because the cheetah’s tail could be seen hanging down from the branch. This was very sad for few cheetahs were being seen at the time.”

Herman Dirschl

Herman, the Ngorongoro Conservation Area’s ecologist in 1966, relates a leopard encounter experienced by John Goddard, a biologist studying rhinos in Ngorongoro Crater. John was on the porch of Lerai Cabin when he noticed his little dog, which had wandered several hundred feet away to the edge of Lerai Forest, racing toward him with a leopard in close pursuit. John opened the cabin’s door just in time to let his dog in, slamming it in the leopard’s face.

Lerai Cabin at base of crater wall, 1964.

Patrick Furtado

Patrick thinks he remembers reading a passage in Beryl Markham’s memoir, West with the Night, about her bulldog fighting off a leopard that leaped through a window to catch it. I can easily believe this happened because West with the Night is about Beryl growing up in Kenya in the early 1900’s when it was British East Africa, and wild animals still prowled the outskirts of Nairobi. Beryl’s bulldog would not have been the only domestic pet to have a close–and sometimes deadly–encounter with a leopard.

David Bygott*

David, commenting on my statement that leopards were rarely seen in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, says this has changed due to an increase in tourism, which is habituating leopards to people (or perhaps the vehicles they ride in). And, of course, leopards also are more commonly seen because more people are looking for them. ” I have seen leopards several times on the main road from Lodoare Gate to Ngorongoro, and in the crater. In the Ndutu area I’ve seen them many times.” (*David Bygott and Jeannette Hanby are the authors of Ngorongoro Conservation Area: A Complete Guidebook. https://www.hanby-bygott-books.com)

Tourists: Agents of habituation.

Photo by David Bygott.

David continues: “Here’s one of my favorite leopard memories: Years ago, staying at Serengeti’s Migration Camp, Jeannette and I slipped away and climbed a small hill to enjoy the sunset. As we sat there, I chanced to look over my shoulder and saw a leopard sitting about ten yards away, illuminated by the sun, peering at us over the tall grass. In the time it took me to whisper ‘Chui!‘ it vanished completely, leaving only an indelible mental picture.”

“Why watch a sunset when I can nap?”

Photo by David Bygott.

FURTHER READING

Bygott, D. & J. Hanby. 1992. Ngorongoro Conservation Area: A Complete Guidebook. https://www.hanby-bygott-books.com

Markham, B. 2013. West with the Night. North Point Press. 2nd edit. (First published in 1942.)

Turner, K. 1977. Serengeti Home. George Allen & Unwin.