About Africa and its antelopes
Transcription
About Africa and its antelopes
2 THE ANTELOPES OF AFRICA by WILLEM FROST 3 CONTENTS About Africa and its antelopes The spiral horned antelopes The Hippotragini tribe (Sable, Roan and Oryx) The Alcelaphini tribe (Wildebeests, Hartebeest and Bastard Hartebeests) The Reduncini tribe (Waterbuck and Reedbuck group of antelopes) The Aepycerotinae subfamily (Impalas) The Peleini tribe (Rhebok) The Gazelles The Cephalophini tribe (Duikers) The Neotragini tribe (Antelopes with short straight horns) Tragulidae Glossary References and further reading 4 “Ex Africa simper aliquid novi” – old Roman saying 5 6 About Africa and its antelopes Africa is a continent of incredible habitat diversity. There are true deserts such as the Sahara and the Namib; thirstlands with huge trees but no surface water, such as the Kalahari; awesome mountain ranges such as the Drakensberg and the Ruwenzori; tropical rainforests in the equatorial zone and evergreen forests on the coasts and along the slopes of mountain ranges; vast open plains and highland plateaus; mangrove swamps along the Indian Ocean coast; extinct, dormant and live volcanoes in East and Central Africa; and hot, dry woodlands such as miombo, bushveldt and mopane veldt. It is a continent of clear mountain streams, lakes, sand dunes, swamps, great rivers, formidable mountains, and endless savannahs. In this vast continent the supply of food in the form of grasses, trees and shrubs is extremely diverse and provide a liveable environment for an equally rich diversity of animal life – each species occupying its own, unique place. Each habitat has its own variety of plant species and wherever there are plants, there are also antelopes to feed on it. Each of the antelope species has evolved over millennia to enable them to utilise the available habitat in a unique way. They all have their favourite food, either different tree or grass species or different stages of growth of the same plant. Some species share a habitat and will compete for food to some degree, but they all utilise the available food resources in their own way. Zebra, wildebeest and hartebeest are often seen grazing together and to the casual observer it may seem that they are sharing the same food resources. But on closer inspection it will soon become clear that the zebras eat the long grasses, leaving shortened stems for the wildebeests and the hartebeests to crop even shorter. The hartebeests are also much more selective in what grasses they eat. When the new growth sprouts, it attracts other species such as gazelles and impalas. In this way the species may share a habitat, but each utilises the available food in a special way. Yet, visitors to Africa are often blown away when they find as many as ten different antelope species in the same area. It was however through specialisation – by developing into different species – and thus minimising competition for food, that such a great variety of antelopes came to exist today. It is not surprising that the game species of Africa are not evenly distributed across the continent. Most species are adapted to a specific environment, and will have much difficulty surviving in a different habitat. The distribution pattern of the species is mainly the result of environmental factors such as soil, climate, vegetation, availability of food and water, and the presence of other animals. Africa is thus also a continent of specialisation: the many different species of antelope have adapted to survive in a specific environmental niche, although some are more adaptable to habitat changes and –degradation than others. Antelopes can broadly be classified as follows in terms of the plant material that they live on: 7 (i) Grazers, of which there are two types: bulk grazers (e.g. zebras and waterbuck) and selective grazers (e.g. hartebeest, roan and sable) (ii) Browsers (e.g. kudu) (iii) Mixed feeders, i.e. animals that both graze and browse (e.g. impala, nyala and eland). In another, more specific classification, the following names have been given to animals (including antelopes) that have certain dietary preferences: “Detrivore” – living on decomposing material “Folivore” – living on leaves “Frugivore” – living on fruits “Granivore” – living on seeds “Herbivore” – living on plants “Mucivore” – living on plant juices “Mycivore” – living on fungi “Nectarivore” – living on nectar “Omnivore” – living on plants and flesh Most antelopes usually fall into more than one of these categories. The forest duikers, for example, are usually folivores and frugivores and granivores and herbivores and mycivores. All antelopes have a dentary pad or plate in the upper jaw to compensate for the lack of upper teeth in the front of the mouth; two flattened incisiform canines and only six incisors in the lower jaw. The have no upper incisors or canines. There are six molars in each jaw and either four or six premolars. Territorialism is one of the most fascinating behaviours that have been discovered amongst some antelope species. The essence of territorial behaviour is that a bull or a ram will stake a claim to a fixed area of real estate which he will then defend against intrusion by males of his own species. Ewes or cows of the species are actively enticed to enter the territory and to stay, but males are chased away. Territorial rams and bulls are the most dominant animals and are responsible for mating with the females in the population. Bachelors are not allowed access to the females and thereby it is ensured that all offspring is sired by the strongest males. In some species the male and female would stay together year round, in others the females come and go as they please. If a female should leave, the male will usually follow her to the boundary of his territory. Beyond that he would ignore her. The territorial male is wedded to his land, not his females. In some species both male and female are territorial and both will defend the territory. Not all antelopes, however, are territorial. In addition to the territory, antelope usually also have a home range which is much bigger than the territory. The home range is the total area that an animal utilises for his daily activities and is not defended at all. The territory is a 8 smaller section of the home range; the purpose of which is to ensure that the best genes are carried forward to the next generations. Antelopes, deer and pronghorn Antelopes are mammals belonging to the Order Cetartiodactyla and the family Bovidae. Bovids are characterised by unbranched horns which they do not shed like deer. Horns are present in the males of all bovid species and in the females of some species (e.g. gemsbok, eland, hartebeest, wildebeest, springbok, tsessebe, etc.). When horns are present in both sexes, those of males are always thicker at the base. The horns are permanently attached to the skull, and are composed of a bone core covered with a keratin sheath (which is never shed). An air space separates these two layers, with the result that bovids are often called "hollow-horned ungulates". Bovids are the most diverse groups of living ungulates and are found predominantly in Africa. The Americas have very few bovids, but there are three bovid sub-families in Eurasia. Bovidae originated in Africa some 19 million years ago and the continent is today still their stronghold with eleven tribes and 72 species. All African antelope are mammals belonging to the order Cetartiodactyla, the Bovidae family and the subfamilies Bovinae and Antilopinae. Taxonomically their place in the animal world can be illustrated as follows: 1. Kingdom: Animalia 2. Phylum: Vertebrates 3. Class: Mammalia 4. Order: Cetartiodactyla 5. Family: Bovidae ( buffalo and antelope) 5.1 Subfamily: Bovinae 5.1.1. Tribes: (i) Bovini (buffaloes) (ii) Tragelaphini (spiral horned antelopes) 5.2 Subfamily: Antilopinae 5.2.1 Tribes: (i) Alcelaphini (the hartebeest group) (ii) Hippotragini (Sable, roan and gemsbok – the horse-like antelopes) (iii) Reduncini – (water related antelopes) (iv) Cephalophini (duikers) (v) Antilopini (Small antelopes) (vi) Peleini (Vaal rhebok) 9 (vii) Neotragini (Antelopes with short straight horns) (viii) Aepycerotini (impalas) (ix) Oreotragini ( klipspringer) Bovids, including all antelopes, are ruminants, belonging to the sub-order ruminantia. A ruminant can be defined as an even-toed ungulate with a four-chambered stomach that regurgitates the plant material that it feeds on in order to rechew it as part of the digestive process. Through a process of fermentation the indigestible plant cellulose is transformed into digestible carbohydrates by bacteria living in the animal‟s digestive system. Fermentation occurs mainly in the rumen; the largest of the four stomach chambers, and happens before the plant material reaches the acidsecreting stomach. This enables the ruminant to better transform cellulose into carbohydrates than is the case with non-ruminants. Ruminants have only lower incisors and a thick calloused pad in the place of upper incisors. Plant material is grasped and plucked between the lower incisors and the pad and then chewed with the cheek teeth and swallowed. When chewing the cud, mouthfuls of regurgitated food are ground between the molars by repeatedly moving the lower jaw sideways. Deer are different to antelope and did not occur historically in Africa, although some deer have been imported into South Africa and are doing reasonably well there. Deer belong to the family Cervidae, whilst antelope belong to the family Bovidae. Africa‟s only native deer is the Barbary red deer (Cervus elaphus barbarous) of North Africa. Deer‟s home range is Europe, Asia and North America. In most deer species only the males have antlers which they shed seasonally. The exceptions are the Siberian musk deer, Moschus moschiferous, and the Chinese water deer, Hydropotes inermis, (they do have not antlers at all) and the Caribou or Reindeer, Rangifer tarandus, where both sexes have antlers. The antlers consist entirely of bone and usually have elaborate branching patterns. After shedding, the antlers soon begin to grow again. During regrowth, the expanding bone is covered with a thin layer of skin known as velvet, which helps protect the growing tissue. Since the entire antler is alive, growth is not limited to the base (as is the case in horns) and this result in specie-specific antler branching patterns. In North America the pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) is usually referred as „antelope‟. This is unfortunate as the pronghorn is not an antelope; it is the single species belonging to the family Antilocapridae, a different family from Cervidae and Bovidae. The horns of the pronghorn are also different: each horn is comprised of a slender, laterally-flattened blade of bone which grows from the frontal bones of the skull, forming a permanent core. The bony core is covered in a keratinous sheath which is shed and regrown annually. Unlike the horns of the family Bovidae, the 10 horn sheaths of the pronghorn are branched, each sheath possessing a forward pointing tine (hence the name pronghorn). Great migrations and vast herds Africa used to be home to unbelievably large herds of ungulates, many of whom were migrating freely with the seasons in search of better grazing. It was a wild continent with a relatively low human population density. Al this has however changed considerably over the last 150 years. The vast masses of migrating - and resident - herds of ungulates have largely disappeared. In fact, much of Africa‟s wildlife has disappeared. The last great migrations in Africa are the wildebeest migration across the Serengeti, the wildebeest migration on the Liuwa Plains, the zebra migration between the Linyanti Swamps and the Mababe Depression, the occasional eland and wildebeest migrations in the Kalahari Thirstland, and the recently rediscovered migration of tiang and white-eared kob in the swamps of southern Sudan. The great springbok migrations, consisting of millions of animals, to the coast of the Northern Cape are also gone forever. These herds were so large that 19 th century hunters, explorers and other travellers sometimes had to camp for days in a place waiting for the massive herds to pass. Although there are still many springbok left, their numbers are but a minute fraction of what it used to be. The Scottish hunter, R. Gordon Cumming, hunted extensively in Southern Africa in the mid 1800‟s and described some of his encounters with springboks as follows in his book “ A Hunters Life in South Africa “ published in 1850 : “I soon perceived herds of springbok in every direction, which , on my following at a hard gallop, continued to join one another until the whole plain seemed alive with them .Upon our crossing a sort of ridge on the plain I beheld the whole country as far as my eye could reach actually white with springboks , with here and there a herd of black gnoos or wildebeest, prancing and capering in every direction …..” Later on he describes another encounter: “…..This was the most extraordinary and striking scene …..that I ever beheld. For about two hours before the day dawned I had been lying awake in my wagon , listening to the grunting of the bucks within two hundred yards of me , imagining that some large herd of springboks was feeding beside my camp; but on my rising when it was clear , and looking about me , I beheld the ground northward of my camp actually covered with a dense living mass of springboks , marching slowly and steadily along , extending from an opening in a long range of hills on the west , through which they continued pouring , like the flood of some great river , to a ridge about a mile to the north-east , over which they disappeared. The breadth of the ground they covered might have been about half a mile. I stood upon the fore chest of my wagon for nearly two hours, lost in wonder at the novel and wonderful scene, and had some difficulty convincing myself that it was reality which I beheld. During this time their vast legions continued streaming through 11 the neck in the hills in one unbroken compact phalanx. At length I saddled up and rode into the middle of them with my rifle ….” In his book “ The Recollections of an Elephant Hunter 1864 – 1875 “ William Finnaughty wrote as follows about his 1864 trek across the vast open plains of the Free State on his way to the hunting fields of Bechuanaland : “The game I saw there astonished me so much that I thought it was not requisite to go much further afield. I could never have believed that such a quantity of wild animals would congregate together. As far the eye could see it was one moving mass , tens of thousands of beautiful wild creatures of many kinds , consisting for the most part of black wildebeest , blesbok , springbok , a sprinkling of ostrich , quagga , and blue wildebeest .” Such sights will never be seen again in South Africa. But Africa is not all bad news. The recent discovery of the great migrations in the south of Sudan is really fantastic news (see www.wcs.org/international/africa/sudanprogram for details). Researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society ( “WCS “) recently discovered, by way of aerial survey, about 1,3 million migrating white-eared kob, tiang antelope and Mongalla gazelle in Southern Sudan – a country torn apart by decades of devastating civil war which left more than two million people dead. Based on experiences elsewhere in Africa it was feared that the Southern Sudan‟s wildlife had largely disappeared. This region was last surveyed in 1982, just before the civil war broke out. Currently there is peace in Sudan and there is hope that the game lands of Southern Sudan will be opened in time to come for eco-tourism and hunting. The WCS estimates that there are more than 800 000 white-eared kob, 250 000 Mongalla gazelle, 160 000 tiang antelope, 13 000 reedbuck, 8 900 buffalo, 8 000 elephant and 2 800 ostrich in the region. It can only be hoped that the opening of Southern Sudan and the inevitable development of infrastructure, will not result in mass poaching and loss of habitat. The first Dutch settlers set foot in the Cape in South Africa in 1652. It took them a long time to start venturing into the interior, but when they did they found herds of game that seemed endless. Vast numbers of elephant, rhino, zebra, hippopotamus, giraffe, antelope and predator were almost everywhere. Hunting became a way of life in South Africa and many farmers made a living essentially from hunting. The world demand for ivory seemed insatiable; the hides of buffalo, eland and giraffe had many uses and fetched good prices; the meat was turned into biltong; and Europe demanded more and more ostrich feathers. It was not long before the blue buck, the quagga and the lion became extinct in the then Cape colony. The first half of the 19 th century saw a mass migration of Boers to the north, beyond the Orange River, in search of freedom from British rule. When gold and diamonds were discovered, adventurers from all corners of the earth flocked to the new mining fields. Many of those not successful at mining became full time hunters. In those days conservation and preservation simply did not feature in the value system of modern man. Rather, the pioneers believed the land had to be cleared and “tamed” so that it could be settled and developed. It was only the farsightedness of Paul Kruger, president of 12 the Transvaal Republic that led to the establishment of the first game reserves, the Pongola and the Sabie, at the end of the 19th century. By then the game numbers in South Africa had been reduced dramatically and the elephant hunters had to venture much further into the interior. It took much longer for Central Africa to open up to the white hunters. By the middle of the 19th century the first great white explorers had already penetrated into most of “deepest, darkest“ Africa. They brought back fascinating reports of fauna and flora encountered on their travels, but it took a while for the “white hunters” to have any impact of the vast numbers of game animals. The Portuguese, who had established themselves in Angola and Mozambique for centuries, were not hunters and they did not bother to venture further into the interior. The great game herds of Central Africa were only disturbed by tribal hunting with primitive weapons such as bows and arrows, assegais, trapping and fire. This had little impact on the mass of wildlife. By the end of the 19th century, the isolation of Central Africa came to an end. The continent had been colonized by the European powers that established colonial administrations and started developing infrastructure. The hunters and settlers with their modern firearms were not far behind. They were either not able to foresee the inevitable vast destruction of the game masses, or they did not care. Elephant hunting became almost an obsession and the major ports around Africa‟s coast kept on providing Europe and the Far East with shiploads and shiploads of ivory. There were few regulations in any of the colonies to control hunting, and even if there were, the colonies lacked the resources to enforce effective control. The result was a massive slaughter of elephant, rhino, hippo, buffalo, giraffe and other game. It was only in the 20th century that game reserves were established and that the colonial powers managed to establish some degree of control over the hunting industry. When the colonies gained independence in the middle of the twentieth century, much of the conservation and game management efforts established under colonial rule, collapsed and indiscriminate killing of wildlife with automatic rifles, particularly the AK-47, took place on a large scale. Countries like Somalia, Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire and before that the Belgian Congo), Liberia and Sierra Leone are still in chaos and many species came to the brink of extinction. In North Africa the game animals suffered an even worse fate. The French troops who were sent to Africa in nineteenth century, encountered vast numbers of wild animals. Lions were particularly numerous and took a regular toll of the flocks and herds of Arab and Berber. But there were also great numbers of gazelle, addax, and scimitar horned oryx, and the like. The troops, and the settlers who followed on their heels, soon became devoted hunters. Overhunting in a fragile environment had a devastating effect on the game numbers. The last lions in Algeria and Tunisia were killed round about 1890, and in Morocco the last one was reportedly shot in 1922. Today North Africa‟s game stocks have been reduced to small fragments of their former ranges and numbers. Many species are either extinct or are on the brink of extinction. The main threats to Africa‟s wildlife today are habitat loss (mostly as a result of human settlement, over-grazing by domestic livestock and urban development, and deforestation); weakened gene pools as a result of animals being confined to relatively small conservation areas; and poaching of which there are three types. 13 Most of Africa is extremely poor and a single family can include several wives, many children, grandparents, etc. There are no job opportunities for these rural people and poaching plays an important role in keeping body and soul together. This subsistence poaching is however not the worst kind. The second type of poaching is the organized poaching for rhino horn and ivory. This industry is largely controlled by unscrupulous operators from the Far East and corrupt officials in the African governments, especially those in the wildlife departments and the military. But it seems that the CITES convention, and antipoaching efforts in countries like Botswana, Namibia and Tanzania, is having an effect and poaching of rhino and elephant has been reduced. The third type of poaching is the organized commercial poaching for the bush meat trade. This form of poaching is indiscriminate and everything is killed – females, males, young and old. And no species are spared. Poachers kill everything they can find where after they dry or smoke the meat for sale to a huge market all over Africa. The bush meat trade is having such a devastating effect on Africa‟s wildlife that it warrants more in depth discussion. The bushmeat horror Man and wildlife used to co-exist in sub-Sahara Africa for thousands of years and wildlife have always been regarded as a free and readily available source of protein. Hunting has always been for subsistence purposes and African hunters took just enough for their own subsistence. The offtake by subsistence hunters did not have much of an impact on the masses of wildlife which were abundant everywhere. With the colonization of Africa in the 19th century by the European powers, everything started to change. The white man brought with him modern medicine, new technology and new legal and administrative systems. Within a hundred years most of Africa was transformed from rural tribal societies living in a very traditional way to modern countries with cities and towns, roads and railways, airports, hospitals, schools, etc., etc. One of the major consequences of the African transformation was a human population explosion that put the natural environment under severe pressure. People started to leave the traditional villages to settle in towns and cities in an attempt to find a better life. But to this day traditional hunting is regarded as an absolute right throughout East, Central and West Africa. In the modern Africa man not only hunts for subsistence purposes: hunting has become a full time commercial occupation for many in the absence of other job or career opportunities. In many villages most of the able men hunt regularly – some more than others. Modern Africa is putting immense pressure on humans to earn cash to pay for food, school fees, rent, clothes, medicines, transport, etc. The hunting pressure increased not only as a result of the rapid growth in human populations, but also as a result of access to modern firearms and ammunition, as well as access to areas that have hitherto been difficult to exploit. The development of new roads built by logging and mining companies into once inaccessible forests has contributed in no small way to the decline of wildlife – particularly the forest duikers and primates. Not only are the logging companies overexploiting pristine forest, they provide hunters/poachers easy access to pristine wilderness areas. It is now also easier to transport the meat back to the towns and cities. Today, uncontrolled commercial hunting is taking place at an unprecedented scale, particularly in West and Central Africa and parts of East Africa. The offtake is not nearly sustainable and it would be very naïve to expect the wildlife populations to 14 withstand this serious onslaught and over utilization. All wild animals are harvested for the bushmeat trade: bovines, primates, birds, rodents, reptiles – everything is killed and consumed. Throughout much of Africa, but particularly West and Central Africa and up into the Horn of Africa, the bushmeat trade is having a devastating effect on wildlife. Although many scientific papers have been published over the years, nothing is changing: Africa is devouring its wildlife heritage and in the not too distant future there may be nothing left. In some areas it is already difficult to find any primates or duikers; in others they have been extirpated. In some areas bushmeat has become a luxury and consumption is declining due to dwindling supplies. Even when bushmeat becomes more expensive than meat from domestic animals, it is still preferred and the demand remains strong. Most of the Africans, especially in West and Central Africa, have always preferred bushmeat to domestic stock such as cattle and sheep. They prefer the taste and believe the quality is better. Bushmeat is regarded as one the most important products coming out of the forests. Bushmeat hunters prefer to hunt at night with a flashlight and a shotgun. This enables them to also shoot nocturnal species such as civets, genets, pottos and porcupines. During the day they could shoot birds, monkeys and other mammals, but it seems that night time hunting is, on average, more profitable. It is believed that each hunter gets, roughly, about ten animals per week. Those who do not own guns, make use of snares. The hunters know their hunting areas extremely well and know exactly where to set snares for different species. Each hunter sets a number of snares – up to one hundred or more – and checks these on a regular basis but not necessarily daily. Traditionally, hunting also used to be undertaken with nets, but this practice has largely disappeared except amongst the Pygmies of the Central African rainforests. Normally all the men in the village would participate in the hunt. They would use four or five nets into which they would drive the animals before killing them. The proceeds of the hunt would then be shared amongst the villagers. Primates are also hunted by surrounding the tree in which they sleep and then killing them as they descend to the ground. Dogs are also sometimes used. Large primates such as gorillas and chimpanzees are not only killed for the bushmeat trade; capturing baby chimps and gorillas is „big business‟. These large primates are usually shot or speared and the babies taken. To capture one baby may however require a number of adults be killed. Some of the bushmeat is obviously consumed by the hunter and his family, but a lot is being sold. The meat is either smoked or consumed fresh. The hunters usually sell their meat, either smoked or fresh, to „middle men‟ who travel along the main routes in the area in vehicles purchasing meat in the villages. Live animals may also sometimes be purchased. The middle men would then sell their meat to the butchers at the markets in the towns and cities. Many people make a living either as hunters, middle men or bushmeat butchers. Truckload after truckload of bush meat is delivered to the markets on an ongoing basis. Fresh meat fetches premium prices. Smoked meat is therefore the cheapest, fresh meat is more expensive and live animals are the most expensive. Each of the markets normally has a number of butchers selling smoked or fresh meat. Some species such as crocodiles, tortoises and large fruit bats may be kept alive and slaughtered in public at the market in order to serve fresh meat. The feet of 15 the bats are often tied together in bunches and they are then hung from a roof or pole to prevent them flying away. The butcher continuously prods them with a sharp wire or bicycle wheel spoke to make them scream out loudly and in this way customers are attracted to the butcher‟s table. The current uncontrolled over exploitation wildlife in the form of bushmeat cannot continue at the current level. It is only a matter of time before Central and West Africa, at least, will be without any wildlife. To make matters worse, the forests are also disappearing fast as timber is shipped to first world countries. Africa is heading towards a calamity, a disaster of grotesque proportions. Most countries have the necessary legislation in place to control the bushmeat trade. The real problem, however, is law enforcement. Most governments do not have the capability or the will to enforce the legislation. And the hunters, middle men and butchers know that. De facto it is a „free for all‟. It is thus not surprising that many National Parks throughout Africa are subjected to ongoing poaching. Huge quantities of meat are flowing out the National Parks and other conservation areas into the urban cooking pots. Whether Africa will be able to manage the consumption of game meat down to sustainable levels remains to be seen. Human populations are still growing and the need for sensible land use practices and rational harvesting of wildlife is critically important for the survival of rural people as well as wildlife. Unfortunately, the sustainable utilization of wildlife and natural resources is not always high enough on the political agendas. Eco-tourism and wildlife To get an idea nowadays of the Africa that explorers such as Livingstone, Stanley, Burton, and Speke encountered in the mid 19th century, one has to visit one of the great game parks such as the Serengeti, the Ngorogoro, the Selous and the Ruaha in Tanzania; the Etosha in Namibia; the Chobe and the Okavango in Botswana; the Kruger and the Kalahari in South Africa; and the Luangwa Valley in Zambia. Hunters are also privileged to hunt some pristine African wildernesses in Southern and Eastern Africa. Even in these wildlife havens some species have disappeared, such as the black and the white rhino in Botswana and Zambia. The game parks are also commercialised – some more than others – and any visit is subject to a strict set of rules. Yet it does provide a glimpse of what Africa once was. And it is still a wonderfully enriching experience to visit one of these great game parks. The hunting concessions are less “rule orientated” and offer a unique Africa experience. Parks like the Kruger, the Masai Mara and the Amboseli are visited by very large numbers of tourists throughout the year and have to be intensely managed. Some wildlife addicts therefore avoid these parks and rather visit parks where the pressure from tourism is less. Reality is however that for Africa‟s conservation areas to be successful in the 21st century and to survive the onslaughts of the ever increasing human populations, they will have to be properly managed and controlled. Most of the parks and reserves in Africa have been abused or threatened to some degree. Conservation areas often has to deal with large human settlements such as refugees seeking safety from civil war or unrest, and agriculturists and pastoralists settling 16 with the boundaries; invasion by domestic stock; poaching and illegal hunting; and illegal mining, logging and firewood extraction. In many so-called conservation areas there are very little control or management and it is not unusual to find species extirpated from these areas. Although wildlife still thrive in some countries (such as South Africa, Namibia, Tanzania, Kenya) most African countries have very little left of their once abundant and rich wildlife heritage (such as Somalia, Ethiopia, Malawi, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, etc., etc.). Only a few of Africa‟s parks are completely fenced and these are mostly south of the Zambezi River. Fencing severs ancient migration routes and necessitates intensive management to maintain ecological balances. Yet, fencing has become absolutely essential in order to protect man and beast from one another as large human populations are often found right up to the boundary of the park. The impact that large numbers of tourists have on many national parks and reserves is also problematic. The hordes of safari vehicles harassing the wildlife in Kenya‟s Masai Mara and Amboseli are seriously distasteful. If a lion or a leopard should venture near one of the roads in the Kruger it will in no time be surrounded by a large number of vehicles with excited tourists. This is no longer a wilderness experience. Some parks have thus adopted a policy of „low volume high income tourism‟. The visitor numbers are restricted but they have to pay top dollars for the privilege. This approach unfortunately puts the reserve beyond the means of the local population which is not ideal. If the above paragraphs have a negative tone, the good news is that there are also breathtakingly beautiful wildernesses in Africa with astonishing wildlife. Places where modern man is able to really re-connect with the natural world. A visit to the wildernesses of the Kalahari, the Okavango, the Namib, the Kaokoland, the Luangwa Valley, the Selous, the Ruaha and the other reserves of southern Tanzania, and Uganda‟s Queen Elizabeth and Murchison Falls National parks will leave an everlasting impression. It is an enriching experience beyond description. The landscapes and the fauna and flora simply blow the mind. It should be realised however that Africa is still going through enormous political, social and economic changes and that this puts the last true African Edens inevitably at risk. Unfortunately, most eco-tourists do not come to Africa to see antelopes; their interest is typically the „Big Five‟: lion, leopard, buffalo, elephant and rhino. Yet, there are antelope species and subspecies that are much more rare and endangered than any of the members of the „Big Five‟. Most visitors do not realise that to see a Hunter‟s hartebeest or a Jentink‟s duiker in the wild, for example, is much more special than encountering an elephant (not that encounters with the „Big Five‟ are NOT also special). The reason is that the plight of Africa‟s antelopes seldom makes headlines. Elephant, rhinos and lions are big news but the lesser known antelope species find it difficult to get the attention of the First World. Yet Africa and the world become infinitely poorer with each species that becomes extinct. The mere thought of an 17 Africa without most of its antelope species is simply too ghastly to contemplate. The realisation that extinction is irreversible and permanent is also extremely frightening. There is fortunately hope for Africa and its wildlife. Not all the changes in Africa are bad; there are also a lot of good things happening. Government is improving in many countries, economic policies are becoming more responsible, the rest of the world is willing to become constructively engaged on the former „Dark Continent‟, and in some instances economic growth is now exceeding the population growth. Let‟s hope that the conservation strategies and plans for Africa‟s remaining wildlife that conservationists are coming up with, will be effectively implemented and that the slide towards a wasteland will be halted. It is unlikely that Africa will be able to achieve this on its own; the support and intervention of the First World is essential. Success will depend on Africa‟s ability to move away from extractive consumptive use of natural resources to sustainable nature-based economies. Cape eland in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Photo: Willem Frost 18 The Antelopes of Africa The Spiral horned antelopes (Subfamily: Bovinae, Tribe: Tragelaphini) The spiral horned antelopes are medium sized to large antelopes. Males are noticeably larger than females. The spiral horns are absent in the females of some species. They are characterised by face and body spots and stripes but this differ from species to species. They do not have any glands on the face or the feet. Greater Kudu (Tragelaphus strrepsiceros) occur widespread over much of subSahara Africa where ever there is suitable habitat. Four races are recognised: (i) The Southern Greater Kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros strepsiceros) of Southern Africa (ii) The East African Greater Kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros bea) of Kenya, Tanzania, north-eastern Uganda and south-eastern Sudan. (iii) The Western Greater Kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros cottoni) of southeastern Chad, north-eastern Central African Republic and far western Sudan. (iv) The Abyssinian Greater Kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros chora) of Ethiopia and Sudan They are found in savannah woodland, usually not too far from water. Expect to find them in thickets or bush large and dense enough to provide cover. In the arid areas they keep to woodland on the fringes of watercourses. They normally avoid open grassland. It is believed that the kudu is one of the few animals that benefited from human settlement and overgrazing by domestic stock in that additional habitat was created for them as a consequence. It is likely that kudu has expanded their range over the last 150 years, especially in South Africa. Kudu are predominantly browsers and utilise an extremely wide range of plant species. Their distribution range is quite wide and they therefore have to utilise a wide range of plant species. Also, within a given habitat they utilise almost all plant species; the main diet consisting of leaves from trees and shrubs. Kudu may be active at any time during the day or night. Browsing by kudu led to a fascinating discovery by researchers in the late 20th century. It was found on game ranches in the then Northern Transvaal (now Limpopo), South Africa, that many kudu are dying even though it would appear that they clearly had enough food. Many of them died with full stomachs. A research team under Professor Wouter van der Hoven from the University of Pretoria then found that when a tree or shrub is being browsed upon, it increases the tannin levels in its leaves significantly, to such an extent that the animal is unable to digest the “food”. This was clearly a case of too many kudu having to live of the available browsing. The research team also found that when a tree is beaten with a stick, or browsed upon, the tannin levels in the surrounding trees also increases. The trees have thus not only developed a remarkable defence mechanism, but they also seem to be able to communicate “danger” to their neighbours. A bull‟s horns grow throughout his life and he is generally regarded as a good hunting trophy when the third turn in the horns has developed. He is then about eight 19 years old and past his breeding prime. Kudu horns can vary markedly from one animal to another. Some have a deep curl, others have a swallow curl. Sometimes the horns are quite widespread; others have narrow horns. A deep curl usually results in a greater overall length. Kudu are gregarious and occur in small herds of up to fifteen animals (although I have seen thirty kudu together), but the herd size can vary with the seasons. Mature bulls stay with the females for much of the year, but in summer they leave the herd to form “bachelor herds“ of ten or more animals. Kudus are not territorial but have home ranges. They often “freeze” in dense bush and have a remarkable ability to melt away into the shadows and foliage. They have not developed the reputation as the “grey ghosts of the African bush” for nothing – it is a reputation well earned. Like the majority of antelope inhabiting wooded terrain, the kudu is not a particularly proficient runner, for superior speed is not the appropriate defense mechanism in this habitat. When confronted by danger the kudu‟s immediate reaction is rather to stay absolutely still. As long as the animal remains motionless it is fairly safe, its outline practically indistinguishable from the ever shifting light and shade of the bush and undergrowth; but once it moves, the kudu‟s presence may be betrayed by the vertical stripes on the body or the horns catching sunlight. Despite their large size, kudus are accomplished jumpers and can clear obstacles of 2.5 meters (8,25 feet) with ease. The noble, elegant and graceful kudu is regarded by many as the aristocrat of the African bush. The bull is indeed an imposing antelope with a proud bearing but is also timid and shy with very well developed eyesight and senses of hearing and smelling. Southern Greater kudu bull. Photo: Willem Frost 20 Kudu cows do not carry horns. Photo: Willem Frost Magnificent trophy kudu bull in Botswana’s Chobe National Park. Photo: Willem Frost 21 The Lesser kudu (Tragelaphus imberbis) is to be found in the dry scrub and thorn bush country of East Africa. The total remaining population is estimated to exceed 100 000 animals but only a third occur in protected areas. The decline in numbers will most probably continue as a result of excessive hunting and competition with domestic livestock of pastoralists. They are very shy animals and largely crepuscular, feeding mostly at dawn and dusk. During the heat of the day they usually hide in dense cover. They are essentially browsers, but will also graze on grasses if it is green and fresh. They are able to inhabit drier country than the Greater kudu and can go for long periods without water during the dry season. When water is available, however, they will drink regularly. Lesser kudus are residential, but they are not territorial. Although females may form small herds, lesser kudus are mostly seen in pairs with their offspring, if any. They have excellent scent and hearing senses. Their natural enemies are wild dogs, leopards and lions. The lesser kudu typically inhabits deciduous bush and thickets with Acacia and Commiphora. They are browsers, like the greater kudu. Photo: iStock 22 The Giant Eland (Tragelaphus derbianus) is a very large bovine, but highly nomadic, moving over vast ranges as the seasons change. They have been exterminated in much of their former distribution range but scattered populations scan still be found in the narrow belt of Isoberlinia woodland between the dry savannah of the pre-Sahara and the wetter forests and grasslands to the south. Their range used to stretch from Senegal in the west to Sudan in the east. Two sub-species are recognised: the Western Giant eland (Tragelaphus derbianus derbianus) and the Central African Giant Eland (Tragelaphus derbianus gigas). The western race is found west of the Niger River and is rufous coloured with fifteen vertical stripes, whilst the eastern race is slightly larger, has a sand-grey colour and twelve vertical body stripes. They are mixed feeders confined to the Isoberlinia doka woodlands where they feed on dominant leguminous trees such as Isoberlinia and Julbernardia as well as herbs and new grass growth. The Central African giant eland, however, likes to browse (more so than the Western giant eland) and is particularly fond of the wild gardenias. Just like the common eland, they have the habit of breaking branches with their horns to get at fresh leaves. They are gregarious and form herds of up to sixty animals, but they are highly nomadic as they need large quantities of food to sustain the huge bodies. They feed mostly at night but are not nocturnal animals and are also active during the day. Giant elands are much more dependent on water than common elands and they need to drink regularly. They are extremely shy and their senses of smelling and hearing are very well developed. When resting, a herd will put out sentries, usually cows, to warn them of approaching danger. Western giant eland. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 23 There are three races of Common eland (Tragelaphus oryx): (i) The Cape eland (Tragelaphus oryx oryx). They are found in Namibia, Botswana, South Africa and the southern parts of Mozambique. (ii) Patterson’s eland (Tragelaphus oryx pattersonianus) which occurs in East Africa (Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, and some parts of Uganda, Kenya, Sudan and Ethiopia). (iii) Livingstone’s eland (Tragelaphus oryx livinstonii). They occur immediately north of the Cape eland and are found in the far north of Namibia and Botswana, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi and southeastern Zaire. They have also been introduced on some game farms in South Africa and n some instances this unfortunately led to crossbreeding with the Cape eland. The Cape eland is characterized by an absence of stripes in the adults. The Livingstone‟s eland is more richly colored and has six to ten vertical white stripes down the sides and a dark brown band on the back of the forelegs just above the knees. The Patterson‟s eland (also known as the East African eland) is more rufous with clear white stripes, often with an incomplete white chevron across the face just below the eyes. All mature eland bulls usually also have a black or chocolate-brown mat of hairs on the forehead. The Livingstone eland is name after the 19th century Scottish missionary and explorer Dr David Livingstone. Patterson‟s eland is named after Col JH Patterson of the “Man-eaters of Tsavo” fame. The eland is the world‟s largest antelope. They are heavily built with a muscular neck and a double dewlap. Yet they have a remarkable ability to leap – similar to the impala and the kudu. They are phenomenal runners, trotting across the plains and savannahs in long strides. Eland are much, much lighter on their feet than the buffalo which is roughly of the same size and weight. The eland is difficult to hunt or to study because of their notorious shyness and restlessness. They are gregarious and form herds and when on the move they stretch out in single file, usually lead by a mature bull. At the first sign of danger, they break into their characteristic determined trot. Pregnant females and young often cannot keep up and will follow way behind. The leading bull may sometimes turn back to urge the stragglers on, but if they cannot keep up with the herd they will be left behind. The eland is nevertheless a docile and intelligent animal. Attempts to domesticate them have met with limited success due to their wanderlust. Cases of hybridization with kudu and domestic cattle have been reported, but this phenomenon is very rare. Elands utilize a wide range of habitat ranging from arid scrubland to woodlands and montane grassland as well as fynbos and open sour-grasslands. They are not water dependant but will drink regularly if water is available. They are diurnal and most active in morning and late afternoon. At times they may also be active in the evenings. The eland is mainly a browser but will also feed on fresh, new growth of various grass species. They also take forbs and fruits. The diet changes with the 24 seasons though and is a function of what is available at the time. They use their horns very effectively to break branches from trees and brushes in order to get at green leaves. When a branch is broken from a tree, other eland may try to take some of the leaves but they are usually chased away or threatened or pushed out of the way. Eland take their food with the lips without using the tongue at all. They are gregarious antelopes; the size of the herd can vary from less than ten animals to more than a thousand. In some areas, such as the arid Kalahari, they move over vast distances whilst in other areas their movements are more restricted. The movements of the eland herds are largely determined by the availability of food. They are not territorial and do not defend a territory. They are rather nomadic, migratory antelopes that always seem to be on the move. Their travels can cover hundreds of kilometers per annum. On fenced game ranches and smaller game reserves they roam the entire area across al habitat types. Their home range is thus typically very large. Elands are known for their loud clicking sound when walking. Hunters in particular will be familiar with this. The cause of this clicking has been in dispute for a very long time. Some thought it comes from the hooves; others believe it is the knees that cause it. But no one really knew. Scientists from the Zoological Society of London and the University of Copenhagen have recently established that the clicking sounds produced by walking eland bulls correlates to body size and are signals to show the bulls' fighting potential. The sound is thought to be made as a tendon in the animals' legs slips over one of the leg bones, and can be heard from hundreds of meters away. The sound signals how large - and thus how fighting fit - the eland bulls are. The bulls can thus establish mating rights among each other while avoiding actual fights. This is yet another interesting way in which eland bulls advertise their status, like the dewlap under their throats which indicates age, and the darkness of their hair which indicates levels of aggression. The eland‟s ability to jump is legendary and they can easily clear obstacles of two meters (6 feet) high despite their enormous size. They are shy animals and will not hesitate to take off when disturbed. Their typical trot always seems never ending and they usually go a very long way before stopping. Eland groom themselves as well others. During the calving season the bulls will leave the herd and the cows will form nursing groups that will include sub-adults. Although the bulls will maintain a strong hierarchical structure when they are with the breeding herd, they are not aggressive and fighting is unusual. It was thus very surprising when an eland bull attacked and killed a game farmer in South Africa in 2009. 25 Female Cape eland. Note the horns. Photo: Willem Frost A large Cape eland bull – no body stripes. Photo: Willem Frost 26 East African or Patterson’s eland. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen The Western Bongo (Tragelaphus eurycerus eurycerus) occurs in the forest zone along the Equator and in some areas north of it. There are two distinct populations: the western population which occurs from Sierra Leone eastward to Togo, and the eastern population which are found from the Sanaga River in Cameroon eastwards to Central African Republic and northern DRC. The bongo and the okapi are the only true browsing mammals of the equatorial rain forests. The bongo is a large antelope but is crepuscular and nocturnal which makes it difficult to see in its dense forest habitat. In addition, the reddish brown coat with its white streaks and spots make them virtually invisible. Both males and females carry magnificent lyre shaped horns. Their numbers are on the decline due to hunting and poaching pressure and loss of habitat. Increased human activity such as commercial logging remains a major threat. The Mountain Bongo (Tragelaphus eurycerus isaaci), also known as the „East African‟ or „Kenya Bongo‟, is endemic to the mountain rain forests of Kenya. The Mountain Bongo is heavier and darker in colour than the western race. This may be the result of the mountain habitat and a different diet. The Mountain Bongo is also known to grow bigger horns than the Western Bongo. Due to rampant poaching and habitat loss through illegal logging on the slopes of Mount Kenya, the Mountain Bongo population was virtually wiped out. The Kenya Wildlife Service then, incredibly, introduced captured problem lions from other areas and they found the bongo to be easy prey. Not surprisingly, these lions were later culled. Subsequently, the Rare Species Conservation Fund initiated a project to relocate about 60 animals in the Aberdares. These animals came mainly from zoos around the world. 27 Bongo is found in small herds of five to twenty animals. Old bulls normally leave the herd to live a solitary life or with one or two other old bulls. The Mountain Bongo is very fond of bamboo shoots, but bongos generally utilize a wide range of leaves, shoots, fruit, bulbs, bark and roots in their diet. In areas where they are regularly disturbed by man, they may become even more nocturnal. Eastern Bongo must be regarded as critically endangered. There are less than 200 animals left, spread over only four very small sub-populations. Note the dark colour of the Mountain bongo – bull above and the cow below. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 28 All Bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus) races prefer riverine woodland and thickets close to water. Tropical habitat with dense cover and permanent water is ideal for bushbuck. They often emerge to feed in open areas but never stray far from cover. Taxonomists have recognised ten different races of bushbuck: The Harnessed bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus scriptus) Menelik‟s or Arushi bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus meneleki) Masai bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus massaicus) Nile bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus bor) Barker‟s bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus barkeri) Abyssinian bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus decula) Shoan bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus powelli) Chobe bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus ornatus) Limpopo bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus roualeyni) Cape bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus sylvaticus) The bushbuck is the smallest of the „spiral horned antelopes‟. It is found throughout most of sub-Sahara Africa in densely wooded habitat. The bushbuck is a selective concentrate feeder browsing on forbs, shrubs and trees but will also take fruits, flowers, berries, mushrooms, fungi, shoots and a little grass. They need browse that is not only palatable and easily digestible, but also high in protein and carbohydrate and low in fiber. It is not surprising that bushbuck do not handle drought very well and that they succumb easily to feeding stress. They also need to drink daily and availability of water is an important habitat requirement. Barker‟s bushbuck, also known as the giant bushbuck, is noted for its impressive horns and large body. It is named after Major W.R. Barker, who collected the first specimen in 1918. The bushbuck is a solitary, crepuscular antelope. During the day they hide in the cover of thickets. They may however sometimes be seen early in the morning and late in the afternoon when they feed in open sunny spots. They are able swimmers and are found on islands such as those on Lake Victoria. When pursued they will readily take refuge in the water. When sensing rivalry, or when being threatened, the ram raises a mane of hairs on his back and may also bark. Despite its modest size, the bushbuck ram is tough and aggressive and will defend himself vigorously against any enemy, using both hooves and the rapier sharp horns. It is not uncommon for a predator to be killed by a bushbuck. A wounded bushbuck can be very dangerous and hunters will pursue them with utmost caution. It has been reported that rams will place themselves between their family and a predator – a common habit amongst some Bovidae. Like the buffalo, they will ambush a pursuer in thick cover and charge at the last moment with the head held low and horns pointing straight ahead. Bushbucks are not territorial and do not have preorbital glands with which to mark territory. The home ranges overlap but they do not feed in the same spot at the same 29 time. During times of drought they are quite tolerant of other bushbuck and large groups (up to thirty animals) may then be seen feeding together. Otherwise they are mostly solitary antelopes, or may be seen in pairs or small family groups consisting on a ram and two or three ewes with their young. Group structures are however fragile and individuals regularly move from one family group to another. Sub-adult rams avoid the dominant ram and stay on the fringes of family group‟s home range. Cape bushbuck ram. They are mostly browsers and take only a little grass. Photo: Willem Frost 30 Chobe bushbuck pair. Photo: Willem Frost A young Limpopo bushbuck ram. Mature ram’s horns are spiraled and can reach in excess of 16 inches. Photo: Willem Frost 31 Limpopo bushbuck ewe on the Letaba River, Kruger National Park. Photo: Willem Frost Mature Masai bushbuck ram. They are territorial and may remain in same territory for years. The females do not have horns and are more brightly coloured. Photograph: Ariadne van Zandbergen 32 Menelik’s bushbuck in the Ethiopian mountains. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen The harnessed bushbuck is slightly smaller than other bushbuck races and the horns are also smaller. This ram (above) and ewe (below) were photographed in the Abuko Nature Reserve in The Gambia. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 33 Bushbuck rams have a reputation for pugnacious behavior and for turning on a pursuer. Photograph: Ariadne van Zandbergen 34 Female Nile bushbuck. Bushbuck are shy, elusive and crepuscular animals. Photograph: Ariadne van Zandbergen All bushbuck races prefer riverine woodland and thickets close to water. They often emerge to feed in open areas but never stray far from cover. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 35 Bushbuck in Uganda’s Queen Elizabeth National Park. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Nyala (Tragelaphus angasii) occur from Zululand in the south (where they are common) through Mozambique and into Malawi. The most northerly population is in Malawi‟s Lengwe National Park. They prefer hot, low-lying country with woodlands and thickets and dense riverine bush. Access to drinking water is an important habitat requirement. The nyala does not handle cold well and does not occur above 1400 meter. The word nyala comes from the Zulu name for the animal: „inxala’. The species is named after Douglas Angas who introduced the animal to the scientific world. The differences between male and female are striking: the bull is dark brown to dark grey-brown with up to 14 narrow white vertical stripes and a long mane along the length of the back and a fringe hanging under the body from the throat to the hind legs; the female has a chestnut colour and up to 18 vertical white stripes, but no long shaggy hair. Only the bull carries horns – shallow upward-curving spirals. The nyala also represents the dividing line for referring to antelopes as bulls and cows or rams and ewes. The female nyala is a ewe, but the male is a bull. Anything bigger than a nyala is called a bull or a cow, and anything smaller is a ram or a ewe. The nyala is a crepuscular animal and is a mixed feeder browsing especially on Acacia species, buffalo thorn and monkey apple. It is partial to fresh green grass and can often be seen grazing in open areas. Nyala also takes fallen fruit, fallen leaves, flowers and herbs. They utilize the same habitat as the bushbuck but are regarded as more successful since they are mixed feeders utilizing a wide range of plant material whereas the bushbuck is strictly a browser. Nyalas are not territorial and they have overlapping home ranges. The females‟ home ranges are much larger – as much as twice the size of the bulls‟. Nyala bulls 36 are real specialists in using visual display to advertise their presence and dominance. The dorsal ridge of long white hair is raised all along the back. The fringes underneath the body also make them bigger and the dark colour makes them look solid and heavy. Displays are usually sufficient to defuse any potential conflict situation. Fighting with the horns is unusual but when it happens it is serious and may result in death or injury. Bulls are often solitary, but small bachelor groups are also common. Nyalas are usually seen in small groups of four or five animals but temporary herds of up to thirty animals may from time to time be formed. These herds are usually seen grazing on fresh new grass in open areas. Breeding occurs throughout the year. The gestation period is about 220 days and a single lamb is normally born. The interval between births is in the order of 300 days. Nyalas are attractive and impressive animals and are very popular with trophy hunters. Bush encroachment as a result of over grazing by domestic stock has created additional habitat for nyala and, in South Africa, they have been successfully introduced to areas outside of their historical range. The nyala is fairly common throughout its range. The total population is at least 30 000and they occur mostly on public and private protected areas. The nyala is a very attractive antelope. Only the bull carries horns. Photo: Willem Frost 37 The female nyala is known as a ewe even though the male is a bull. Antelopes larger than the nyala are referred to as bulls and cows; smaller antelopes are rams and ewes. Photo: Willem Frost Nyala bull in Malawi’s Lengwe National Park. This is their most northerly distribution area. Photo: Willem Frost 38 The Mountain nyala (Tragelaphus buxtoni) was only discovered in 1908 and is endemic to the mountains of Ethiopia. It is named after its discoverer, Major Ivor Buxton and is an extremely rare antelope. Buxton did not realize that he had collected a new species of spiral horned antelope. When the specimen was examined by the South Kensington Museum in London, it was recognized as a new species and named the „spotted kudu’, but some later renamed the „mountain nyala’ - a name that has stuck up to now. DNA analysis has shown however that the mountain nyala is only remotely related to the common nyala, despite the apparent similarities of the bulls.The mountain nyala is in fact closer to the bushbuck and the sitatunga than to any other member of the Tragelaphus genus. It is the least numerous of the spiral horned antelopes, having a very restricted local distribution in some mountain ranges east of the Ethiopian rift valley. The number of remaining mature animals probably does not exceed 4000 individuals and the specie is under pressure from illegal hunting/poaching and loss of habitat. The best place to see them is the northern parts of Bale Mountains National Park. The South African hunter Peter Flack described two different types of mountain nyala in an article “Mountain Nyala – One of the Top Two African Trophies”, published in Issue 1, Volume 8 of “African Sporting Gazette”. He differentiates between the mountain nyalas of the high mountain heather and the so-called forest nyala. These two types not only utilizes different habitat but they also look and behave differently. He describes the differences as follows: “Forest nyala are a darker grey versus a minky brown, are bigger in body, eat differently (forest nyala are browsers whereas their upcountry cousins mainly graze), and their horns are shaped and constructed differently. Most of the forest variety has a very prominent ridge running around the horns and detailing the spiral. They curve sharply in and sharply out to create an acute angled lyre shape. The high mountain nyala lack the prominent ridge and have thinner more gently curving horns.” There is however no scientific rationale yet to recognize separate sub-species of the mountain Nyala. 39 The mountain nyala (bull above and cow below) is a rare and magnificent antelope, endemic to the mountains of Ethiopia. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 40 The Sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei) is perfectly adapted to a life in the swamps and marshes. Its long-haired coat and dark brown coloration with white traverse stripes across the back, enables the animal to conceal itself expertly in its swampy habitat. The hooves are 6-7 inches long and expand the moment they come into contact with the ground, ensuring firm footing on the slippery terrain. The sitatunga is the only bovid which, though not feeding in water, is capable of living permanently in water. When disturbed or threatened, the sitatunga will enter the water and swim away such that only the muzzle remains above the surface. It will stay in the water until it is safe to return to terra firma. The sitatunga is a very shy and timid animal. It is generally a solitary animal but may sometimes be seen in small groups. After feeding together they form loose associations and then move off in different directions. They spend the day hiding in the thick vegetation on the riverbank and venture out only at night to feed on drier ground. They make extensive use of well-defined, inter-connecting path systems through the reedbeds and papyrus in the swamps. The paths in the papyrus are more noticeable in areas with semi-solid substrate, but usually become indistinct in deeper water. Sitatunga can use an area of floating papyrus as a refuge for a couple of days at a time. A firm base which would keep it partially out of the water is often built by flattening the stems of papyrus. It will leave the papyrus bed to feed on the mainland and the adjacent reedbeds during the evening, the night and early morning. It will return when disturbed and to rest during the heat of the day. The following sub-species are generally recognized: (i) The Zambezi sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei selousi) of Zambia, southeastern Angola, Namibia‟s Caprivi Strip, northern Botswana, southeastern DRC and southwestern Tanzania (ii) The East African sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei spekei) which occurs in the swamps of northwestern Tanzania, Western Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, south central Sudan and parts of DRC. (iii) The Western sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei gratus) which ranges from Gambia and Senegal in the west through to the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the east. The main population is found in the Congo River basin. (iv) The Sesse Islands sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei sylvestris) which are endemic to the Sesse Islands, Lake Victoria, Uganda. (v) Some hunters and naturalists recognize separate sub-specie, the Forest Sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei larkeni) which occurs in southwestern Sudan near the DRC border, northern DRC and southern CAR. They vary considerably as far as stripes and spots are concerned and some are even completely without stripes and/or spots. Their range and status is unclear, but they are probably the same sub-specie as the Western Sitatunga. This sitatunga is named after Major Larken, who was the first to take one of these animals in 1931. 41 Young male Western Sitatunga of Gabon. Photo: Wikipedia East African sitatunga. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 42 A young male Ssese Island sitatunga; the horns are yet to appear. Photo: Lauren Droy Sable, Roan and Gemsbok (Subfamily: Antilopinae, Tribe: Hippotragini)) They are large, heavy animals with ridged horns present in both bulls and cows. They do not have facial glands but there are glands on all four feet. The facial markings are characteristic. The tail is relatively long and with a tuft at the end. The sable (Hippotragus niger) is regarded by many as the most attractive of Africa‟s antelopes. Its stately built; glistening black coat with white under parts, bristly mane and the magnificent scimitar-like ringed horns certainly gives it a regal appearance. It is a shy, nervous animal inclined to take off into the thickets at the least rustle of leaves or snap of twigs. The beautiful curving horns are deadly weapons and it is not uncommon for sable to kill a lion. When wounded, a sable will resist to the last, waiting for the enemy to come within striking range - its rear tucked into a bush and the head lowered. Sables are territorial and fighting amongst bulls is common. They engage in violent battle whilst kneeling on the front legs and the clashes of their horns can be heard from far away. 43 The following subspecies of sable are generally recognized: (i) The Common sable (Hippotragus niger niger) which is found in South Africa, northern Botswana, the Caprivi Strip of Namibia, southeastern Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique. (ii) The Roosevelt sable of East Africa (Hippotragus niger roosevelti). They occur from the Ruvuma River on the Tanzania/Mozambique border northwards to the Shimba Hills National Park in South East Kenya. (iii) The Western Zambian sable (Hippotragus niger kirkii). They resemble the giant sable in facial marking and horn length and , consequently, there was some controversy over their subspecie status. Some thought they might be closely related with the giant sable, or might have cross-bred with them. Others included them with H.n.niger, the common sable. Recent research by Bettine van Vuuren, however confirmed that the Western Zambian sable should be placed within the H.n.n. subspecies. It is not known whether Western Zambian and Giant sable hybrids exist and this possibility cannot be ruled out. (iv) Some taxonomists recognize a further sub-species, Hippotragus niger anselli, occurring in Eastern Zambia and Malawi. This is, however, not generally accepted. (v) The Giant sable (Hippotragus niger variani), also known as the Royal sable, the distribution of which is restricted to a small area in central Angola. The Giant Sable has been known to science for less than a century. Many years before the Giant Sable was first described in described in 1914, the famous big game hunter Frederick Courtney Selous, observed a single sable horn of extraordinary length in a museum in Florence. Later he came across reports of larger than usual sable and suspecting they were from north of the Zambezi, he attempted to go there in 1888 but was thwarted by hostile tribes. In 1907, Frank Varian, a Belgian engineer, went to Angola to work on the construction of the Benguela railway line. Varian soon learned about this rather different sable. In 1909 he announced he had found a unique sable specimen carrying immense horns of over 60 inches in length. He was promptly ridiculed for his claim. By 1912 the Thirstland Trekkers (Boers who left the Transvaal to eventually settle in Angola) arrived in the lands of the giant sable. Frank Varian, concerned about overhunting these sables, persuaded the governor, Joao Norton de Mattos, to declare the giant sable royal game and to restrict access to the area by special permit only. That provision apparently still remains on the statute books today. In 1914 Varian send a male and a female head to the natural history museum in London for examination. It was then named Hippotragus niger variani after Frank Varian. International sport hunters soon started going to Angola specifically to hunt the giant sable. Only in the 1950‟s a further population of Giant Sable was discovered to the north of the Luando River in the Cangandala area. The local Songo people had maintained the secret from the outside world for ages. 44 By the mid 1970s the Giant Sable was well protected and total numbers were estimated at about 2000 animals. In 1982 Dr. Richard Estes still saw and photographed a number of these sables in Cangandala National Park. These were the last published photographs of Giant Sable until 2005. After 1982 the war situation made it impossible for any outsiders to get access to Giant Sable country and it was feared that Palanca Negra (the Portuguese name for H. n. variani) had not survived the bloody 27 year civil war in which masses of elephant, rhino, buffalo and other game were slaughtered. Then in early 2005 it was announced that a research team had found photographic evidence that at least one group of Giant Sable is still around. Further proof was conclusive DNA sequences from the dung samples a 2004 expedition had brought back. A disturbing discovery was however made regarding the Cangandala population: the last adult bull had disappeared after the 2004 breeding season and a roan bull had taken over the breeding herd. A number of Roan X Giant Sable hybrids had been born every year up to 2008. Initially it was believed that the hybrids are infertile. Recent photographs of females with calves suggest however that the hybrids may in fact be able to reproduce. In 2009 the remaining Cangandala sables, together with a bull from Luando, were captured and moved to into a breeding enclosure under the leadership of the Angolan biologist Pedro vaz Pinto. The objective is to breed them in captivity as a last desperate effort to save the giant sable from extinction. At the time of writing the arrival of the first calves are eagerly awaited. Although the breeding seems to be a success, the threats to the survival of the giant Sable have not disappeared. The main threats are human encroachment, habitat loss, poaching in Luando and the risk of theft of sable for sale elsewhere. The Giant Sable is extremely rare and one of Africa‟s most remarkable animals. The body size, weight and spoor are similar to that of the typical sable. The horns are however much longer and the sight of them is simply breathtaking. The facial markings are quite different from the typical sable. Its huge and perfectly arched horns, elegant and majestic features, and the coal black colour of the mature male, make the giant sable arguably one of the most beautiful and regal antelope species in the world. For this reason it has always been sought after by naturalists, scientists and hunters. 45 The common sable (Hippotragus niger niger). Photo: Willem Frost A breeding herd of common sable at a waterhole. Note the colour differences between the bulls and cows. Photo: Willem Frost 46 Roosevelt sable, Shimba Hills, East Africa. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen Pedro vaz Pinto with the first ever Giant Sable captured live (2009). Photos: Pedro vaz Pinto 47 Captured Giant Sable bull. Note the exceptional horns. Photo: Pedro vaz Pinto The Roan antelope (Hippotragus equinus) is the second largest of Africa‟s antelopes. Five sub-species are recognized: (i) The Southern roan (Hippotragus equinus equinus) (ii) The Angolan roan (Hippotragus equinus cottoni) (iii) The East African roan (Hippotragus equinus langheldi) (iv) The Sudanese roan (Hippotragus equinus barkeri) (v) The Western roan (Hippotragus equinus koba) Roan antelopes prefer open savannah woodlands with medium to tall, sweet grasses in excess of two feet or 50 cm. Sourveldt, short grass areas, dense scrubland, thickets, closed woodlands and forests are unsuitable and are generally avoided. Unlike sable and many other antelopes, roans are not attracted to new growth on burnt areas. They also require access to permanent sources of drinking water. Roan is extremely habitat sensitive and does not adapt well to changes in habitat. This has been a major cause of the decline in their numbers in the past. They are also very uncomfortable with grazing pressure from other species and will move out of an area if there are too many other game animals. Although they are mainly grazers, they will also small quantities of leaves and forbs during the dry season. Roan antelopes are diurnal and most of the grazing takes place during the cooler hours of the day. The stronghold of the Southern roan in South Africa has historically been the Waterberg Mountains and the Kruger National Park. In 2006 their numbers in the 48 Kruger have declined to only about 60 from about 450 in 1986. The reasons are unknown but probably due to habitat changes (short grasses replacing long grasses) as a result of too many artificial waterholes. Roan, like sable antelope, is partial to medium to long grasses and when the habitat takes strain from too many grazers they will move out of the area. Habitat management is thus crucial for the survival of roan populations. Although roan is still relatively common in West and Central Africa, most populations are in strong decline, such as that in Comoé National Park where numbers have declined to around 500 animals. There are however a number of small populations throughout the current range. The major threats are poaching, increasing human settlement and loss of habitat. Roan are large antelopes (standing about five feet high at the shoulder and weighing about 400 pounds), but they are also very shy and nervous. They are semigregarious and live in breeding herds of up to 25 animals; bachelor herds of subadult bulls; and single, post-breeding bulls that have been pushed out of the breeding herd. A typical breeding herd consists of a bull in charge of a number of female and young. The home range of the breeding herd remains constant for many years and a roan may spend its entire life within a single home range. The structure of the breeding herd is usually also maintained for several years. When the herd becomes too large, some members of the herd will break away to form a new herd in a new home range. Breeding bulls do not establish fixed territories, but rather maintain a territorial zone of a couple of hundred yards on the periphery of the ever moving herd. Intruding bulls are simply driven off. Home ranges of breeding herds do not overlap; there is only one breeding herd in a given home range. Once a breeding bull has been pushed out of the herd by a younger bull, he becomes a solitary animal and will not join the herd again. Home ranges are marked by digging in the soil with the hooves and releasing a secretion from the inter-digital glands between the hooves. Roan also breaks branches with the horns as a form of marking the home range. Breeding bulls do not mark their territories and they constantly move with the herd throughout the home range. Roan antelopes can however be very aggressive animals, especially when wounded or cornered, and should be approached with caution. A wounded roan will not hesitate to charge his pursuer. They fight with the horns, the feet and the teeth. Fighting bulls confront each other on the front knees with the hind legs stretched out straight. Both sexes carry horns, although the horns of the cow are inferior to that of the bull. The shape of the horn is similar to that of the sable. The horns are heavily grooved for the most part; only the end 15% to 20% is smooth. 49 Western roan (above and below) Réserve de Bandia, Senegal. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 50 Southern roan. Photo: Willem Frost Angolan roan with calve, Kafue National Park, Zambia. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 51 Roan on the Nyika plateaux, Malawi. Photo: iStock Oryx and Gemsbok All oryx seem to thrive in semi-arid to arid thorn brush country where they do not have to rely on surface water. They obtain moisture from their food and possibly dew. They can go for very long periods without drinking and will travel vast distances to find water. Oryx are mainly grazers but will also eat wild fruits, melons and cucumbers. They also dig up succulent roots and bulbs with the fore feet. Gemsboks are gregarious and form breeding herds of various sizes. They are nomadic migrating animals that can travel great distances without any fixed route or pattern. During the wet season (i.e. summer) when there is plenty of food, they form large herds (sometimes hundreds of animals) but in winter when food is scarcer, they break up again in small herds of about ten animals. In the arid habitats, such as the Kalahari, the herds will follow local rainstorms to find better grazing and massive herds may then be formed. Bulls are either solitary or are found in small groups of two or three animals. They are territorial and the territories are large in comparison to other ungulates, probably due to the low quantities of food that are available in the arid habitat. The territorial bulls are also more tolerant of intruding bulls than is the case with other ungulates. Territories are marked by defecation and with secretions from the glands on the feet. They also beat bushes and scrubs with the horns. Territories are not occupied throughout the year: the bull may leave his territory for a 52 while when he joins a breeding herd that moves through several territories within their home range. Their body temperature can rise considerably during the day (by as much as nine degrees Celsius) and they then have to cool themselves by nasal panting or sweating. Consequently they tend to feed mainly in the cool of the mornings and late afternoons. During the heat of the day they often rest up in whatever shade might be available. The following subspecies are recognized: (i) Gemsbok (Oryx gazella gazella) of Southern Africa (Namibia, Botswana, South Africa). (ii) Angolan gemsbok (Oryx gazella blainei). This is a race that is not accepted by all taxonomists as separate subspecie and many include it with O. g. gazella. (iii) Beisa oryx (Oryx gazella beisa) of northeastern Africa. They utilize semi-arid and arid bushland and grasslands, eating a wide range of grass species. They also browse during the dry season. Beisa oryx drinks regularly when water is available, but can also obtain sufficient moisture from waterstoring melons, roots, bulbs and tubers. (iv) Fringe-eared oryx (Oryx gazella callotis) of southern Kenya and northeastern Tanzania. The tufted ears and the tan colored body distinguish the fringeeared oryx from the more grayish Beisa oryx. Also, there is no black on the forelegs below the knees. Both sub-species have a long black eye stripe down the length of the face. The believe that fringe-eared oryx grow slightly shorter horns than the Beisa oryx is not clearly supported by the trophy record books, but is probably true in general terms. Neither the fringe-eared oryx nor the Beisa oryx have horns as long as the gemsbok which is the largest of the oryx genus. Fringe-eared oryx are shy and wary and are found on open plains as well as thorn-bush thickets. When threatened or disturbed they quickly gallop away with their long black tails swinging from side to side. They are gregarious but the herds are not big: five to 35 animals. Old bulls leave the herd to lead a solitary life but may be joined by one or two other old bulls. (v) Scimitar oryx (Oryx dammah). They used to occur widely in the sub-desert areas on both sides of the Sahara Desert. It was hoped that a few remnant populations may still exist in north-central Chad, in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, but in 2009 the IUCN declared that Scimitar oryx is now extinct in the wild. Captive herds are kept in fenced, protected areas in Senegal and Morocco (Sous Massa National Park) as part of a long-term reintroduction programme. In 2007 a few animals were also introduced to the Dghoumes National Park in Tunisia in an effort to repopulate southern Tunisia as part of Tunisia‟s strategy to restore the Sahelo-Saharan antelopes and their desert environments. They have also been introduced to a few game 53 farms in South Africa. In times gone by they used to gather in great numbers in North Africa, in January, before migrating to the south. These migrating herds could number thousands, stretching in long columns across the horizon. The Scimitar-horned oryx was well adapted to life in arid habitat. They would be home in sub-desert and dry grassland habitat, but were rarely found in true desert. It is believed that scimitar oryx were kept by the ancient Egyptians, but it has long since disappeared from those areas. Gemsbok (Oryx gazella gazella) in the sweet Bushveldt of South Africa’s Limpopo province. Photo: Willem Frost 54 Gemsbok in the remote Kaokoveld, Namibia. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Beisa oryx in the Samburu National Park, Kenya. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 55 Scimitar oryx. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Addax (Addax nasomaculatus) may remind one of oryx, but they belong to a different genus. They used to occur throughout the northern limits of the Sahel from Mauritania to the Sudan. A few small remnant populations remain in Niger, Mali, Chad and eastern Mauritania. A few privately owned herds have been introduced on game ranches in South Africa and the USA. There is also an international endangered species breeding programme in European and North American Zoos, with a total population of about 800 addax. The total North African population is estimated at less than 300 animals. The population trend is downwards due to habitat loss and poaching. The addax stares down the barrel of extinction in the very near future. It has however been reintroduced in Tunisia and Morocco, but is regionally extinct in Algeria, Libya, Egypt and Sudan. The addax was at home in sand-dune deserts, gravel plains and stony plateaus where they lived on coarse desert grasses. They also browsed on Acacias and leguminous herbs. Addax feed at night and around dusk and dawn; during the heat of the day they seek a place to rest up. They are not water dependant and are able to extract their moisture requirements from the plant material that they feed on. They used to roam the Sahara in herds of up to twenty animals, sometimes aggregating in larger herds. Large migrations, consisting of more than a thousand animals, used to take place whenever a seasonal shower brought about fresh growth somewhere distant in the desert. These migrations are now a thing of the past. Overhunting with modern firearms and vehicles, as well as pastoral agriculture, has virtually wiped out a species that survived the harsh Sahara environment for hundreds of thousands of years. 56 (Above) The addax is a rare and highly endangered antelope. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preserve (Left) The rare addax photographed in the Réserve de Faune de Guembeul, Senegal. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 57 Wildebeests, hartebeests and bastard hartebeests (Subfamily: Antilopinae, Tribe: Alcelaphini) Medium to large antelopes with horns present in both sexes. They have well developed preorbital glands as well as glands on the front feet. The tail is long with either a tuft at the end (hartebeests) or hairy and horse-like (wildebeests). The Black wildebeest (Connochaetes gnou) is endemic to the short grass-veldt areas of South Africa‟s interior „Highveld‟. Historically they have ranged in vast herds of many thousands across the open plains, but became almost extinct about a century ago as a result of overhunting, human settlement, agricultural development and diseases. Thanks to the efforts of a few conservation minded farmers in the Free State and the former Transvaal, they have been brought back from the brink of extinction and today there are almost 15 000 of these animals – many of them on private land. Black wildebeests are selective grazers of short grasses, preferring open plains without trees or brushes. This is probably because they rely on eyesight to detect predators and thus require open habitat. The warm sub-tropical areas, forests, woodlands, areas with long grasses and the arid, dry areas are not suitable habitat. Like many plains game animals, the bulls are territorial, and a dominant, breeding bull will defend a specific area aggressively against intrusion by other bulls. Bulls defecate in fixed places or stamping grounds and regularly roll on it. Faeces and other behaviour patterns are then used by bulls to demarcate their territories. Behaviour is important for reproduction and the strongest males are in a more favourable position to reproduce. Mating usually occurs only within the territory. The cows are not territorial and move through several territories within the home range. The social structure consists of breeding herds cows with their young; territorial, breeding bulls; and bachelor herds consisting of young and sub-adult bulls and mature bulls without a territory. Black wildebeests are known to accept other species such as springbok and zebra within their home ranges and they are often seen grazing together. They are mostly active in the mornings and late afternoons. During the heat of the day they often lie down to rest, chewing the cud. They are natural migratory antelopes but they are no longer able to do so as a result of fences and other human developments. They thus had to adapt to a fenced-in life on game farms and nature. 58 The black wildebeest is at home on the Highveld plains of South Africa’s interior. Photo: Willem Frost The Blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) is a typical wanderer of the savannahs of Southern and East Africa. They were once abundant throughout Southern Africa but their numbers have been drastically reduced as a result of human settlement and competition with domestic livestock, illegal hunting and fencing across their historical migration routes. They are nowadays largely restricted to conservation areas, national parks and game reserves. The following sub-species are recognised: (i) The brindled gnu, or common blue wildebeest, ( Connochaetes taurinus taurinus) of Southern Africa (ii) Cookson’s wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus cooksoni) which is endemic to the Luangwa Valley in Zambia (iii) The Nyassa wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus johnstoni) of southern Tanzania and northern parts of Mozambique ( it is now extinct in Malawi) (iv) The Eastern white-bearded wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus albojubatus) of southern Kenya and northern Tanzania (v) The Western white-bearded wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus mearnsi) which are found in Tanzania and Kenya west of the Great Rift Valley, reaching Lake Victoria at Speke Bay. This is the wildebeest of the famous Serengeti-Mara ecosystem. The annual migration of about a million C. t. mearnsi is one of the world‟s greatest wildlife spectacles. 59 Wildebeests are grazers of short grasses and are associated with savannah woodlands. Availability of drinking water is a definite habitat requirement. They are gregarious and form herds of ten to thirty animals. At times they form mega-herds of thousands of animals. The social structure consists of territorial bulls, breeding herds of cows with their young, and bachelor herds. Territorial bulls protect their territories mostly by threatening trespassers which usually suffices. Serious fighting is not common, although they may sometimes head butt. Wildebeests have pre-orbital glands as well as glands on the front feet – these are used to mark territories. Breeding herds of cows with their latest calves move through the territories of the bulls, but they do not tolerate newcomers that want to join the herd. Bachelor herds consist of young and mature bulls that do not possess a territory. They normally live on the edges of the home range of the breeding herds. In some areas the wildebeests are more mobile than in others and they may move over vast distances in search of grazing and water. They are partial to fresh short, green grasses and known to move areas where it has rained. They can detect rainfall over vast distances and will not waste time in moving there. Botswana used to be home to very large numbers of common blue wildebeest. One of the country‟s main exports is beef which is exported to the Europe – countries which are hyper-sensitive to any possible disease that could affect their imports. In an attempt to separate cattle and wildebeests, veterinary control fences have been erected across the ancient migration routes of the wildebeests. In times of drought wildebeest used to mass together the southern and central parts of the Kalahari from where they would migrate northwards to their ancient drinking places along the Boteti River and Lake Xau. Thousands and thousands of wildebeests died along the veterinary fences during the mid-1980‟s. This calamity was first brought to the attention of the outside world by two researchers, Mark and Delia Owens, who were studying brown hyenas in the Kalahari at the time. They got expelled from the country for their troubles. There are still wildebeests in Botswana but their numbers are not nearly what it used to be – thanks to the Botswana government and the European Union. Something similar happened in Namibia‟s Etosha National Park. Before the park was completely fenced in, wildebeests were free to migrate to adjacent parts in their unending search for suitable grazing. The wildebeest population was then estimated at 25 000 animals. In 1973 an 850 km fence was erected to enclose Etosha, cutting off ancient migration routes. The seasonally well-watered grasslands to the north of Etosha Pan, which includes the Andoni plains and the Lake Oponono area, were now inaccessible to the wildebeests. By 1978 the population had fallen to 2500, constituting a 90 percent decline from the previous population and again illustrating the devastating effect of fences across migration routes. 60 Cookson’s wildebeest is endemic to the Luangwa Valley in Zambia. Photo: Willem Frost The common blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus taurinus) is also known as the ‘brindled gnu’. Photo: Willem Frost 61 Common blue wildebeest used to be abundant in the Kalahari, but veterinary fences resulted in a significant decline in their numbers. Photo: Willem Frost The greatest wildlife spectacle on planet earth The wildebeest relies on migration, as opposed to a sedentary lifestyle, as a means of survival. They are strictly grazers as the wide mouth inhibits browsing. Migration allows it to graze over vast areas and to utilize the best available food resources. This in turn enables them to live in large herds. Migration also reduces predation by the larger carnivores. Wildebeests have longer forelegs and a sloping back. It is believed that this aids them in conserving energy when they have to travel over long distances. The huge annual migration of White-bearded wildebeest across the grasslands of the Serengeti-Masai Mara ecosystem is regarded by many as the world greatest wildlife spectacle. It‟s only remaining possible rival is the migration of tiang and white-eared kob in the south of the Sudan. The Serengeti migration is essentially a wildebeest affair although kongonis, topi, Grant‟s zebra and Thomson‟s gazelles also participate. The migration can be regarded as a continual year-round movement of wildebeest in search of water and grazing. It is believed that the wildebeest may have been covering the same migratory cycle for at least a million years. 62 When the rinderpest virus was brought under control in the early 1960‟s, the number of White-bearded wildebeest numbered about 260 000. Since then they have increased to about 1,25 million today – maybe more. The migration commences in the ancestral wildebeest calving grounds in the treeless, short-grass plains of the southeast of the Serengeti. Calving takes place within a three-week period in January-February. Hundreds of thousands of calves are born, but only one in every five or six will survive the first year. The survival percentage however suffices. The predators (lions, wild dogs, hyenas, cheetahs) have a feast but they only kill a relatively small percentage of the masses of newborn wildebeests. The grass withers quickly at the onset of the dry season and by the end of May there is not much grazing left on the vast plains. The drinking water then also dries up. At this time the herds begin to mass together in preparation for the migration to the west and the north. The concentration of wildebeests is simply one of the great wonders of the natural world. They have just spent several months grazing on rich, short-grass plains , storing up food and energy. The wildebeests are now in peak condition. The zebras leave first, perhaps as many as 250 000, followed by more than a million wildebeests and almost 500 000 gazelles. The zebras eat the grass tops and the taller, coarser grasses. The wildebeests follow and eat the lower parts of the grasses which have more nutritional value. They are followed by the gazelles (mainly Thomson‟s gazelles) that graze the fresh shoots of new growth. Whilst the gazelles remain mostly in the western parts of the Serengeti, the zebras and wildebeests move further north to eventually reach the Masai Mara by July. The rainfall here is higher and there is permanent water in the Mara River and its tributaries. By August-September the Mara is inundated with wildebeests whilst zebra and topi numbers have also increased significantly. The crossing of the crocodile infested Mara River with its steep banks is one of the main events during the migration. The wildebeests do not seek safe or easy places to cross. Instinct simply drives them frantically on to the grazing fields on the other side. The wildebeests at the front simply hurl themselves down the banks into the river regardless of danger. The result is usually bewildering chaos. Many animals drown, or suffocate, or are trampled to death, or suffer serious injury, or get taken by the crocodiles. Dead and dying wildebeests collect in large piles, providing a feast for crocodiles and vultures. The exhausted surviving wildebeests drag themselves up the opposite slippery banks amidst the same confusion and chaos. By October the rainclouds begin to build up over the vast plains in the south and thunder can sometimes be heard in the distance. By November-December the “short-rains” have started and the migration to the short-grass plains in the south is in full swing. Long columns of wildebeests can be seen for miles, often trudging along in single file. 63 By the end of the year they are back in the vast short-grass plains where it all began. They once again graze the fresh grasses and get themselves in prime condition for the calving season the migration west and north that invariably follows. The crossing of the Mara River is a major event during the wildebeest migration across the Serengeti. Photos (above and below): iStock 64 Hartebeests (Tribe: Alcelaphini) Like the members of the Damaliscus genus, the hartebeests (which belong to the genus Alcelaphus) are widely distributed across the semi-arid regions of Africa. They have adapted well to many different environments, but have suffered badly as a result of human settlement and development. The outbreak of the rinderpest epidemic at the end of the 19th century also had a catastrophic effect on the hartebeest populations. They were not sufficiently prolific to recover from the decimation by the rinderpest (unlike buffaloes) and the uncontrolled hunting also continued unabated. The result was catastrophic. It is sometimes argued that predators also contributed to the decline in antelope numbers across Africa. This is however most unlikely. It is specifically unlikely that the decline in hartebeest numbers can be attributed to their natural predators such as lions, leopards, cheetahs, wild dogs and hyenas. Hartebeests are very fast runners and usually rely on their speed and endurance to outrun predators. Although some adult hartebeests are taken by predators, it is mostly new-borns that are taken. Had it not been for human population growth and settlement, and perhaps the rinderpest epidemic, hartebeest populations would probably have remained as steady as it was for centuries before the arrival of Western man in Africa. Hartebeests are able to survive on low-quality grasses of medium height. They are gregarious throughout the year. The bulls are seasonally territorial and mark the boundaries of their territories with defecation sites. They defend their territories aggressively against neighbouring and non-territorial bulls. The cows form small herds that pass through the contiguous territories of the males. The territorial bull will investigate the receptiveness of the cows and will try to herd them in his territory until all receptive females have been covered. Hartebeest cows are known to be very aggressive in defending their young. Red hartebeests (Alcelaphus buselaphus caama) are found in Namibia, Botswana and South Africa and are fairly common throughout their range. In Botswana, however, their numbers have been severely depleted by veterinary control fences – a fate they share with the blue wildebeests. Red hartebeests are grazers preferring medium height grasses and relishing new growth after fires or rain. They are associated with open country and various types of grass plains, but can also be found in open woodland. These hartebeests avoid thickets and dense woodland and do very well in the more open, arid areas of Namibia, Botswana and South Africa. They are independent of water but will drink when water is available. Red hartebeests are mainly grazers but will also take leaves, pods, fruits and seeds. Red hartebeests are gregarious and live in herds of up to 30 animals, but often in much smaller family groups. Sometimes very large aggregations of herds may also occur in mid-summer. They are known to move to areas where it has rained – just like blue wildebeests. 65 Red hartebeests are active in the early mornings and late afternoons, but on cool days they may be active throughout the day. On warm days they will seek shade during the heat of the day; otherwise they often lie down in the sun to rest. Their senses of hearing and smelling are excellent, but the eyesight is suspected of being slightly less developed. Red hartebeests are very fast runners and speed is obviously an important defence mechanism. When running away, however, the herd may stop after a distance to mill around and assess the situation. Mature bulls are only territorial during the mating season (February to April) during which time the territory is aggressively defended against intruding bulls. Fighting is then not uncommon. They fight aggressively with horns whilst facing one another on the knees. Territories are marked with dung piles. Outside of the mating season, the mature bulls will either join bachelor herds or larger mixed herds of bulls, cows and calves. Red hartebeest in the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park. Photo: Willem Frost 66 Lichtenstein’s hartebeest (Alcelaphus lichtensteini) was discovered on the lower Zambezi and named after Dr. W.H.C. Lichtenstein, a German naturalist and director of the Natural History Museum in Berlin. They used to occur from the northeastern corner of South Africa (i.e. Crookes Corner northwards to the Katanga province of the Congo), but have disappeared from much of their former range due to indiscriminate hunting, loss of habitat and tsetse fly control measures. They are now considered rare in Southern Africa. There are, however, more than 80 000 Lichtensteins left in the wild, mostly in reserves and conservation areas. Lichtenstein‟s hartebeest is a shy antelope of the savannahs and prefer „miombo‟ woodlands where it may sometimes be seen in open stretches covered with short grasses known as „dambos‟. They are grazers favoring perennial grasses and preferring relatively open bush country. Since they are grazers, they require habitat with adequate perennial grass species on which to feed. Grazing takes place mostly in the early mornings and late afternoons. They are water dependent and need to drink daily. Lichtenstein‟s hartebeests are gregarious: herds normally consist of a territorial bull and six or seven cows with their calves. Calving peaks during August; the territorial system then seems to collapse and large concentrations of Lichtensteins may then occur. Territorial bulls will occupy and defend their territories throughout the year. During the rut they may however leave their territories temporarily in order to find cows which they then herd back into their territories. This is a hectic time for the bulls: they not only have to keep the cows within their territories but also have to deal with intruding bulls which are after the cows or disputing the territory. Fighting is thus quite common amongst the bulls. The territorial bulls will not tolerate the male youngsters when they reach the age of about twelve months and these youngsters are then driven from the herd. This hartebeest has a pale colour, stocky build and short horns. Its elongated head, humped shoulders and sloping back is typical of the hartebeests. 67 Lichtenstein’s hartebeest has a more solid and heavy body than other hartebeest. Photo: Willem Frost Coke’s hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus cokei), or kongoni, can be seen on the Serengeti plains where they are easily observed. They graze in herds of ten to hundred animals but herds are far less permanent or cohesive than those of wildebeests or zebras. Bachelor herds are also formed. Males are territorial and fighting between bulls is not uncommon. When fighting, a bull will force his opponent to the ground and then, from a kneeling position, deliver a series of violent head butts in order to enforce submission. The curved horns are formidable weapons and can inflict serious wounds. Calves are born at any time of the year, but calving peaks at the onset of the rainy season. They never stray far from their mothers. Kongonis graze both long and short grasses, but during the rainy season they move from the tall grass areas to the short grass plains (“mbugas”) of the Serengeti to graze with the wildebeests and zebras. Their sand-coloured coats then stand out vividly against the bright green grass plains. They are, however, not true migratory animals but tend to move around according to season and quality of available grazing. The shape of the animal is unmistakably hartebeest: a long face, lyre-shaped horns, high withers and a sloping body. Although they have lost much of their former range, good numbers of Coke‟s hartebeest can still be seen in the game reserves of Kenya and Tanzania (such as the Masai-Mara- , Tsavo- , Tarangire- and Serengeti game reserves). 68 Kongoni or Coke’s hartebeest. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Swayne’s hartebeest is named after Brigadier-general Swayne who was the first European to discover these animals. He visited Somaliland in 1891-1892 and was also the first European to venture into the area south of the Golis range and as far as 125 miles (200 kms) from the coast. There he saw vast herds of hartebeests. He reported 300 to 400 animals in a herd and a dozen or so herds in sight at any time. He also saw much bigger herds of around 1000 animals. In the mid 1890‟s Africa was hit by the rinderpest epidemic and the hartebeests were decimated. It is possible that less than a thousand of the hartebeests that Swayne saw survived the rinderpest. The influx of modern firearms thereafter put the surviving animals under continuous pressure. A .b. swayneri is today extinct in Somalia. There are probably no more than 500 left in Ethiopia. They are found only in four localities in Ethiopia namely, Awash National Park, Senkele Swayne's Hartebeest Sanctuary, Nechisar National Park and Mazie Wildlife Area. They are critically endangered and extinction is imminent. Swayne‟s hartebeest is closely related to the tora hartebeest, both races being smaller than the other hartebeests. The colour is however darker than that of the other hartebeests. They occur in open country with some bush, and sometimes in savannah woodland. These hartebeests are usually found in herds of between five and thirty animals. The dominant bull leads the herd and will protect its territory. He is often seen standing on slightly higher ground acting as a sentinel for his herd. 69 Swayne’s hartebeest in the Senkele Game Sanctuary, Ethiopia (above and below). Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 70 The Tora hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus tora) were once plentiful in Ethiopia, the Blue Nile valley as well as the region between the Nile and the Atbara Rivers in Sudan, and in parts of Eritrea. They are now extinct in Sudan and the total number remaining in Ethiopia and Eritrea is unlikely to exceed 500. It is a critically endangered antelope. The horns of the Tora differ from other hartebeest subspecies by being significantly thinner and spreading more widely and sideways from the top of the skull Lelwel hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus lelwel) is rather similar to Jackson‟s hartebeest. They are distinguished by the horn tips which are turned outwards, and by the dark markings on the lower parts of the limbs. They can hybridise with Swayne‟s hartebeest to make the Neumann hartebeest. The Lelwel hartebeest is regarded as endangered as the total population is declining fast. Once there were hundreds of thousands of them; today there are less than 70 000 left. Lelwel hartebeest. Photo: iStock 71 Jackson’s hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus jacksoni) is as typical to Uganda as the red hartebeest is to Botswana and Namibia. Their range is generally regarded to extend from western Kenya through the Karamoja district of north-eastern Uganda. There is still some debate around the taxonomy of Jackson‟s hartebeest. Some regard it as a hybrid between the lelwel and Coke‟s hartebeests, whilst others regard it as synonymous with the lelwel hartebeest. The Antelope Specialist Group of the IUCN, for example, considers the lelwel hartebeest of Uganda and the Jackson‟s hartebeest to be identical. They are often seen in herds of up to 100 animals in Uganda‟s Murchison Falls National Park. They have an even more elongated head than the other hartebeest subspecies Jackson’s hartebeest in Uganda. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen The Western hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus major) is the race found in West Africa. It occurs on the medium to tall grassland plains between south-western Chad through Cameroon, CAR, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Niger, Mali, Benin, Burkina Faso, all the way to Senegal. It is extinct in the Gambia. The appearance is typical hartebeest: a narrow face, slim legs and a small hump at the front of the shoulders. The horns are heavily ridged and curve out sideways then forward and then inward and backwards. 72 They are diurnal animals, grazing during the cooler hours of the mornings and late afternoons. During the heat of the day they rest up in shade. They form small herds of up to twelve animals and whilst they are grazing one will always act as a sentry, looking out for predators. The sentry can often be seen standing on a termite mount in order to get a better view of the surroundings. Typical hartebeest they are very fast runners and when fleeing they run in single file. The bulls are territorial and will defend the territory aggressively. They also mark the territory with dung piles. Their numbers are declining throughout their range and are regarded as „Near threatened‟. The main threats are overhunting and habitat loss. Western hartebeest showing it‟s heavily ridged horns and slight chevron between the eyes. Photo: Jonas van de Voorde. The Bubal hartebeest of North Africa was mentioned in the Old Testament under the name „Yachmur‟. Aristotle and Pliny the elder also made reference to the Bubal. Horns of the Bubal hartebeest were also found in Egyptian tombs at Abadiyeh. The Roman colonists on the Barbary Coast named and described it in more detail. Modern scientist later named it Alcelaphus buselaphus bubal. It once ranged from Egypt through Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco. The Bubal may also have occurred in the Middle East. It utilised a variety of habitats such as oases, oasis-like depressions, sand dunes, salt flats, mountainous woodland and 73 plateaus, sub-desert steppe and rocky areas, and the Mediterranean coastal belt. It preferred rocky habitat to sand dunes. Up to the 19th century herds of these antelopes could still be found on the plains of southern Algeria and parts of the Atlas Mountains. Human settlement and the inevitable agricultural development, overgrazing by domestic stock, and uncontrolled hunting with modern firearms pushed these animals farther into the mountains and into less suitable habitat. The black-maned Barbary lions that preyed on them were forced to follow, but the environment was such that neither herbivore nor carnivore would survive in the long run. By 1925 there were still a few bubal hartebeests left in Morocco and Algeria but within a few years they became extinct together with the Barbary lion. Today there are no Bubal hartebeests left on planet earth. It is however regarded as the nominate subspecies of the hartebeests. A female Bubal hartebeest that was photographed by Lewis Medland in the London Zoo in 1895. She died in April 1897. Damaliscus The so-called „bastard-hartebeests‟ are all grouped together under the genus „Damaliscus‟. Like the hartebeests, they have long faces, horns that are heavily ringed, and whithers that are higher than the rump. They are easily identified by the pronounced slope of their back. Since they are very fast runners, and since the high angle of the head and the position of the eyes allows them a wide field of vision, they seldom fall prey by predators. They are alert and also have a very well developed sense of hearing. Damaliscus are grazers and require a variety of grasses, shade and access to drinking water. Hunter’s hartebeest (Beatragus hunteri) is also known as the hirola. It was discovered in 1888 on the Tana River in Kenya by the big game hunter and zoologist H. C. V. Hunter (1861-1934). Some zoologists prefer to classify the hirola in the genus Damaliscus but it is more often recognised as Beatragus. It would appear that 74 the Hunter‟s hartebeest is an evolutionary link between the Alceplaphus and Damaliscus species and should thus be regarded as a relic species. The long, shapely horns resemble those of the impala and are uncharacteristic of hartebeest which carry by short, crumpled horns. The hirola‟s horns are however shorter, thicker and narrower than those of the impala. The long, ungainly face is typical hartebeest. These antelopes used to occur in a very small territory, about 60 square miles in total, between the Tana River in Kenya and the Juba River in Somalia. This unique habitat can be described as desert savannah. Life has always been precarious for the hirola. In 1962 it suddenly faced a major crisis when the United Nations‟ Special Fund for Economic Development investigated the feasibility of an irrigation scheme in the Tana River valley. This would have resulted in the flooding the area inhabited by the hirola. Conservationists immediately expressed concern and it was decided to remove the hirola to an alternative location. The site chosen was a plain in the Tsavo National Park in the south of Kenya. Some twenty animals were relocated with much difficulty and their descendants still roam the Tsavo. Not long afterwards the irrigation scheme on the Tana River was canned, mainly as a result of political difficulties, and the hirola can still be seen in this area but they are extremely rare. They are categorized as “Critically endangered‟ by the IUCN Red List and there are no more than 500 remaining in the wild. They require very specific habitat and their future is dependent on effective conservation measures. Hunters Hartebeest ram. Note the chevron between the eyes. Photo: republica-de-angola.blogspot 75 The very rare Hunter’s hartebeest. Photo: itsnature.org The Bontebok (Damaliscus pygargus pygargus) and the Blesbok (Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi) are endemic subspecies of South Africa. The former is relatively scarce and is found in a more specialized habitat. Blesbok are much more common and have been successfully introduced on game ranches outside of their historical range. Historically the bontebok was endemic to the southwest Cape Province of South Africa. They nearly became extinct in the 1800‟s through overutilization but conservation efforts by farmers and the government secured their future. The establishment of the Bontebok National park near Swellendam was a particularly important milestone in conserving the bontebok. They have also been translocated on game farms throughout the central and southern parts of South Africa, often outside their natural range. Although this helped to secure their future, it also inevitably led to interbreeding with blesbok on some properties. Bontebok and blesbok are closely related and very similar. The two white patches in the blaze of the blesbok are usually separated by a brown bar across the face, just below the eyes and sometimes just above the eyes. In the bontebok the two white patches are usually continuous. The lower legs of bontebok are white as if it is wearing white socks whereas the blesbok only has a brown stripe down the outside of the lower leg. The bontebok also has a conspicuous white rump patch, but the rump of the blesbok is brown with only a small white patch around the base of the tail. The bontebok also has a purplish gloss which the sun reflects of its hide; the blesbok does not have this gloss. Bontebok and blesbok are grazers preferring short grasses and are thus essentially plains dwellers. Blesbok are however also doing well in mixed woodland with short, sour grasses provided there are not too many large predators such as cheetah and leopard. They are partial to new grass growth on burnt veldt and tend to avoid grasses with more than one season‟s growth. As the nutritional value of the grazing deteriorates in winter, blesbok start losing weight, but when new growth sprouts out 76 after the first summer rains they immediately start gaining condition. During winter they are also less active and spend much time lying in the sun, or on hot days, lying in the shade. In summer they become much more active again. They are gregarious, diurnal antelopes and the social structure consists of territorial rams, nursing herds of ewes with their young, and bachelor herds of younger rams or rams with no territory. Blesbok nursing herds are however larger than those of bontebok; at times blesbok aggregations of hundreds of blesbok occur. The males of both races are territorial, but blesbok do not maintain their territories during winter and spring (June to September) when the large concentrations of animals are formed. Bontebok, however, are year round territorial. The territory is defended by driving away intruding rams and by displays such as horning the ground and defecating on middens within the territory. Neighboring territorial bulls also engage in „territorial behaviors‟ whereby one will enter the territory of the other and they will stand alongside each other, performing certain behavioral sequences before carrying on with their normal daily routines in their own territories. Fighting between neighboring rams may happen from time to time but is not common. Trespassing non-territorial rams are also driven off non-violently. The territory holder firstly look at the intruder with the head held as high as possible and the ears forward – a position known as “proud posture” and common amongst the antelope species. This is usually sufficient to cause the intruder to leave. If not, the territorial ram will resort to other tactics. For instance, he will run towards the intruder but will not attack; he will simply run past and shake his horns at the intruder whilst running. He may have to repeat the performance before the intruder starts running away. The territorial ram will wait for the intruder to start running before giving chase. If he catches up with the bachelor he will not attack, but will rather slow down to allow the intruder to escape. Ewes are not territorial but stay within a restricted home range. Since territories of the rams are adjacent the ewes usually find themselves on one the territories. Should they wish to leave the territory the ram will display in an attempt to convince her to stay. He will follow her only to the boundary of his territory; thereafter she is free to go. Sometimes she may try to escape by running away and this will provoke the ram to give chase. She will jink and swerve at full gallop with the ram each time trying to head her off. This will continue until either she escapes or is shepherded back to the group. Bontebok has the habit of standing still, facing the sun in a characteristic posture with the head low and forward and the chin tucked. Blesbok‟s unique characteristic is head nodding when they are nervous or joyful or when the territorial rams “pronk” in front of the ewes. They also have the habit of using the exact same routes to water and grazing, and then walk in characteristic single file. Blesbok depend largely on their eyesight to detect danger. When they are threatened they mill around in one place before running away for some distance before stopping and milling around once again. If they still perceive a threat the flight procedure is repeated until they feel safe. Blesbok mate during the period March to May and they drop their young from November through to January. Two colour variants of the blesbok, namely white blesbok and yellow blesbok, have been bred by South African game farmers for commercial purposes. White and yellow blesbok are not sub-species; they are simply colour variants. They breed with 77 common blesbok and also cross-breed with bontebok. The descendents of crossbreeds are fertile and they are thus regarded as a risk for the genetic integrity of both blesbok and bontebok. Typical posture of the male bontebok. Photo : Willem Frost Blesbok are animals of the wide open plains of the South African Highveld. Photo: Willem Frost 78 Tsessebe (Damaliscus lunatus lunatus) is typical of the sub-family: grazers that utilize a wide range of grass species. The Damaliscus lunatus specie is classified as “Least Concern” on the IUCN Red List. D.l. lunatus is unfortunately not separately assessed. Tsessebe are present in a number of Southern African populations, but became extinct in Mozambique around the late 1970s or early 1980s. They have been reintroduced in Swaziland, after the indigenous population was exterminated. It is however interesting to note that their numbers in South Africa‟s Kruger National Park , one of their historical strongholds, have declined from about 1300 in 1986 to somewhere between 120 and 170 in 2006. The same thing happened with roan antelope. The reasons are uncertain, but this phenomena is probably due to habitat changes (short grasses replacing long grasses) as a result of too many artificial waterholes. Tsessebe prefer medium to long grass and is water dependent. However, they do not drink easily from artificial water troughs – only from natural water points. Open, natural water and open woodland seems to be an important habitat requirement – they are sensitive to bush encroachment and loss of suitable habitat is a serious threat to their well-being. They like to drink daily, but during times of drought they are able to survive by drinking less frequently; maybe once per week. Tsessebe cannot handle extreme cold weather and are found only in tropical and sub-tropical habitat. Tsessebe are exclusively grazers and partial to new growth - they are attracted to burnt areas as soon as the new grass starts to appear. They are found in grassland and open country with scattered bush. Tsessebe normally occur in small breeding groups of six to ten cows with their offspring. When grazing is good, bachelor herds and territorial bull herds may however number as much as thirty animals. When grazing deteriorates they will move out of an area to return only once grazing is good again. During the dry season more than one herd and breeding bulls may share a waterhole; during these times the bulls are much more tolerant of one another. The cows are not restricted to a specific territory. Territorial bulls, however, patrol their territories, maintaining a steady gait and defecating at regular intervals. They mark their territories with the preorbital glands and also rub the sides of their faces on the ground. Both sexes horn the ground, especially after rain. They also paw and scrape the ground as a means of territorial marking with a secretion from the interdigital glands on the front feet. Territorial breeding bulls are often seen some distance from the herd, standing on some height such as a termite mount. This is done to advertise his presence. All the while the herd is watched with a hawk-eye. Serious fighting between bulls is not common, but when they do engage one another they go down on the knees and attack the opponent with the horns. Bachelor bulls do not have territories, but occupy the periphery of existing territories. Old territorial bulls that have been pushed out of the herd and that are no longer reproductive, will not join a bachelor or breeding herd again but will remain solitary. Sometimes they rather associate themselves with other species such as blue wildebeest, zebra or waterbuck. The Tsessebe has the reputation of being the fastest antelope in Africa and speed is their main defensive mechanism. They can maintain a fast gallop for long distances but are inquisitive animals and will stop in the open even if some members of the herd have already been shot. This behavior must have contributed to their decline in numbers. 79 Tsessebe in South Africa’s Ithala Game Reserve. Photo: Willem Frost Tsessebe calf running for the apparent fun of it. Photo: Willem Frost 80 The Topi (Damaliscus lunatus topi) is the most common subspecies of East Africa and can be seen in large numbers on the Serengeti plains and in the Rukwa valley in Tanzania. They are specifically partial to the areas with short grasses known locally as „mbugas‟. They are probably the most common ungulate in the Rukwa valley, which are part of the Great Rift Valley of Africa, where the floor of the valley provides excellent grazing and a good supply of water. They are usually found on flood plains and open savannah and park woodland. They are strongly gregarious and herds of hundreds of animals may sometime s be found. More often the herd size is in the order of twenty animals though. Topis are most active in the morning and evening, taking to the shade during the heat of the day. They usually feed for a while, then rest and chew their cud before they continue feeding. They have several rest breaks during the day. If they have access to green pastures they can without water for long periods of time. The quality of the grazing has a major impact on their daily activities - the coarser and drier the feed, the longer rest time needed for digestion. The topi is found in large numbers on the grassy plains of East Africa, particularly areas of short grass known as “mbugas”. The males (next page) stake out territories and the females (above) wander freely through territories. During the rut, the bull engages in scent-marking and fighting. A single calve is born after a gestation period of about 240 days. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 81 The Tiang (Damaliscus lunatus tiang) and the Korrigum (Damaliscus lunatus korrigum) are distinguished from the other Damaliscus subspecies by the concave shape of the skull and the flatter but more curving horns. It is a large antelope and resembles the tsessebe. Africa‟s largest population of tiang was rediscovered by the Wildlife Conservation Society during an aerial survey in southern Sudan in 2007. A population of at least 150 000 animals (and probably more) seems to be thriving in the Jonglei area of Southern Sudan. Africa‟s total tiang population could well in excess of 200 000 animals. Tiang is a savannah antelope and can exist without surface water, but they need good quality grazing and are one of the main participants of the great Sudanese migration. They avoid dense woodland and are usually found in open plains and savannahs such as lightly wooded woodlands, floodplains, grass plains, grass veld, vleys and grassy areas around pans. 82 Korrigum in the Pendjari National Park, Benin. It is locally also known as the topi and is a look-alike of the East African topi. Photo: Jonas van de Voorde The Reduncini tribe (Waterbuck, Lechwe, Kob, Reedbuck, Mountain reedbuck, Puku) Waterbuck (Kobus ellipsyprimnus) got their name from their habit of fleeing into water when threatened or disturbed. They will swim rapidly towards the deepest water and stay there until the danger is over. The thick fur of the waterbuck is unusual for an African bovid. There is however a good reason for this: the thickness of the animal‟s pelage prevents water seeping through to the skin, which allows the animal to maintain body temperature. They are however not truly aquatic or as home in water as the lechwe or sitatunga. The waterbuck is a large robust animal. Only male waterbucks have horns which are heavily ringed, widely spaced and curving gracefully up and back. The shaggy brown-gray coat emits a smelly, oily secretion thought to be for waterproofing and perhaps for deterring predators. The waterbuck is a grazer and feeds on types of coarse grass seldom eaten by other grazing animals. They occasionally also browse leaves from certain trees and bushes. They are crepuscular, feeding in the mornings and the evenings, and rest and ruminate during the rest of the day. They are water dependant and drink daily. They are thus almost always found near water. Dominant bulls occupy territories which they defend by aggressive posturing and even fights. Cows, calves and young bachelors congregate in herds. The composition of such herds can vary daily as individuals freely leave or join these. The following sub-species are recognized: (i) The Common Waterbuck (Kobus ellipsyprimnus ellipsyprimnus) of Southern Africa (ii) The Common Defassa Waterbuck (Kobus defassa defassa) of East Africa 83 (iii) The Crawshay Defassa Waterbuck (Kobus defassa crawshayi) of Zambia and adjacent parts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. (iv) The Uganda Defassa Waterbuck (Kobus defassa ugandae) of Southern Sudan, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, eastern DRC and western Tanzania. (v) The Angolan Defassa Waterbuck (Kobus defassa penricei) which may be found along the Okavango River in Namibia and Angola, the CuandoCubango area in Angola, southwestern DRC, southern Congo and southern Gabon. (vi) The Sing-sing Defassa Waterbuck (Kobus defassa unctuosus) of West Africa. The common waterbuck and the defassa waterbuck are distinguished by the markings on the rump. The common waterbuck has a conspicuous white ring encircling a dark rump, while the defassa has wide white patches on either side of the rump. Common waterbuck bull. They never stray far from water. Photos: Willem Frost 84 Common waterbuck cow. Photo: Willem Frost Young East African Defassa waterbuck. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 85 Female defassa waterbuck with calf. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen The Sing-sing waterbuck of West Africa (above and next page). Photos: Jonas van de Voorde 86 The Lechwe (Kobus leche) is a perfectly adapted aquatic species. Five different sub-species have been identified, one of which is now extinct: (i) The Red lechwe (Kobus leche leche) of northern Botswana‟s Okavango Delta, as well as the Kwando/Linyanti/Chobe, Mashi, and Zambezi River systems of north-east Namibia; and the upper Zambezi and middle Kafue of Zambia. They have also been introduced to game farms in Free State and Eastern Cape provinces of South Africa where they may be hunted. This is unnatural habitat for them and South African specimens are exotics. The total population is believed to be close to 100 000 and there are no immediate concerns over their future. The immense Okavango Swamps in Botswana is undoubtedly one of the greatest wildlife paradises on the African continent. The Okavango River rises in the Bié plateau of Angola and flows southwards for about 600 miles before it end in a huge inland delta of about 10 000 square miles. This is the home of the red lechwe. They tend to congregate early and late in the day in the swallow waters of the Okavango where they find food. During midday they wander off in small groups to drier ground. When disturbed they scamper off in long bounds with all four feet simultaneously off the ground. Although these galloping movements are somewhat heavy and ungainly, the lechwe‟s lateral hooves enable them to move swiftly over the soft yielding terrain. It also reduces the risk of slipping on the soft, swampy terrain. Furthermore, it is also believed that the bounding gait is an indicator for the young to follow the mothers in a perilous situation. 87 Lechwes are also strong swimmers and often escape predators by taking to the water where their aquatic habits and skills stand them in good stead. They are preyed upon mainly by wild dogs, lions and hyaenas. The numbers of lechwes are not so much determined by predators, but rather by the availability of quality grazing. When the lechwes become too many in their home range, the quantity of available grazing is reduced and there are then more undernourished and sick antelopes which are easy pickings for the predators. As the lechwe numbers decrease, the quality of the grazing improves and the lechwe population starts to increase again. Although the balance is maintained for a while, eventually there is an overpopulation problem once again and the natural cycle of correcting imbalances repeats itself once again. The red lechwe of the Okavango delta. (the ewe above and the ram below). Photos: iStock 88 (ii) The Kafue lechwe (Kobus leche kafuensis) which are endemic to the Kafue Flats in Zambia. The total population is currently in the order of 60 000 and the population trend seems stable. Mature Kufue lechwe bull. Photo: iStock (iii) The Black lechwe (Kobus leche smithemani) which is endemic to the Bangweulu area in Zambia. They are listed as „Vulnerable‟ by the IUCN, and listed on Appendix II of CITES. The total population of this subspecies is stable at about 30 000 animals. Black lechwe on the Bangweulu Swamps, Zambia. Photo: Chris Worden, Zambezi Safari & Travel Company (iv) Mrs. Gray’s lechwe - also known as the „Nile lechwe‟ - (Kobus lechwe megaceros). They occur in the swamps of southern Sudan and western Ethiopia, especially the marshy regions on the seasonally flooded swamps 89 and grasslands of the Bahr el Ghazal in the Sudd in southern Sudan. They are listed as “Endangered” by the IUCN. The survival of the Ethiopian population seems highly precarious because increased human pressure in the form of hunting/poaching and habitat degradation by domestic livestock. The Sudanese population is threatened by oil exploration and development of the Sudd region and current inadequate conservation measures in a conflict torn country. An aerial survey carried out by Wildlife Conservation Society in southern Sudan in 2007 yielded an estimate of 4,291 animals, and identified the Zeraf Reserve as the most important protected area for this species. It was only many years after the British army took over the Sudan that the Nile lechwe became known to the Western world in the early twentieth century. By the time the Mrs. Gray was discovered the numbers of the red, the black and the Kafue lechwes had already been reduced through hunting. When the British administration managed to make a few rough roads through the middle of the Ango-Egyptian Sudan, they discovered amongst other things a tribe known as the Dinkas. There are several different Dinka clans but it was the Bahr el Ghazal Dinkas who lived in the Sudd who first brought in a lechwe to the white administrators. It was immediately realized that that this was an animal new to science and the head and skin was sent to London for investigation. The animal was named after the wife of the then head of the British Museum Zoological Department, Dr. Gray, and has ever since been known as “Mrs. Gray‟s lechwe” even though it is unlikely that either Dr. or Mrs. Gray ever saw a live specimen. The first Nile lechwe originated from the Sudd – the place where the White Nile spreads out into extensive swamps covering hundreds of square miles. It is believed that the Sudd prevented the ancient Egyptians from venturing further south so that they never got to the source of the Nile. The Sudd is still today regarded as one of the most inhospitable, impenetrable, awful places in all of Africa. It provides, however, ideal habitat for the lechwes: seasonally flooded swamps and grasslands where these rare antelopes mostly keep in shallow waters on the edge of deeper swamps. There are marked differences between males and females. Whilst the female‟s coat is pale brown, that of the male is a shining black with a white patch along the neck and across the shoulders. The young males look much like the females and only change colour and develop the white patch at three to four years of age. From a distance female and young Mrs. Gray lechwes look just like the white-eared kobs that live in close proximity. The size, the shape and the curve of the horns are alike. The only difference is in the color; the lechwe is more grayish whereas the kob is more light brownish. When a lechwe bull approaches full maturity, he turns from gray-brown to almost black, the pelage grows longer, a large white patch appears on the withers, and the horns are much bigger than those of the kob. In the early stages of the mating season the males behave in a rather unique way. They will lower the head as far as possible and then urinate, 90 thereby wetting the hair on the neck and cheeks. These wet parts are then rubbed against the muzzle and back of the female. Like the Sitatunga and the southern lechwe races, the Mrs. Gray has very elongated hooves (though not as long as those of the sitatunga) for walking or swimming in his swamp home range. He escapes his enemies by running or swimming in the swamps and he avoids dry land. Whereas the sitatunga submerges itself so that only the muzzle is above the water, the Mrs. Gray usually simply wades and swims away with ease. Only if really necessary, will he submerge up to the tip of the muzzle. Mature Nile lechwe ram. Photo: iStock The heavily ridged horns of the Nile Lechwe form a shallow “S” and diverge towards the tips. Photo: iStock 91 (v) The now extinct Roberts lechwe (Kobus lechce robertsi) whose distribution was restricted to the Luongo and Kalungwishi drainage systems of the lower Luapula area in Zambia. Kob The following subspecies are recognised: (i) The White-eared kob (Kobus kob leucotis) of Southern Sudan and western Ethiopia, particularly the swamps of the Nile and the Bahr-el-Ghazal. The status of the Ethiopian population is however uncertain. It is quite similar to the Uganda kob except that around the eyes and ears, and down the front of the neck, it is whiter. It is believed that there are almost one million white-eared kob on the floodplains of south-eastern Sudan. The annual migration of white-eared kob in the swamps of southern Sudan is Africa‟s second largest migration after that of the wildebeests on the Serengeti. This handsome member of the kob tribe is the most numerous game animal of Southern Sudan and the principal migrant of these parts – although not all white-eared kob participate in the migration. Their migration leads through really inaccessible terrain and not many people have witnessed this incredible spectacle. Apart from white-eared kob the migration consists of tiang, Mongalla gazelle and East African eland all followed by lions, jackals and hyenas. At the southern end of the migration they are joined by zebras, Bright‟s gazelles, giraffes and Beisa oryx. There are also roan and buffalo near the Ethiopian foothills. It is believed that at least a million animals participate in the migration. (ii) The Uganda kob (Kobus kob thomasi) which are found in north-eastern DRC, western and northern Uganda, and south-western Sudan west of the White Nile. It also used to occur in the lake areas of north-western Tanzania, but is now extinct there. This beautiful antelope is smaller than the waterbuck but much more elegant with its reddish-brown coat, dark eyes and large ears. They are found either in large herds, small groups or bachelor herds. Females generally live in herds apart from males. They often feed during the heat of the day – an unusual habit. 92 Uganda kob (above and below) are never far from water and prefer open floodplains with good quality grass cover. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 93 Fine Uganda kob ram. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen (iii) The Buffon kob (Kobus kob kob) of West Africa and northern DRC. They have the widest distribution range of all kob, but are extinct in Gambia and Sierra Leone and possibly southern Mauritania. Buffon kob. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 94 Buffon kob (ram above left, ewe on the right and a lamb below). Photos: Jonas van de Voorde 95 The Puku (Kobus vardoni) belong to the same genus as waterbuck, lechwe and kob and used to occur widely across the savanna woodlands and floodplains of southcentral Africa wherever there was grassland near permanent water. They have lost much of the historical range and have been reduced to fragmented, isolated populations, some of which are fortunately still numerous. Tanzania and Zambia are the strongholds. The population in the Selous Game Reserve has been extirpated. A small population of Puku still occurs on the Chobe River floodplain in northern Botswana. The first specimen was collected by Dr. David Livingstone and he first described it in 1857. Apparently puku was then abundant in suitable habitat. In 1874 Frederick Courtney Selous reported that puku were very numerous for 100 kilometers west of the confluence of the Chobe and Zambezi rivers which included an area that we know today as the Puku Flats. Since those days puku numbers and range have declined dramatically. The remaining small southern population (i.e. south of the Zambezi River) is completely isolated from other puku populations by hundreds of kilometers. Pukus are grazers and inhabit the margins of rivers, lakes and floodplains. They live on higher ground in the rainy season in small groups of three to fifteen animals. During the dry season they descend to graze the many grass species on the grasslands near permanent water and may then form herds of fifty or more animals. Adult rams are territorial whilst young and non-territorial rams form bachelor herds. Ewes and their young form small breeding herds. They breed throughout the year although there is distinct peak during the rainy season. Puku lamb on the banks of the Chobe River, Botswana. Photo: Willem Frost 96 Puku ram on the Chobe River floodplain, Botswana. Photo: Willem Frost Mountain Reedbuck There are three sub-species of Mountain reedbuck, namely (i) Southern mountain reedbuck (Redunca fulvorufula fulvorufula) of South Africa, south-eastern Botswana and southern Mozambique (ii) Chanler’s mountain reedbuck (Redunca fulvorufula chanleri) which occurs from Ethiopia southward to western Kenya, north-eastern Tanzania and adjacent parts of Sudan and Uganda. (iii) Western mountain reedbuck (Redunca fulvorufula adamuae) from the Adamua Mountain in Cameroon. The Mountain reedbuck require unique habitat: uneven terrain consisting of hills, mountains and rocks with medium to long grasses - habitat that are only marginally utilised by other species. They also require some cover in the form of trees and scrubs. Areas with short grasses as well as habitat consisting of thickets, dense woodlands and forests are avoided, but they are partial to new growth on burnt veldt. Although they are almost exclusively grazers, they tend to avoid the open mountain slopes and are mostly seen in areas with some cover where they can hide and rest. They avoid cliffs and sheer rock faces and are not able to utilise the same habitat as 97 klipspringers. The Mountain reedbuck is also one of the rare species that do well in sourveldt. They are found in areas with relatively high rainfall – 400mm to 900mm per annum. They are also less dependent on water than common or Bohor reedbucks. They like to drink daily and often come down from their mountainous home ranges to drink at rivers or marshes, but can go for relatively long periods without drinking, if forced to. The availability of drinking water is however an important habitat requirement and they will not remain indefinitely in an area with no water. Mountain reedbucks are smaller than reedbucks or Bohor reedbucks. Only the male carries horns which curve forward like those of common and Bohor reedbucks. The horns are short – about the same height as the ears - and heavily ridged. They are essentially grazers and are mostly active in the early morning and late afternoon. They graze on less nutritional sour grasses and therefore quickly lose condition during the dry season. Understandably, they do not like hard, dry grass material. Even though they occupy marginal habitat, they will not migrate to better grazing. Mountain reedbucks are usually found in small herds of three to six animals, but sometimes larger herds may be formed. The rams are solitary and territorial. They defend their territories more by way of advertising their presence than by fighting. The home range of the breeding herd overlaps with the territories of two or three rams. The sizes of the territories and home ranges can vary and depend on the quality of the habitat and the population density. Territorial rams remain within their territories throughout the year, seldom leaving it. When disturbed and having fled, they normally return to the territory. Non-territorial rams form small groups on the periphery of the territories. They are able to multiply quickly; in areas with good quality grazing the ewes can come into oestrus within a year of being born. Single lambs are born in 12 to 14 month intervals after a gestation period of 235 to 250 days. They mate throughout the year with a peak during the period April-May in South Africa. The Southern Mountain reedbuck gives birth during the early part of the „green‟ season – October to December. The ewe leaves the herd to give birth where after the lamb hides itself in cover. The ewe visits her lamb once or twice per day to feed it and will spend up to half an hour with the youngster before leaving again. The lamb constantly moves to a new hiding place. After two to three months the lamb starts grazing with the mother and then joins the herd. Lambs are preyed upon by jackals, caracals and large raptors and the hiding behaviour is an important defence mechanism. Mortalities can still be high though. The territorial rams will tolerate young rams until they are about a year old when they are driven from the herd to join bachelor herds. 98 A good sized southern mountain reedbuck ram in its mountainous habitat. Photo: Willem Frost Mountain reedbuck ewes (above and next page). Photos: Willem Frost 99 100 Bohor reedbuck (Redunca redunca) is a savannah antelope. Although they are not as common as waterbuck, they are also usually found near water where they hide in long grass. They are however more nocturnal than diurnal. Bohor reedbucks do not form herds but are seen as pairs or small family groups consisting of a ram and three or four ewes. Herds of up to fifty animals have however been reported from Akagera in Rwanda. Eastern bohor reedbuck. Photo: Rhett A Butler, Mongaby.com Abyssinian bohor reedbuck. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 101 Eastern Bohor reedbuck of Tanzania’s Katavi Game Reserve. Photograph: Ariadne van Zandbergen Bohor reedbucks are inhabitants of river floodplains, reed beds and seasonally flooded grasslands. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 102 Bohor reedbuck in the Pendjari National Park in Benin. Photo: Jonas van de Voorde Common reedbucks (Redunca arundinum) are taller than Bohor reedbucks. The horns are also longer and the lower part of the horns is straighter than those of other reedbucks. In all reedbuck species it is only the rams that carry horns. The horns are ringed and curve forward. A common characteristic of all reedbucks is the bare grey patch below each ear. It is believed that the function of this bare patch is to help the reedbuck determine the wind direction. Reedbucks are found in reeds and tall grasses, which can be up to two metres high, and are associated with flood plains, marshes, wetlands and pans with permanent water. Open plains without cover and thickets and forests are avoided. Reedbucks are water dependant and need to drink daily, but they do not like to move physically into the water like sitatunga or lechwe. They use well-worn trails to go the water, but approach very cautiously. The ewes will hang back and will wait for the rams and lambs to drink first. When reedbucks are at the water, a few will always be on guard duty whilst the others drink. During very hot days they may drink more than once. Rain does not seem to affect their behaviour, but strong winds may cause them to rest more and to spend less time grazing. The cover provided by tall grass and reeds is more important than the nutritional value of the available food. They are primarily grazers that utilises both sweet and sour grasses. They utilise such a specialized habitat that they do not have much competition for grazing, the only possible competitors being waterbuck, lechwe and 103 sable. Although they are grazers they will also take small quantities browse during the dry winter months. Reedbucks do not migrate but will graze on the ecotones of adjacent plains. They are not tolerant of other species or human activities and find it difficult to adapt to habitat changes. During the day reedbucks characteristically hide in tall grass and reeds by lying down and it is then almost impossible to spot them. Reedbucks are mainly nocturnal but may also be active during the day, especially during the dry winter months. They are found as solitary animals, or in pairs, or as small family groups of up to six animals. In the dry season, temporary herds of up to twenty animals may form. Reedbucks are simply not gregarious antelopes like the waterbuck or lechwe. Pairs are territorial but the ram and the ewe move independently through the territory. The ram will defend his territory aggressively and young intruding rams are often killed. Reedbucks do not need to move far for their daily activities, the home ranges and territories are quite small in comparison to other species. Territorial rams will defend the territory by advertising their presence: the head is held up high, the legs are stiffened and the white mark across the throat is shown clearly. The territory is also marked by defecating and urinating in specific places. Mating can happen throughout the year, but lambs are mostly dropped during the wet summer months. Single lambs are born and are hidden for the first six to eight weeks. The ewe will visit the lamb regularly to feed it, where after it will move it, each time, to a new hiding place. This behaviour is similar to that of the mountain reedbuck. 104 Common reedbuck; ram above and ewe below. They can be difficult to observe as they like to lie down in tall grass during the day. Photos: Willem Frost Common reedbuck ewe. Photo: Willem Frost 105 The Aepycerotini tribe Impalas are common and abundant in Southern-, Central- and Eastern Africa. Three races are recognized: (i) the Black-faced impala (Aepyceros melampus petersi) of southern Angola and northern Namibia; (ii) the Southern impala (Aepyceros melampus melampus) of South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Swaziland, Mozambique, Malawi and southeastern DRC; and (iii) the East African impala (Aepyceros melampus rendilis) of Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda. The Southern impala is typically associated with Acacia and Mopane woodlands and avoids open grass plains and flood plains. In summer they may however graze on the fresh grasses on open plains. They do not occur in mountain habitat. The black-faced impala prefers dense riverine thickets and somewhat more open woodlands with trees such as camel thorn (Acacia erioloba), Ana tree (Acacia albida) and Leadwood (Combretum imberbe). Impalas are mixed feeders, i.e. they browse and graze, enabling them to do well in a variety of bushveldt habitat and to handle drought better than the specialist feeders such as sable and roan. They utilize a very wide range of plant material and are very selective in terms of plant species and the part of the plant that is eaten. They are thus also regarded as „concentrate feeders‟ that eat only tasty plant material with a high nutritional value. During the rainy season they like to feed on new, green grass growth. During the dry winter months they tend to move closer to rivers where they may still find green grass. Browsing is however always an important part of the impala diet. They also eat fruits and the pods of the umbrella thorn (Acacia tortilis) are particularly sought after. Availability of drinking water is an important habitat requirement and impalas need to drink daily. Like all other species of antelope, the impala‟s senses of smelling, sight and hearing are extremely well developed. They also have an incredible leaping ability and when disturbed they take flight in spectacular leaps and bounds. Impalas are gregarious and make bachelor herds and separate breeding herds consisting of several females, young and a dominant male. A dominant ram will not tolerate other males amongst his ewes. As soon as the young males are a year old they are expelled from the breeding herd to join a bachelor herd. The impala rut is one of the main happenings in the bushveldt region of Southern Africa. By January the days start getting shorter and the testosterone levels in the rams start rising, making them more aggressive. Fighting amongst rams become more and more common and their load roars reverberate throughout the bush. The big dominating rams each establishes an own territory which they scent-mark by rubbing the glandular skin on the forehead and face on the vegetation. Intruding rams are driven off aggressively. This leads to regular fighting, the loser being chased until he is safely out of the territory. By March the territorial ran has started herding a group of females together and they start coming into heat. He tests them on an ongoing basis for readiness to mate. The mating peaks between the two full moons in the first half on May. During this time the territorial ram is so busy fighting off intruders, herding ewes and mating, that he has very little time for feeding. He draws energy from the fat reserves that has been built 106 up in his neck during preceding months, but still loses condition. He may then be displaced by an intruding ram which is still in better condition. The lambs are dropped en mass during a three week period at the end of November and the beginning of December. During drought when the veldt is in poor condition, the ewes are able to delay birth for periods up to three weeks, hoping for rain and better quality grazing on which to raise the young. The concentrated lambing is an important defense mechanism of the impala. All of a sudden there are huge numbers of young in the bush. Many are taken by jackals, caracals and other predators, but many more able to escape and to grow stronger so that they have a better chance of survival. Southern impala (ewe above and ram below). Photos: Willem Frost 107 Black-faced impala ram of the mopane woodlands, northern Namibia. Photo: iStock East African impala. Note the impressive horns. Photo: iStock 108 The Peleini tribe The Vaal Rhebok (Pelea capreolus) is endemic to a small region in southern Africa and is the only member of this sub-family. They occur in the montane and plateau grasslands of South Africa, Swaziland and Lesotho. The South African distribution is discontinuous and patchy where they are extinct north of the Orange River in the Northern Cape and in parts of the North West Province. They used to occur on the Highveld of western Swaziland, but have largely disappeared from this area. They remain however fairly common in the Malolotja Nature Reserve and also survive in a few unprotected areas. In Lesotho, only a few scattered populations remain of the former large and wide population. They are apparently doing well, however, in the Sehlabathebe National Park. Vaal rhebok are found in rocky mountains, rock faces, and mountain plateaus. They are grazers and require habitat with good quality grass cover. Only the rams carry horns which are straight, like those of the steenbok, and ridged for about half of the length. Rather than use the horns to fight, rams will defend their territories by advertising that the area has been occupied and that intruders will not be tolerated. This is done by approaching the intruder very slowly, stamping with the front feet and snorting loudly. This is usually sufficient to drive the intruder off. If the advertising does not work, the confrontation may result in fighting where after the victor will retain the territory. Young rams will leave the family group just before the lambing season (November/December) and will occupy the periphery of the existing territories until they have been able to establish an own territory. A family group usually consists of a ram and a few ewes and their lambs. Size of the group is not big: six to twelve animals. A few family groups may sometimes join together to form temporary, bigger herds. Family groups stay throughout the year in the home range. Vaal rhebok are active for most of the day, but will rest during the heat of the day. During winter, when the quality of grazing deteriorates, they have to move over greater distances to find food. They are graceful and agile antelopes that can move very swiftly over their mountainous habitat. When running away the white under part of the tails are clearly visible – this is believed to be a marker for the followers. 109 Vaal rhebok photographed in the Swartberg Pass, South Africa. Photo: Patrick Cardwell Gazelles (Subfamily: Antilopinae, Tribe: Antilopini) Gazelles are graceful, medium sized antelopes that are well adapted to life in the desert and in the dry, grassy savannahs. They are striking animals Gazelles have numerous natural enemies and are preyed upon by lions, leopards, cheetahs, wild dogs, hyenas, jackals and caracals. Each predator has its own peculiar hunting method. Jackals seem to specialise in taking the newborn and can often be seen hanging around the herds during the lambing season. Cheetahs and wild dogs will run the prey down whilst the leopard relies on stealth and the surprise of an ambush. Large eagles such as martial and Verreaux‟s eagles will also take young gazelles should the opportunity arise. The Gerenuk (Litocranius walleri) is an odd looking animal. Its long neck makes it appear somewhat ungainly, and it is sometimes known as the “giraffe antelope “. It is however perfectly adapted to the harsh conditions of the dry north-eastern parts of Africa. It is a voracious browser, especially of acacia, and is capable of enduring extremely hot temperatures and thirst. With its long neck, slender limbs and large eyes, its bears no resemblance to any other antelope than perhaps the dibatag. The gerenuk has the unique ability to stand erect on its hind legs whilst resting its front hooves against the thorny acacia branches and stretching its neck so as to 110 reach the leaves and shoots unattainable to other browsers. It‟s only browsing competitor is thus the giraffe. They will drink regularly when water is available, but can go without water for considerable periods. They have also developed a kidney mechanism that maximizes the re-utilization of water. They merge imperceptibly into the acacia bushes for the greater part of the day. Standing upright on all four legs, absolutely motionless, with the neck stretched forward, often behind the foliage of undergrowth, they become almost invisible. The Gerenuk relies on camouflage and stealth, rather than its running ability, when threatened. When disturbed it will disappear into the nearest thicket where it will hide. When threatened it will trot or walk quickly from cover to cover, with the head held low, stopping frequently to look back at the cause of disturbance. The gerenuk is easily identified by its long legs and long, thin neck. They are browsers feeding on Acacias and a wide variety of other plants of the arid areas. Gerenuk is independent of drinking water. Photos: Ariadne van Zandbergen 111 Northern gerenuk. They prefer arid thorn scrub and thickets. Adult rams are often solitary. Photo: iStock The Thomson’s gazelle (Gazella thomsoni) has for long been regarded as one of Africa‟s most abundant gazelles, but is now classified as “Near Threatened” by the IUCN Red List. The specie is on the decline, even in its strongholds such as the Ngorogoro, Serengeti and Masai Mara. They are very much part of the East African plains landscape and used to occur wherever there is open space. It is East and North Africa‟s most prolific gazelle. They are rather similar to the Red-fronted gazelle with a white bar near the eyes and a horizontal black bar on the flanks. Both sexes carry large ringed horns which curve delicately backwards. Whilst many gazelles are essentially browsers, Thomson gazelles (“Thommies”) are primarily grazers, although they may also take forbs and fruits in the dry season. They are relatively drought resistant, enabling them to remain out on the dry plains, long after most other ungulates have moved off to find better grazing. Thomson's Gazelle in the Serengeti follow the migratory pattern of the wildebeest and zebra populations, but remain for longer on the open plains in the south-east of the ecosystem and do not migrate as far north as the Masai Mara. Thomson‟s gazelles 112 cover substantial distances when grazing. They have pointed muzzles and will stop to graze in a patch of short grass before moving on to another patch some distance away. The rams mark their territories with their preorbital scent glands, defecation and exaggerated urination. They defend their territories aggressively and fighting amongst rams is not uncommon, especially when territories are closely located. Fighting rams approach one another with straight, stiff necks and the horns held vertical. They then jump forward to butt heads, retreat and butt again and again, stopping every now and then to stand in mock alarm, to urinate or defecate, to graze or to engage in some other activity. The shape of the horns, however, prevents serious injury during these fights. The Thomson gazelle has been named after a Scottish naturalist that explored East Africa on foot in the early 1880‟s when he was searching for a route between Mombasa and Lake Victoria. He was the first white man to explore Masailand and live to tell his story. In 1883 he shot an antelope near Lake Baringo that he named after himself. Thomson’s gazelle, a denizen of the open grasslands of the Serengeti and the Masai-Mara. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 113 The Thomson gazelle is a grazer and needs to drink regularly. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Grant’s gazelle (Gazella granti) migrates to short-grass plains of East Africa in the dry season and the savannah woodland during rains - opposite to the main Serengeti-Mara wildebeest and zebra migration. Sometimes they also mix with the more numerous Thomson's gazelle and can be seen feeding together – the Thommies grazing on the short grasses and the Grant‟s gazelles browsing quite contentedly on leaves. Grant‟s gazelles are primarily browsers and, unlike the Thomson‟s gazelle, will stay in one place when feeding. Grant‟s gazelle is water-independent and is at home sub desert, lowland thorn bush, savannah woodland, open plains, and montane grassland up to 2500 m., but not long grass. It is possible for Grant's gazelle to thrive in areas beyond the reach of herbivores that need to drink regularly. They are able to utilise a wider range of habitat than the Thomson‟s gazelle, but is not as numerous. Like gemsbok and oryx they can go without water for months and are comfortable staying out in the sun when other species seek shade. This has probably to do with their nasal cooling system. Herds are not large and seldom exceed thirty animals. Males are territorial but the territories are larger than those of the Thomson‟s gazelles and fighting is not as common. Two subspecies are recognized: (i) the Southern Grant’s gazelle (Gazella granti granti) of Tanzania and (ii) the Northern Grant’s gazelle (Gazella granti lacuum) of 114 southwestern Ethiopia and Kenya. A further three subspecies, with different common names are also recognized: Bright’s gazelle (Gazella granti brighti), Peter’s gazelle (Gazella granti petersi) and Robert’s gazelle (Gazella granti robertsi), all of different parts of East Africa. The Bright‟s gazelle is confined to the southern end of the Sudanese savannah zone, east of the River Nile, and to some areas near the Ethiopian foothills. It differs from the other Grant‟s gazelles in being smaller in body and horn size, in having a black border around the white rump patch, and in having vaguer flank bands. A mature Grant’s gazelle ram on the Serengeti plains in Tanzania. Photo: iStock 115 Typical East African scene: Grant’s gazelle in the Samburu National Park, Kenya. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Female Grant’s gazelle. They drop a single fawn at any time of the year after a gestation period of about 200 days. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 116 Grant’s gazelle ram in the Samburu National Park, Kenya. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen The Mongalla gazelle (Gazella thomsoni albonotata) resides on the floodplains and savannah grasslands in southern Sudan. They do seem to be water dependent though. Although they migrate annually over the eastern Sudd floodplains, an ecologically peculiar region where extensive floods are followed by extreme aridity, the Mongalla gazelle is one of the last species to join the Great Migration. During the wet season, the Mongalla gazelle aggregates in high population densities with other migratory species such as White-eared Kob and Tiang. An aerial survey by the Wildlife Conservation Society in 2007 (the first in more than two decades) resulted in an estimate of 278 000 animals for this subpopulation. The Soemmering’s gazelle (Gazella soemmeringii) is a denizen of the harsh habitat of the horn of Africa (Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan, Eritrea and Djibouti) and is regarded as vulnerable. They are the largest of the Soemmering‟s gazelles and prefer short grass plains. The Sudan Soemmering’s gazelle (Gazella soemmeringii soemmeringii) occurred in north-eastern Sudan and adjacent Eritrea, but is feared to be extinct. The Borani Soemmering’s gazelle (Gazella soemmeringii butteri) is endemic to the Dawa valley in Ethiopia, but is probably also extinct. There are a few Somali Soemmering’s gazelles (Gazella soemmeringii berberana) populations left in Somalia, Djibouti and Ethiopia, but they are under extreme pressure from 117 uncontrolled hunting and poaching and habitat degradation as a result of overgrazing by domestic livestock. Somali Soemmering’s gazelle. Photo: iStock Somali Soemmering’s gazelle. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation 118 The Dorcas gazelle (Gazella dorcas dorcas) used to have the widest distribution of any African gazelle, which stretched over most of North Africa and the Sahara and the Sahelian region, but populations are now highly fragmented and they are absent from much of their former range . A number of subspecies have been identified: the Sahara dorcas gazelle (Gazella dorcas osiris), Egyptian dorcas gazelle (Gazella dorcas dorcas). G. dorcas neglecta from North West Africa (Morocco, Mauritania and West Sahara); G. dorcas massaesyla from northern Morocco and the subspecies listed hereunder: the Eritrean gazelle (G.d. littoralis), the Isabelline gazelle (G.d. Isabella) and Pelzeln’s gazelle (G.d pelzelni). Scientists are still debating whether Pelzeln‟s gazelle is a subspecies of the Gazella dorcas or a species on its own. Officially it is still a dorcas subspecies, but this may change. The Pelzeln‟s gazelle is not water dependent as it obtains its moisture requirements from the plant material that it eats. It is found along the coastal plains of Somalia in desolate rocky and/or sandy habitat where it likes to keep in dry, sandy fossil rivers known locally as wadis. They can also be found on the hard gravel flats with very little vegetation. Pelzeln‟s gazelles keep in small family groups of about six animals on average, but can also be encountered in pairs or as single animals. Gazella dorcas dorcas is the most widespread and is found all over the Sahara. The overall population has been on the decline for a long time as a result of drought, overgrazing by domestic livestock and excessive hunting. The largest current populations are in Chad (especially in the Ouadi Rimé-Ouadi Achim Faunal Reserve), Niger (Aïr-Ténéré National Nature Reserve and the Termit MassifTinToumma), and along the northern parts of the horn of Africa. Dorcas gazelles are rather small (shoulder height 55 to 65 cm and weight 15 to 20 kg) with few contrasting colors. They have typical gazelle facial stripes but these are less distinct than those of most other gazelles. The horns are lyrate and strongly ringed and 25 to 37 cm in length. Females are identical to males other than for the more slender horns and the slighter build. Dorcas gazelles feed on a wide variety of plants (in fact, they feed on almost all desert plant species) and also supplements their diet with locusts and their larvae. These gazelles have a remarkable ability to withstand severe desert climate. They usually live in small herds and the males keep some distance from the rest of the herd. They only join the herd again for mating which can take place any time of the year. Bachelor and female groups are common. The social structure also depends on habitat conditions. When food is very scarce they are to be found only in pairs with dependent offspring. Communication amongst dorcas gazelles is unusual and the white patch on the rump plays an important role. When the animals are relaxed and feeding, the black tail is flicked from side to side across the clearly visible white patch on the rump. If they are disturbed, they take a posture which largely conceals the white patch. The tail is now tucked down beneath the hind legs. If they are threatened, they will raise alarm. The hindquarters are raised thereby accentuating and enlarging the white patches. The tail is flicked nervously and this seems to be a signal for the herd to move off, usually at a trot. 119 Mature Dorcas gazelle ram. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preserve 120 The Dorcas gazelle’s preferred habitat consists of semi-desert and sandy areas. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Pelzeln‟s gazelle. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation 121 The Slender-horned gazelle, (Gazella leptoceros leptoceros, also known as the Rhim gazelle, was already listed as endangered in the 1960‟s. In 1996 the IUCN listed it as “critically endangered “. Today, it may very well be close to extinction. It has been reported recently that an Arab hunting expedition shot as many 42 of these animals in January and February 2004 in Egypt‟s Western Desert despite the fact that it is illegal to hunt in the said area. This once common desert gazelle used to range from Algeria eastward to Egypt, Chad and possibly northern Sudan. It lives in the dunes in very small groups usually consisting of a ram and one or more ewes with their young. It is not known how many of these animals are left in the wild. Total numbers are probably only a few hundred. All sub-populations are small. It is now classified as Endangered on the IUCN Red List, and listed on Appendix I of The Convention on Migratory Species. It is also listed as Endangered by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, and is listed on Appendix III of CITES in Tunisia. The slender-horned gazelle is a nomadic desert antelope. Photo: iStock 122 The Dama gazelle (Gazella dama), also known as the Addra gazelle, used to be common on the edges of the Sahara Desert, from Morocco and Senegal in the west to the Sudan in the east. Only a few small populations remain Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and Chad. They have also been introduced on private land in the USA and Europe. Today they are regarded as Critically Endangered by the IUCN and have been placed on Appendix 1 of CITES as well as The Convention on Migratory Species. This is the largest of the gazelles (shoulder height 90 top 120 cm and weight 40 to 75 kg). The neck and legs are also relatively long. The reddish hue of the upper part of the body contrasts strongly with the white belly and hindquarters. Both sexes carry strongly ringed short horns which bent back from the base and which are curved at the tip. These hardy animals prefer a desert habitat, as well as adjoining arid areas with sparse vegetation cover. Three subspecies are recognized: G.d. dama, G.d. mhorr, and G.d. ruficolis and they are all highly endangered. The mhorr gazelle is now only found in captivity and in fenced protected areas. It is estimated that roughly a thousand of G.d. dama and G.d. ruficolis remain in the wild. After the Second World War, North Africa was subjected to mass slaughtering of wildlife in which vehicles, helicopters and automatic rifles were often used. Many thousands of dama gazelle were killed. The Dama gazelle still seem to head inevitably towards extinction. The Dama Gazelle used to be one of the most common and widespread of the desert gazelles, but is now staring down the barrel of extinction in the wild. Photos: iStock 123 All three races of the Dama gazelle are characterized by a distinctive white spot on the throat. Photo: iStock The striking dama gazelle in typical habitat. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 124 The Red-fronted gazelle (Gazella rufrifrons) has a widespread distribution between northern Nigeria and the Nile River in central Sudan. There is also an isolated population in Senegal. Four subspecies are recognized: G. rufrifrons rufrifrons – West Sahel region G. rufrifrons laevipes – East Sahel/from Niger to the Nile G. rufrifrons kanuri – south of Lake Chad G. rufrifrons tilonura – Eritrea and along the Sudan-Ethiopian border. The total population is unlikely to exceed 20 000 and is scattered in small fragments over its former range. The specie is under severe pressure from habitat degradation, overgrazing by livestock and illegal hunting. The majority of Red-fronted gazelles are found outside of protected areas. Consequently, the population trend is downwards. It is already extinct in Ghana. Red-fronted gazelle. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation 125 Cuvier’s gazelle (Gazella cuvieri) is also known as the Atlas gazelle or the Mountain gazelle and is found only in the high country of northern Algeria and southern Morocco, with a small population in western Tunisia. It is endangered; the total population is less than 2500 adult animals and no sub-population has more 250 animals. Cuvier’s gazelle. Photo: Wikipedia Speke’s gazelle. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation 126 Speke’s gazelle (Gazella spekei) is endemic to the horn of Africa. The only known population remains in Somalia. The Ethiopian population is most probably extinct but this has to be confirmed. Speke‟s gazelle still occurred in fair numbers in its historical range up to the 1980‟s. Since then their numbers have crashed as a result of uncontrolled hunting, poaching, drought and pressure from domestic livestock. The ongoing armed conflict and lawlessness in Somalia has also contributed to the specie‟s demise. The size of the remaining total population is unknown, but it cannot be many. They prefer open flats with little vegetation and keep in small family groups. The Speke‟s gazelle resembles the Thomson‟s gazelle but the horns are shorter and it has two protuberances on the nose. Springbok (Antidorcas marsupialis) is the only gazelle found south of Tanzania. It is one of the most abundant antelopes of Southern Africa and is common throughout Namibia, Botswana and South Africa. It is the only antelope with a long term increasing trend in numbers. Vast herds used to cover the open plains of the Highveld and the Karoo of South Africa. They migrated in herds consisting of hundreds of thousands of animals and were known as “trekbokken” by the early Boer settlers. The last known large scale migration took place in 1896 in the Northern Cape. Although their numbers have been decimated since, they are still abundant throughout their range, especially in the Kalahari. They are at home in the arid regions, as well as the Highveld, of Southern Africa. Although they are independent of surface water, they will drink regularly if water is available. Drinking can take place at any time of the day or night. They will, however, not drink in cold weather or immediately after rains. Springbok are grazers and browsers, but avoid mountainous areas, dense woodlands and areas with high grasses which impair their ability to see. During winter when the nutritional value of the grasses deteriorates as far as protein and energy content is concerned, they feed mostly on bushes and scrubs. Once the rains have commenced, usually from October onwards, they feed mostly on fresh green grasses and herbs. They also feed on leaves of trees such as camel thorn (Acacia erioloba), shepherd‟s tree (Boscia albitrunca) and buffalo thorn (Ziziphus mucronata), as well as roots and bulbs. Springbok are gregarious antelopes; during winter (May to September) they form small herds but during summer the herds may be considerably larger. Like wildebeests and hartebeests, with which they share habitat, they will move to areas where it has rained in order to feed on fresh growth. In these instances they may form massive herds consisting of thousands of animals of both sexes and all ages. Up to end of the 19th century springbok used to undertake enormous migrations consisting of hundreds of thousands of animals. S.C. Cronwright-Schreiner described one such migration in his 1925 work, “The migrating springbucks of South Africa” as covering an area in excess of hundred miles long and fifteen miles wide, 127 moving as one solid mass. Human settlement in their distribution range, increased numbers of domestic stock, agricultural and infrastructural development, and hunting all contributed to a severe decline in springbok populations. But today they are doing well and their numbers are once again on the increase. The rams are territorial but will not maintain the territory throughout the year. The peak mating season depends on veldt conditions and the weather. Territorial rams herd the ewes to their territory and try to keep them there. The territory is defended more by advertising than by fighting; the rams will often stand in prominent positions within the territory to advertise their presence. They also use middens to mark the territory. Although springbok have pre-orbital glands they do not seem to use it to mark territory. Bachelor herds consist of anything between two and more than a hundred rams. Young rams are often seen sparring playfully. The ewes are more aggressive and will stab other springbok. When fighting, the rams will lock horns and wrestle from side to side. Fighting only occasionally results in a death. Springbok always appear to be clean; they rub themselves with the noses and the horns, scratch themselves with the hind feet and nibble on the sides of the body. Although “pronking” has been observed in other species such as oribi, the springbok is specifically known for this unique behaviour. Pronking is spectacular and happens when the animals are stressed or being chased. The legs are stiffened, the head held low down, the back is bent, and the white dorsal fan of hair is raised. The animal jumps in the air and lands on all four straight, stiffened legs. This is repeated several times. The raising of the white dorsal hairs is believed to be a form of communication with the rest of the herd. Springbok is sometimes classified into three subspecies: Kalahari springbok (A.m. hofmeyeri; Angolan springbok (A.m. angolensis) and South African springbok (A.m. marsupialis). The differences are, however, so minimal that most zoologists do not believe that sub-species are justified. Game farmers in South Africa have also successfully bred black, white and copper springboks for the hunting industry. These are however not subspecies; simply colour variations. 128 Springbok in the Kalahari Transfrontier Park, Botswana. Photo: Willem Frost The Dibatag (Ammodorcas clarkei), also known as „Clarke’s gazelle, is not a true gazelle but is similarly marked. It is very similar in build to the gerenuk, but the neck is shorter and it does not carry the neck in a horizontal position when it runs. Only the males carry horns that points forward like those of the reedbuck. There is a distinct white ring around the eyes which extends down the muzzle. It has a long, furry black tail which is raised in flight. Hence the name which means “erect tail” in Somali. The dibatag stands barely three feet high at the shoulder and is not easily seen in its preferred habitat: plains with shrubs and tall grasses. It feeds on grass, leaves and acacia flowers as well as the thorns of the Commiphora. Dibatags have long necks which allow them to browse at higher levels than most other antelopes. Like the gerenuk, they will stand on the hind legs in order to reach higher up into the brush or tree. They feed mostly in the mornings; when it gets hot they seek shade to rest up. They need very little surface water. It is an attractive, elegant antelope with a graceful gait. When running he trots like a horse with the head thrown back, the neck arched and the tail erect. His senses of hearing, smelling and vision ar. all very well developed. He relies on his remarkable abilities to see, hear and smell as well as his shyness, to stay out of harm‟s way. When disturbed they run a long way before stopping to look back – just like an eland. The rams are territorial and they mark their territories with dung piles which they visit daily. Mating takes place throughout the year, but with a slight peak between March and May. A single lamb is born and is hidden in the undergrowth where the mother suckles it until it is able to follow her and to fend for itself. 129 Dibatag were found only in the Ogaden in Ethiopia and in central Somalia. Hunting/poaching, political unrest and armed conflict, and loss of habitat due to human settlement, has resulted in the disappearance of the dibatag over much of its range. It is not known if any dibatag survives in Somalia. The numbers in Ethiopia are unknown, but there cannot be many. The population trend is downward and there must be concern over the future of this animal. Duikers (Subfamily: Antilopinae, Tribe: Cephalophini)) The Bush duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia), or Common duiker, is one of the most widely distributed antelopes of Africa. Although it is essentially a savannah species it is found in relatively open country as well as mountainous areas. It occurs from the sandy flats of the Western Cape in South Africa northwards into Botswana, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Mozambique, Malawi, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Congo Brazzaville, Cameroon, Chad, Sudan, all of East Africa, and throughout West Africa to Senegal. Throughout this vast distribution range there are differences in size and color and some nineteen sub-species have been identified (Ansell, 1972). This is, however, not generally accepted. Grubb and Groves recognized 14 races. The differences are however marginal and it is not easy to recognize the different sub-species. Bush duikers have pre-orbital, foot and inguinal glands. The pre-orbital glands are particularly noticeable. Normally only the rams carry short, straight and ridged horns, but the ewes may also sometimes have horns - albeit somewhat underdeveloped horns. They require habitat with bushes that can provide cover and shade and they will avoid grass plains with short grasses. Bush duikers are browsers feeding on leaves, shoots, flowers, fruits and seeds. Small quantities of grass and fruit may also be taken. They are the only antelopes with a carnivorous dimension to their diet: they are known to occasionally eat small birds, small reptiles and even rodents. Bush duikers are crepuscular and are active around dusk and dawn, but on cool days they may remain active throughout the day. When they are constantly disturbed or hunted, they will become nocturnal. The ram is slightly smaller than the ewe. Duikers are solitary animals and the rams and ewes have their own home range. A ram will thus mate with two or more adjacent ewes. When a ewe comes into heat, she will be visited by the ram for a period seldom exceeding four days. Mating and births happen throughout the year without any peak periods. The size of the home range depends on the quality of the food resources and can vary significantly. Duikers make use of middens as well as scent marking to define their territories. They are excellent runners and can disappear very quickly into the undergrowth. The name duiker is derived from Afrikaans and refers to the animal‟s characteristic ability to „dive‟ into cover. Bush duikers are preyed upon by lions, leopards, cheetahs, hyenas, wild dogs, jackals, caracals, servals, baboons, pythons and large raptors such as eagles and owls. 130 Young bush duiker ram. Photo: Willem Frost The Natal red duiker (Cephalophus natalensis) was introduced to the scientific world by Sir Andrew Smith in 1834 after he discovered it in the forests of Natal. It is found in the coastal forests of South Africa‟s Kwa-Zulu Natal, through Mozambique, Malawi, Tanzania and northwards as far as the south of Sudan. This species is however absent from Zimbabwe and Zambia. Like the blue duiker, they require specialized habitat consisting of forests and thickets but they are able to occupy more diverse habitat than blue duikers. They occur widely in coastal and riverine forests and thickets, escarpments and montane forests. According to Wilson the availability of water is not a habitat requirement – this is typical of the forest duikers. They are crepuscular antelopes, active at dusk and dawn and inactive at night. Red duikers appear not to be territorial and home ranges overlap considerably. They are usually seen in pairs or as single animals or a ewe with her lamb. Red duikers are selective browsers living on fresh and fallen leaves, fruits, flowers and shoots. In some areas the Natal red duiker has been recorded feeding well outside of the small isolated forests in which they live. Burnt flushes and regrowth are then a major attraction for red duikers. Clearing of forests for agricultural purposes is destroying much of the red duiker habitat and is putting the species under pressure. 131 Red duikers in the coastal forests of Zululand. Photo: Willem Frost The Blue duiker (Cephalophus monticola) has a widespread distribution throughout Africa‟s forests south of the Sahara, but not west of the River Niger. The Blue duiker is the most widespread of all the forest duikers of Africa, but their distribution is not continuous. Although deforestation is taking suitable habitat away from them, there are still many blue duikers in non-protected areas. The species is not threatened and East estimated in 1999 that there must be at least 7 million of them spread over several populations. They require specialized habitat and are restricted to forests and thickets. According to Wilson there are three critical habitat requirements for blue duiker: (i) suitable feeding areas, usually in open places beneath a high forest canopy; (ii) adequate shrub cover where they can take shelter and hide; and (iii) secluded bed-sites in dense cover. During the day they rest and hide in dark shade, but in the evenings and early in the morning they may browse in more open areas and on the edges of the forests. Blue duikers however seldom venture far from an overhead forest canopy. They are water dependent and need to drink regularly. They feed on fruits, seeds, fine shoots, mushrooms, fresh and fallen leaves, flowers and fresh grass sprouting after a fire. Fruit seems to be dominant in their diet. The blue duiker is the smallest of all the duikers but not as small as Bates‟ or the royal antelope. The coat has the bluish hue – hence the name blue duiker. When seen in the shade of the forests where they live, they appear more black than blue though. The males are generally smaller than the females (like the red-flanked and the yellow-backed duikers), which is unusual amongst the antelopes. Both males and females have horns that point backwards and that are heavily ringed near the base. Blue duikers are mostly solitary animals. They are very shy and will flee into the dense undergrowth at the slightest suspicion of danger making a peculiar whistling 132 sound. When caught they bleat loudly. Sometimes though, the blue duiker may freeze when it senses danger and will then skulk away to hide in dense undergrowth. Here it will remain still and quiet until it regards it to be safe again. They are very territorial and will not easily leave the territory or venture beyond the home range. Since the blue duiker is such a small antelope, it is preyed upon by raptors such as the crowned eagle, pythons, small cats and leopards. The distribution ranges of blue duikers and crowned eagles overlap throughout Africa and their inter-relationship is part of the inter-dependence of forest animals. Other large eagles and raptors prefer different habitat and it is probably safe to say that crowned eagles are the principal avian predators of blue duikers. But crowned eagles also prey inter alia on monkeys, other small antelopes, birds and hyrax. They have extremely strong legs and very powerful, long talons. They kill by grasping the prey from behind and penetrating the spine with the claws. If the prey is not immediately killed, it is at least paralyzed. The eagle then suffocates the animal by standing on it and closing the wind pipe. Blue duikers and monkeys share the same fruit resources and both are preyed upon by crowned eagles. The duikers are thus often seen with monkeys - they pick up fallen fruit and rely on the monkeys‟ alarm calls. Blue duiker in Kenya’s Aberdares. Photo: iStock Maxwell’s duiker (Cephalophus maxwelli) occurs in the rain forests of West Africa between Senegal and the River Niger in Nigeria (i.e. Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Guinea – Bissau, Gambia, Senegal). The total population is more than two million. They show resilience to hunting pressure and adapts well to degradation of habitat. The population is 133 however slowly on the decrease as there are few effective conservation areas within their range. Maxwell‟s duiker is named after Colonel Charles Maxwell who took a specimen from Sierra Leone to England early in the nineteenth century. These duikers vary considerably in size and colour, even in a single population. As the animal gets older the colour becomes lighter. There are also major colour differences between young and adult Maxwell‟s duikers. Maxwell‟s duiker typically has a distinct superciliary streak from the base of the horns to just below the eyes, but this often fades with age. The rams have short, heavily ridged horns that curve slightly forward. Some females may also have horns. Some parts of the range seem to produce more hornless ewes than others. These duikers also have well developed pre-orbital and pedal glands. Maxwell‟s duiker is found in primary and secondary forests with good undergrowth. The Akyempong weed (Chromolaena odorata) has been introduced to West Africa some fifty years ago and has since become extensive, especially where the forests took a hammering from logging, fires and other human activities. The Akyempong is however providing good habitat for Maxwell‟s duiker and must have contributed to the fact that there are still relatively large numbers of these duikers around. Maxwell‟s duiker feeds mainly on seeds, fruits, flowers – only small quantities of leaves are taken. They are more crepuscular than nocturnal or diurnal. Typically, Maxwell‟s duiker will move through the undergrowth with the head lowered and stretched out forward; the gait will be somewhat jerky and the tail will be flicked up and down. Maxwell‟s duiker is territorial and both ram and ewe will defend the territory. They are usually found in pairs and it is believed that they mate for life. Single animals are also common. Maxwell‟s duiker is preyed upon by leopards, small cats, pythons and crowned eagles. Some taxonomists believe that Maxwell’s duiker and the blue duiker are one and the same species as there are almost no distinguishing features. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 134 The Red-flanked duiker (Cephalophus rufilatus) is widely distributed between Senegal, southwestern Sudan and northeastern DRC (i.e. Mali, Niger, Senegal, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Nigeria, Cameroon, CAR, Congo, DRC, Uganda and Sudan) where it inhabits savannah woodlands, riverine woodland, dense riparian forest and gallery forests. It seems to avoid dense rainforests. It is a very small duiker with well developed pre-orbital and pedal glands. It is usually a solitary animal but pairs are also seen, sometimes with a baby. The red-flanked duiker is quite a restless animal and when disturbed will quickly run off in a series of long leaps. When walking the tail flicks from side to side. They also make use of middens to defecate, but unlike impala and some other antelopes, they do not deposit the droppings each time on top of each other, but would rather scatter it over a much larger area. The red-flanked duiker feeds mainly on fallen fruits, seeds and flowers but will also take dry leaves and tubers. It is believed that, like the bush duiker, they also eat meat of dead animals. The red-flanked duiker occurs in a broad belt across West Africa: from Senegal in the west to Uganda and Sudan in the east. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 135 Red-flanked duiker in the Pendjari National Park, Benin. Photo: Jonas van de Voorde Harvey’s red duiker (Cephalophus harveyi) occurs in central and south-eastern Kenya, north-eastern and central Tanzania, marginally in southern Somalia, and northern Malawi. Although the overall population is on the decline as a result of habitat destruction and illegal hunting, they are still common in protected areas within the range. The Black duiker (Cephalophus niger) is found in West Africa (Nigeria, Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea) where it inhabits lowland rainforests, the edge of primary forest, gallery forests, thicket, and riverine and deciduous forest patches within savannas. It remains widespread and common throughout its historical range. It shows remarkable resilience to hunting pressure and adapts well to habitat changes. The black duiker gets its name from the soft, glossy, black pelage. Around the throat and chin it pales however to a light grey. There may also be an orange spot between the forelegs. Both sexes carry horns, but typical of most bovids, the horns of the females are much smaller. They have pre-orbital as well as pedal glands. Like all other forest duikers, the black duiker inhabits the high forests, dense bush, thickets and forest edges where they feed on fruits, seeds, bulbs, flowers, leaves, fungi, bark, cultivated crops and some grasses. The diet is however dominated by fruit and seeds. Like Maxwell‟s duiker, they have benefitted from the introduction of the invasive weed Akyempong and their numbers have probably increased in parts of their range as a result of this. They are apparently mostly nocturnal, but also diurnal and seldom seen. Wilson thinks they are crepuscular. They are mostly solitary animals but are sometimes also seen in pairs. 136 Black duiker. Photo: courtesy of Mountain View Wildlife Conservation Centre The Zebra duiker (Cephalophus zebra) occurs in Sierra Leone, Liberia and western Ivory Coast. There is also a population in south-eastern Guinea. The zebra duiker is a small antelope with a unique colour pattern. The body colour is generally rufous with 12 to 16 black transverse body stripes between the shoulders and the rump. The body colour and the width of the black stripes can vary considerably. The upper parts of the legs are very dark on the outside whilst the lower parts are rufous-reddish-brown. The back is rounded, like that of the grysbok, and the legs are relatively short. Both sexes carry horns so short that it is sometimes hidden by the crest of hair on the forehead. Like most other duikers they have preorbital, pedal and inguinal glands. This duiker prefers evergreen moist primary rainforest and does not adapt well to deforestation and habitat changes. It feeds mainly on fruits and seeds and has also been reported to eat mice. Not much is known about the behavior of the animal as it has not been as well studied in the wild as well as most other species. There is, for instance, uncertainty as to whether it is diurnal or nocturnal. The zebra duiker is listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN Red Data List. Habitat loss, deforestation and excessive hunting and poaching are pushing the population numbers sharply down. The size of the total population is uncertain. The zebra duiker requires undisturbed primary lowland forest ranging into montane and hill forest. Wilson considered them the least adaptable of all West African duiker 137 species to deforestation and therefore the least likely to survive hunting pressure and habitat degradation. In addition it has a limited distribution. This species must be regarded as being in trouble. The Ogilby’s duiker (Cephalophus ogilby) is named after William Ogilby, secretary of the London Zoological Society in the 1830‟s. It is a rufous colored duiker with a black dorsal stripe along the back to the base of the tail. There is a very distinct tuft of black and white hair at the end of the tail. The hair on the neck is usually grayish in contrast with the rufous body. Both sexes carry heavily ridged horns which are slightly concave. They also have pre-orbital, pedal and inguinal glands. This duiker has not been studied as well as other duikers and it is regarded as one of the least known duikers of Africa. Ogilby‟s duiker and the bay duiker can easily be confused with each other; they are similar in size and color and can be found in the same forests. Ogilby‟s duiker may be classified into two sub-species: (i) ogilbyi which occurs in southeastern Nigeria, southwestern Cameroon and on Bioko Island (formerly Fernando Po) in Equatorial Guinea: and (ii) crusalbum which is endemic to western Gabon and is also known as the white-legged duiker. Ogilby's duiker is diurnal and inhabits primary rainforest habitats, but has also been recorded in secondary forest. On Bioko Island, in the absence of other mediumsized and large duikers, this species has expanded its niche to include not only lowland forest but also Schefflera-dominated forest and montane forest (East, 1999). It feeds primarily on fruits and seeds. The total population of Ogilby's duiker is estimated at 30,000 individuals, with roughly 12,000 C. o. ogilbyi and 18,000 C. o. crusalbum (East, 1999). The major threats to survival are habitat loss due to human settlement, agriculture, logging and hunting for the bush meat trade. This species is highly susceptible to overhunting (East, 1999). Duikers are popular with hunters because they are easy to hunt, easy to transport by foot, and have enough meat to be highly profitable. Current levels of hunting are, however, unsustainable. Overhunting and increasing habitat loss, to which Ogilby‟s duiker is particularly susceptible due to its restricted distribution and dependence on mature forest, will most probably lead to the further decline of this species in the years to come. Ogilby‟s duiker has only a few strongholds left such as Korup National Park in Cameroon and Bioko Island in Equatorial Guinea. Although this antelope remains relatively numerous on Bioko Island, it is seriously overhunted and control of the bushmeat trade and effective protection in conservation areas are vital to the survival of the species. Brooke’s duiker (Cephalophus brookei) used to be regarded as a subspecies of Cephalophus ogilbyi (Ogilby‟s duiker) but has been restored to specie status by Grubb et al (1998) and Grubb and Groves (2002). They occur in Sierra Leone, Liberia, western Ivory Coast and western Ghana. Their numbers are decreasing throughout their range and have been reduced to around 5,000 individuals. Healthy populations occur in only in a few areas, such as Sapo National Park in Liberia and Tai National Park in Ivory Coast. Peters’ duiker (Cephalophus callipygus) is still fairly common within its range which stretches across the equatorial forests of Congo, Cameroon, Gabon and Democratic 138 Republic of the Congo. Although there is a large variation in body color, it is generally a reddish-brown duiker with a broad band between the shoulders and the rump, sometimes extending down to the hind legs. They have large pre-orbital glands as well as pedal glands. Peters‟ duiker inhabits moist, lowland, equatorial forests where dense undergrowth can provide shelter. They also do well in forests that are regenerating after logging. They forage primarily in mature forests and fruit forms the major part of their diet, although they also take leaves, flowers, shoots and mushrooms. The combination of fruit and leaves change, however, as the seasons change. Peters‟ is a diurnal duiker but when disturbed it will quickly rush off into dense undergrowth. Males are believed to be territorial and they breed continually throughout the year. Current population is estimated to be at least 300 000. Unless the excessive hunting and poaching is however brought under control, Peter‟s duiker will come under increasing pressure and will probably disappear from parts of its current range. The overall population trend is downwards; in undisturbed areas with few people their populations are stable, but elsewhere it is on the decline. Scientists are not in agreement on the classification of Weyns’ duiker (Cephalophus weynsi). SCI recognizes it as full specie and include the following six races: babertoni, ignifer, johnstoni, lestradei, rutshuricus and weynsi. Boddington and Flack also list it at species level in their book “African Hunter II”. Others such as Roland Ward and Dr. Vivian Wilson regard it as a sub-species of Peters‟ duiker and refer to it as Cephalophus callipygus weynsi. The range then stretches across northern DRC, south-eastern CAR, south-western Sudan, Uganda Rwanda, Burundi, southeastern Sudan, and far western Kenya. One of the main reasons Weyns‟ duiker is regarded as a species rather than a sub-species of C. callipygus, is the absence of the black dorsal stripe that is so characteristic of Peters‟ duiker. Weyns‟ duiker remains fairly widespread and common with a total population of more than 150 000. The Gabon duiker (Cephalophus leucogaster), also known as the White-bellied duiker, is habitat specific and is found in moist equatorial forest and the mature closed-canopy forests of southern Cameroon, southwestern CAR, Gabon, Congo and DRC. It prefers undisturbed high forest. The Gabon duiker is a light coloured with a brown-black dorsal stripe. The belly, the throat, the sternum and the inside of the legs are white. Pre-orbital, pedal and inguinal glands are present and active. It is a diurnal antelope and feeds mainly on fruits, flowers, leaves, petioles and fungi. The populations of Gabon duikers are more stable than those of Brooke‟s or Ogilby‟s duikers as it occurs mostly in areas where there are relatively few humans. It is still relatively widespread and common and occurs in a number of protected areas, including Lopé-Okanda National Park and the Gamba complex in Gabon, as well as Odzala National Park in Congo. Preservation of this habitat is vital to the conservation of C. leucogaster in the long term. Although the total population is estimated to be in excess of 250 000, the bush meat trade and loss of habitat presents a major risk to the long term survival of the specie which will depend on the maintenance of viable populations within protected areas such as 139 national parks and reserves. The Pygmies are very successful in calling these duikers and then shooting them. The Gabon duiker is curious and will often stand still in one place trying to figure the cause of some disturbance, thereby giving the hunter ample shooting opportunity. They are also easily captured in game nets and wire snares. Overhunting is thus regarded as a major threat to their survival in the long run. The Black-fronted duiker (Cephalophus nigrifrons) inhabits tropical forests ranging from lowland swamp forest and seasonally flooded forest with poorly drained or permanently saturated soils (where it is frequently encountered along streams and in marshy areas) to montane forests, and subalpine vegetation zones. It remains widespread in Angola, DRC, Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, Burundi, Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, CAR, Cameroon, Cameroon, and Nigeria. The total population is about 300 000. It is however coming under pressure from human settlement, habitat loss and the bush meat trade. Five sub-species have been recognized: (i) C.n. nigifrons – the lowland forests of Gabon, CAR, Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of Congo down to Angola. (ii) C.n. rudibus – the higher parts of the Ruwenzori Mountains (iii) C.n. kivuensis – the lower slopes of the Ruwenzori Mountains and around Lake Kivu in Uganda (iv) C.n. fosteri – Mount Elgon in Kenya (v) C.n. hooki – Mount Kenya. The pelage of the black-fronted duiker is red, but the underside is much lighter. There is a dark brown or black blaze running from the nose to the crest of the head. Some animals may also have some black on the shoulders. This species is also characterized by relatively long legs in comparison to other forest duikers. They have well developed pre-orbital, pedal and inguinal glands. The hooves have a shape similar to that of the sitatunga as the black-fronted duiker prefers marshy areas and habitat close to permanent water. When disturbed it will flee towards water where it will hide. Black-fronted duikers occur also in the montane forests of East Africa and have been recorded on Mt. Elgon, Mt. Kenya, the Ruwenzoris and the Virungas where it has adapted well to the different environmental conditions. It utilizes various woodland habitats as well as bamboo forests and the diet in the mountainous habitats consists of herbs, lichens, bamboo leaves, bark, vines and some grass. In the lowlands there are more fruits available and fruit and leaves then dominate the diet. The black-fronted duiker is both diurnal and nocturnal. The Bay duiker (Cephalophus dorsalis) is a heavily built red duiker with a black dorsal stripe and black or dark brown legs. There is a dark frontal blaze and the inside of the ears are near white whilst the back of the ears are somewhere between brown and black. Both rams and ewes carry short, straight and smooth horns. They have large and well developed pre-orbital, pedal and inguinal glands. Bay duikers are nocturnal and this explains their relatively large eyes. They are solitary animals keeping in dense parts of primary forests with closed canopies. The 140 skull of the bay duiker is broader and flatter than that of other duikers and the cheek muscles are quite pronounced. The eyes are not only larger but also higher up. This enables them to feed at night on tough-skinned fruits that are too large and too fibrous for other duikers. Like the bush duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia) the bay duiker has been observed eating meat. The bay duiker is still fairly common within its range. This probably because they are solitary, nocturnal animals that is difficult to hunt. There are two populations: (1) From Sierra Leone eastwards to Togo, and (2) From Nigeria eastward into the DRC and southward into northern Angola. Total population is currently in excess of 700 000 but excessive hunting and deforestation presents a real threat in the longer term. It is believed to be already extinct in Uganda. Its future will be dependent on the preservation of relatively undisturbed equatorial forest. The bay duiker is to be found in the tropical lowland forests of west and central Africa. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen Aders’ duiker (Cephalophus adersi) has an extremely limited distribution, occurring only on the island of Zanzibar and along the Kenyan coast in pockets of forest such as the Arabuko-Sokoke and the Dodori. It is critically endangered. Aders‟ duiker used to be quite common on the island of Zanzibar and in the coastal forests along the Kenyan and Tanzanian coast. Indiscriminate hunting and the bush meat trade has seen their numbers declining dramatically. In 1983 there were about 5000 in Zanzibar. By 1999 they were down to 600. Today there are probably no more than 300 left on the entire island. Until recently the only other known population was in the Arabuko-Sokoke forest in Kenya. In 2004 another Kenyan population was 141 discovered in the Dodori Forest north of Arabuko-Sokoke. The size of this population is unknown. In 2000 three pairs were also released on Chumbe Island, a small island near Zanzibar Town that offers seemingly suitable habitat for the duikers. Aders‟ duiker is such a small, secretive animal that further populations may yet be discovered in the coastal forests of East Africa. It is however unlikely that any have survived the areas that have been cleared for agricultural purposes. It is also interesting those coastal forests opposite Zanzibar harbor not Aders‟ duiker but the more common Harvey‟s red duiker. So, chances of finding further populations are extremely limited. Aders‟ duiker is named after Dr. W.M. Aders, a Zanzibar based naturalist who collected the first specimen in 1918. Its distinguishing features are the white freckles on the lower legs and the white band along the length of the body. They feed mostly on fruits and leaves. Like the blue duiker, they are often seen in the company of monkeys, picking up fallen fruits and leaves. Although they live in forests with high rainfall, there is no permanent surface water. Aders‟ duikers seem to be able to obtain their moisture requirements from the plant material that they eat and would appear they can go without drinking water. However, it rains often in their forest home ranges and they then drink from water collected in depressions. They are diurnal antelopes with a very acute sense of hearing. Aders‟ duiker, together with blue duiker and suni, are hunted mercilessly by traditional hunters from nearby villages for own consumption and for the bush meat trade – even though it has been illegal for years to hunt these animals. Habitat destruction and deforestation has also contributed significantly to the decline in their numbers. C. adersi is Africa‟s rarest duiker with the smallest distribution range, and it is possible that this antelope will become extinct within the next decade or two. Ader’s duiker caught on a digital monitoring camera on Chumbe Island which is about 12 kms offshore from Zanzibar. Photo: courtesy of Chumbe Island Coral Park. 142 Abbott’s duiker (Cephalophus spadix) is named after Dr. W.L. Abbott, an American naturalist who explored northern Tanzania in 1888 and 1889 and presented the first known specimen to the National Museum in Washington. Its appearance is very similar to the black duiker, but some naturalists and scientists think it might be more closely related to the yellow-backed duiker. The size of the Abbott‟s duiker is also between that of the black duiker and the yellow-backed duiker. The body colour is very dark brown, almost black. The neck and face is slightly lighter coloured. It has a long crest which almost hides the horns completely. Abbott‟s duiker is endemic to the mountains of Tanzania and is regarded as endangered. Although it has a wide distribution in Tanzania, it is not often seen and is regarded as rare. According to Wilson (2005) it is unlikely that there are more than 2500 animals remaining in the wild. The stronghold of C. spadix is the Udzungwa and Kilimanjaro National Parks. Very little is known about the biology and ecology of this threatened, secretive and rare species. It occurs in low densities and is very rarely seen even where it is considered relatively common. Furthermore, it also appears to be mainly nocturnal and also crepuscular to a degree. Typical duiker, it prefers dense, understory vegetation in high altitude forests where it feeds mostly on fruits, leaves and flowers. The Yellow-backed duiker (Cephalophus silvicultor) is fairly widespread but not exactly common within its range. It inhabits the lowland forest zones between Senegal in the west and southwestern Sudan in the east, and southward to northern Angola and Zambia. It has the widest distribution of forest duikers. It occurs mostly in moist lowland and montane forests, forest-savanna mosaics, riverine forests, thickets and isolated forest patches within moist savanna woodlands. Yellow-backed duikers may also be found in secondary forests, plantations and farm lands. They utilize a range of forest and woodland habitats where they feed on fruits, seeds, pods and leaves. There records of Yellow-backed duikers eating newly hatched tortoises, chameleons and pigeons but this must account for a very insignificant part of the diet. They seem to be mainly crepuscular but can be active at any time of the day or night. During the heat of the day they rest up in a comfortable shady spot. When feeding they move slowly with the head and neck held low in order to get through the vegetation more easily. But when disturbed they can run off very quickly with large leaps. Sometimes it will freeze for a few moments before taking off. They react quickly to the calls by the Pygmy hunters and are thus easily shot. Four sub-species have been recognized: (i) C.s. silvicultor – Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ghana , Togo and western Nigeria (ii) C.s. longiceps – Cameroon, Congo, Gabon, Democratic Republic of Congo, southern Sudan (iii) C.s. ruficrista – Angola and Zambia (iv) C.s. curticeps – Uganda, Rwanda The yellow-backed is a large duiker with a heavy built. The body colour is dark brown to black with a large triangular yellow patch on the rump and the back. When the animal is alarmed the yellow hair on the back and rump is raised to form a crest. Yellow-backed duikers use their pre-orbital glands to deposit secretions on plants as a method of marking territory. 143 Yellow-backed duiker. Photo: Rhett A Butler, Mongaby Jentink’s duiker (Cephalophus jentinki) is found in West Africa in the lowland parts of Sierra Leone, Liberia and southwestern Ivory Coast. It is named after Dr. Jentink, director of the Leyden Museum in Austria, who first described it in 1885 from a specimen taken in Liberia the year before. Jentink‟s duiker is an exquisite animal. The neck and head is black; there is a pure white collar around the shoulders that stretches down to the front legs; and the back and rump is light gray. Jentink‟s duiker and the yellow-backed duiker are about the same size and are the largest of the duikers. Jentink‟s duiker is the rarest and least known of the antelopes of the West African rainforests, and very little is known about its natural history and biology. Its forest habitat and elusive habits makes it very difficult to study. Its habitat requirements are not clearly understood yet, but they have been sighted in primary high forest, logged and secondary forest and in some farm bushes. It is believed that they are crepuscular but they have also been seen to be active at other times of the day. They are usually seen as solitary animals, but have been observed in pairs. Its feeding habits have not been studied properly and are largely unknown. Although no reliable estimate of its numbers exists, it is believed that no more than a few thousand of these antelopes survive in the wild. Wilson‟s estimate is only 2000. It is seriously threatened by loss of forest habitat and excessive hunting for the bush meat trade. Extinction within the next decade, or two, is a real risk. 144 The rare and exquisite Jentink’s duiker. Photo: Gladys Porter Zoo, Brownsville, Texas The Neotragini tribe These are small antelopes with short straight horns, usually with ridges at the base. The females are without horns. They have preorbital glands and the tail is short. Oribis (Ourebia orebi) are small, graceful antelopes that live in family groups of two or three. They are territorial and their boundaries are clearly marked by the male who deposits an odorous substance on the shrubs from his preorbital glands. He also stands prominently in his territory to advertise his presence. A territory is roughly one square mile in extent. Oribi have no less than six sets of scent glands: preorbital glands; interdigital glands on all the feet; inguinal glands; metatarsal glands on the hindlegs; carpal glands just below the knees on the forelegs; and sub-aural glands which can be seen as black patches just below the ears. Only the males carry horns. The horns are similar to that of the steenbok and the klipspringer in that they go straight up from the skull. The bases of the horns are heavily ridged. The horns of old rams often curve slightly forward. This is an indication of good trophy quality. They have the habit of interspersing their runs with enormous leaps that may take them as much as five feet off the ground. The oribi prefers open grass veldt or flood plains or large marshes with short grasses and some taller grasses that can provide 145 shelter and place to hide. They avoid areas with only tall grasses. They like to lie down in the grass with the head erect, observing the immediate environment. When disturbed they will give an alarm call and dash away, pronking. They are however inquisitive animals and will stop after a short while to look back at the source of their fright. If they are running through tallish grass, they will jump up every now and then to get a better view of what is happening. They are very selective feeders and carefully pick the most nutritious parts of the grasses and forbs that they eat. They are independent of water and do not need access to drinking water. There are two races of oribi: (i) The Common oribi (Ourebia ourebi ourebi) (ii) The Haggard oribi (Ourebia ourebi haggard) which is found along the coast of Kenya and in Somalia along the southern coast and along the Juba and Webi Shebeli rivers. The Kenya oribi (Ourebia ourebi Kenya) is extinct. The total population of all oribi (i.e. both sub-species) is in the order of three-quarter million. They are well protected in many game parks and reserves throughout their range. The South African population is however under threat as a result of habitat loss and poaching (especially poaching with dogs by so-called “traditional hunters”). Total numbers in South Africa is somewhere between 2000 and 2500 only. Oribi on Zambia’s Kafue Flats. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 146 Oribis are small, graceful antelopes that live in family groups of two or three. They are territorial and their boundaries are clearly marked by the male who deposits an odorous substance on the shrubs from his preorbital glands. A territory is roughly one square mile in extent. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen The Klipspringer (Oreotragus oreotragus) is a strong, agile and very graceful little antelope found only in rocky mountains and hills. Riverbeds and riverbanks with rocks are also suitable habitat. They occur widespread in East and Southern Africa. There is also an isolated population in central Nigeria. The total African population is estimated at more than 40 000 animals, about a quarter of which are in protected areas. They also occur in rather inaccessible, though unprotected, habitat. The population trend seems to be stable. Fifteen sub-species have been recognized: (i) Oreotragus oreotragus aceratos – (Noack, 1899) Southeast Africa between the Zambezi and Rufiji Rivers (ii) O. o. aureus – (Heller, 1913) northern Kenya (iii) O. o. centralis – (Hinton, 1921) south-central Africa, i.e. southern Tanzania, southeast DRC, Zambia, Zimbabwe (iv) O. o. cunenensis – (Zukowsky, 1924) north bank of the Cunene River, Angola (v) O. o. hyatti – (Hinton, 1921) northern Nigeria (vi) O. o. porteousi – (Lydekker, 1911) Nigeria and Central African Republic (vii) O. o. saltatrixoides – (Temminck, 1853) Ethiopian highlands 147 (viii) O.o. saltator – (Kirk, 1864) Eastern DRC and northwest of Lake Tanganyika (ix) O. o. stephensoni – (Roberts, 1946) Zimbabwe, eastern Botswana and Zambia (x) O. o. shillingsi – (Neumann, 1902) northern Tanzania (xi) O. o. somalicus – (Neumann, `1902) northern Somalia (xii) O. o. steinhardti – (Zukowsky, 1924) west of Kaoko Otavi, Namibia (xiii) O. o. transvaalensis – (Roberts, 1917) southern Mozambique, Swaziland, the Natal Drakensberg, Mpumalanga and Northwest province in South Africa (xiv) O. o. oreotragus – (Zimmerman, 1783) the Eastern Free state, the Orange River Valley and the Southern and Western Cape, South Africa (xv) O. o. tyleri – (Hinton, 1921) Namibia, Angola and western Botswana The differences between sub-species are however marginal and insignificant. Klipspringers are usually found in pairs or singly, or as family groups consisting of a ram and a ewe with their offspring. On occasion larger groups of up to eight animals may also temporarily stay together. Single klipspringers are also quite common. They are most active during the early morning and late afternoon; during the heat of the day they rest in the shade. On cool days they may be active throughout the day. During the heat of the day they rest in the shade of rock overhangs or bushes. Although klipspringers will feed on grasses they are mostly browsers feeding on fresh, new leaves, flowers and fruits. They are however very selective browsers. Like the dik-dik and the gerenuk they are able to stand on the hind legs to reach higher browse. They compete with rock hyraxes for the same food resources. Klipspringers are not dependant on permanent water; they are able to survive on morning dew and on rain water that accumulates in crevices. In the southern klipspringer races only the rams carry horns but in East and Central Africa both sexes have horns. The horns are short and straight, wide apart and the bottom third is ringed. Their small, blunt, cylindrical hooves enable them to leap with remarkable acrobatic skill from rock to rock, and from ledge to ledge, to escape danger. They can descent a mountain as effortlessly as scaling it, sometimes clearing 15 to 20 feet in a single leap and rebounding immediately to the next ledge or rock. Their rock jumping skills are regarded as a major defense mechanism. They are covered in a thick, bristly coat, the hair of which comes away in tufts so that they can escape from the claws and talons of predators. The thinned-out patches are normally quickly covered by new hair growth. 148 Klipspringers are preyed upon by leopards, caracals, pythons and birds of prey such as the martial eagle and the black eagle with which it shares its mountainous habitat. A predator has to catch the klipspringer unawares as he has no chance of running it down amongst the rocks and cliffs. It is common to see klipspringers standing motionless, like sentinels, on a large rock in the open. This is done not only to look out for predators but also to advertise the territory. The rams as well as the ewes are territorial. They share and mark the same territory. Klipspringers do not have inter-digital glands on the feet to mark the territory, but the ewe regularly uses the preorbital glands for scent marking. The ram then follows up with ear-marking. They defecate and urinate on latrines as a form of marking the territory. Both male and female will attack intruders. The territory is usually also the home range. Klipspringers do not migrate; the territory is permanent and they will stay there for years. Klipspringers are browsers and are usually seen in pairs and on rocky outcrops. The ram is on the right. Photo: Willem Frost The dik-dik (Madoqua saltiana and Madoqua kirki) is a small, dainty antelope living mostly in pairs or singly. It is a resilient animal that lives comfortably in hot, dry habitat. They are also able to go for long periods without drinking water. The dik-dik ram is noticeably smaller than the ewe but only carries the short, straight and heavily ridged spike-like horns. Both sexes have a crest of long, dark hair on top 149 of the head. The crest is raised when the animal is excited or disturbed. The eyes are large with a white ring around it and long eyelashes giving the animal a Bambilike appearance. A distinctive feature of the dik-dik is the elongated mobile snout. Dik-diks live in dry, hot habitat where water is usually scarce. They must therefore minimize heat production as well as water loss. The specialized, flexible, bellows-like nose is the dik-dik‟s major mechanism for cooling the blood. Arterial blood from other parts of the body flows to the moist membranes of the mouth and nose. The dik-dik pants rapidly causing a continuous stream of dry air to pass over the membranes which results in evaporative cooling of the membranes and the underlying membranes. They are hunted by leopards, jackals, hyenas, caracals, cheetahs and large birds of prey such as the martial eagle. During the day it will usually lie up in thickets. If disturbed it will simply plunge deeper into the undergrowth, usually in a wide circuitous detour. At dusk it becomes more active when it will feed on leaves, shoots and some grasses. Dik-diks are territorial and a pair will occupy a territory for life. The ram actively defends his territory against intrusion by other dik-dik. Both the ewe and the ram mark the territory by depositing a blackish secretion from the preorbital glands on grass stalks and twigs. This is done regularly in the vicinity of their dung heaps. African folklore has it that a dik-dik one day stumbled over an elephant dung-ball lying in its path. It was so angry that from that time on all dik-dik are depositing their rice-sized dropping in mounds hoping that an elephant would trip and thus revenge the indignity suffered by the stumbling dik-dik. The toilet-ceremony follows a distinctive pattern: the ewe first urinates and defecates on an existing heap and the ram then scrapes at the site with the front hooves, urinates and then scrapes again before defecating. There are two species and several subspecies of dik-dik and the differences are not always easily noticeable. The overlapping habitat of certain subspecies also complicates identification. Individual behavior does not differ much from one species to another. Some dik-diks are smaller than others and some have a tuft of hair that may cover the horns of the males. Taxonomists have recognized the following dikdiks: Salt dik-dik (Madoqua saltiana saltiana) - Northeastern Ethiopia, northeastern Sudan and northern Djibouti Cordeaux dik-dik (Madoqua saltiana coredeauxi) - The Awash and Danakil regions of Ethiopia and also southwestern Djibouti Phillip’s dik-dik (Modoqua saltiana phillipsi) - Southeastern Djibouti and Somalia Swayne’s dik-dik (Madoqua saltiana swaynei) - Southern Ethiopia and southern Somalia 150 Harrar dik-dik (Madoqua saltiana harrarensis) - Ethiopia Guenther’s dik-dik (Madoqua saltiana guentheri) - Somalia, northern and eastern Kenya, southern Ethiopia, southeastern Sudan and northeastern Uganda Kirk’s dik-dik (Madoqua kirki kirki) - Northern and central Tanzania, southern Kenya and coastal Somalia up to Mogadishu Damara dik-dik (Madoqua kirki damarensis) – northern Namibia and southwestern Angola Thanks to conservation measures dik-diks are still fairly abundant in East Africa and northern Namibia. Guenther’s dik-dik. Photo: Ariadne van Zandbergen 151 Kirk’s dik-dik. Photo: iStock Phillip’s dik-dik. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation 152 Damara dik-dik. Photo: Willem Frost The Steenbok (Raphicerus campestris) has a widespread distribution throughout Southern Africa with another population in southern Kenya and adjacent Tanzania. The population size is somewhat uncertain but could be close to 750 000. The steenbok population is stable and on the increase in some protected areas. They require a habitat consisting of short to medium sweet, palatable grasses and scattered trees and shrubs that can provide cover. They avoid mountains, steep slopes, sourveldt, thickets and forests. The semi-arid savannahs suit them particularly well. They are independent of drinking water and are able to inhabit arid areas that are not suitable for other species that are more water dependent. Steenbok are quite territorial, but the ram and the ewe have separate, permanent territories that they maintain throughout the year. The same individuals frequently form pairs for reproductive purposes. It is a myth that steenbok pairs bond for life. The territory is scent-marked with secretions from the pre-orbital, inter-digital and inter-mandibular glands. Dung middens are also repeatedly used along pathways on the territory perimeter. Elsewhere the dung is buried by kicking sand over it – this is done to hide the scent from predators. 153 Steenbok are fairly common in the semi-arid regions of Southern Africa. Photo: Willem Frost Two Grysbok species are recognised: (i) The Cape grysbok (Raphicerus melanotis) which is endemic to the southern and eastern Cape of South Africa. Their range is limited due to their specialized habitat requirements, but they are common within this range and there are no major threats to the Cape grysbok‟s survival. The estimated 250 000 – 300 000 population is stable and well protected on public as well as private land. The preferred habitat is thickets, shrub lands and the fynbos biome. Grysbok are predominantly browsers, and have limited water requirements. But they do need suitable cover. In the grasslands of the north-eastern Cape they need to be close to forests and clumps of bushes. They may however also use long grass for cover. 154 Cape grysbok. Photo: Wikipedia (ii) Sharpe’s grysbok (Raphicerus sharpei) which can be found in the northeastern parts of South Africa, and in Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia and Tanzania. The specie occurs widespread and is common and there are no major threats to the population which is estimated to be around 100 000. Sharpe‟s Grysbok are mainly nocturnal; they are exceptionally shy and secretive and are not easily seen or observed. They are browsers but will sometimes also graze. Like the Cape grysbok they need good cover and prefer habitat with thickets and dense shrubs. It is therefore not surprising to find them in miombo woodland with good undercover and/or long grass. They are however also found in mopane veldt with little cover. Sharpe‟s grysbok is named after Sir Arthur Sharpe who collected the first specimen in Nyassaland (now Malawi). Some zoologists recognise two sub-species: Sharpe‟s grysbok (Raphicerus sharpei sharpei) and the Tropical grysbok (Raphicerus sharpei colonicus). This classification is however not generally accepted as some believe that it is a monotypical species. 155 Sharpe’s grysbok. Photo: Willem Frost Grysboks are small, solitary antelopes; pairs are only seen when a ram visits the home range of an ewe to mate, or when an ewe still has her lamb with her. They are nocturnal and crepuscular animals and not easily seen during the day when they like to lie down and hide in thickets. When sensing danger they do not immediately run away, but rather lie down and remain motionless in the hope of not being detected. When fleeing, they do not run very far before hiding again. The grysbok is a shy animal and usually keep the head low and back always seems to be bent as if the animal is ready to dash off. The rams are territorial and will defend the territory against intruding males. The territory is small but the home range is obviously somewhat bigger. The home range overlaps with the home ranges of two to three ewes and the ram will leave his territory to mate with neighbouring ewes. The home ranges of ewes are slightly smaller than those of the rams. Home ranges are not static and change with the seasons; during the dry season when food becomes scarcer, grysboks will expand the range. Sharpe‟s grysbok is slightly smaller than the Cape grysbok. Ewes are bigger than the rams, but only the rams carry horns. Since they are secretive, shy animals living in undergrowth, grysbok are difficult to study and not much is known about their behaviour and habits. 156 The Suni (Neotragus mochatus) is a survivor: it is relatively resilient to hunting pressure and adapts well to changed habitat. The total population of all Suni is estimated to exceed 350 000. Suni probably benefits from the expansion of secondary thickets caused by human activity, and it will colonize such habitat. Two races of suni are recognized: (i) Livingstone’s suni (Neotragus moschatus livingstonianus) which occurs in southern Malawi, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and the northeastern parts of South Africa. It occurs in coastal forests, dry deciduous thickets, montane forests to 2,700 m and other habitat with suitable undergrowth. (ii) The East African suni (Neotragus moschatus kirchenpaueri) of Kenya and eastern and southern Tanzania. Only the rams carry short, straight horns that point backwards. They have preorbital glands, presumably to mark territory. They occur in dry woodlands with thickets and dense undergrowth. Sunis are browsers and independent of water. The diminutive suni antelope. Photo: Wikipedia The Beira antelope (Dorcatragus megalotis) was first described only in 1894 was has probably always been scarce, living on hills in small isolated groups. The current population is less than 10 000 and they are threatened by drought, overgrazing by livestock and excessive hunting. They are found in the mountains of Somalia from the Nogaal Valley northwards. In Ethiopia, the Beira antelope used to be found from the Marmar Mountains along the border with north-west Somalia. Its current status in this part of Ethiopia is unknown, but large numbers of armed pastoralists and their livestock pose a severe threat. The species‟ existence in southeast Djibouti, close to the Somali border, was only confirmed in 1993. There is currently a captive-breeding program at the Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation in Qatar. The current captive population is about 50 beira. 157 The ability of the Beira to melt away in its barren environment where there is no cover is legendary. The camouflage effect of their coloring is very effective and when they stand still, they are quite difficult to see. It is a small animal: weighing in the region of 25 pounds and seldom reaching a height of two feet. Only the males carry horns which are straight like that that of a steenbok. They tend to reside in a small home range, usually a bare, stony hill or a section of a large hill. If left undisturbed, they will stay indefinitely in the home range where they form small family groups of up to seven animals. They browse early in the morning and late in the afternoon on scrubs and small bushes that grow on the hillsides. During the heat of the day they will seek shade where they can rest. Beira is independent of water and do not have to leave their stony retreats in search of drinking water. Beira antelope are characterized by a gristly pad on the underside of the hooves, the purpose of which seems to be to provide better traction and to reduce the noise level when running. Beira antelope. Photo: Catrin Hammer, Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation The Royal antelope (Neotragus pygmaeus) inhabits the dense West African forests between Ghana and Sierra Leone. It is a crepuscular and nocturnal, timid and secretive animal living in moist lowland forest and secondary vegetation habitats, forest edges and other areas with dense undergrowth. It is the smallest African ungulate and the smallest bovid. An adult animal weighs no more than three kilograms and the shoulder height is only 25 cm. They are often found in logged forest with good undergrowth and also on farmlands with good cover. When approached, the royal antelope crouches and hides under 158 cover where it will wait motionless until the last moment before taking flight. They move very swiftly though the dense cover. They feed mainly on green leaves, buds and shoots but may also take fruits and flowers. Royal antelope. Photo: Dennis Chanter Bates’ Pygmy antelope (Neotragus batesi) is Africa‟s second smallest ungulate (shoulder height 25 to 32 cm, weight 2 to 3 kg) and its size is a main identifying feature. They are selective browsers and often visit cultivated fields to feed on crops. They eat leaves, buds, shoots, fungus, grass and herbs. Only males have horns and males are bigger than females. They are also territorial and the males mark their territory with scent from the preorbital glands. Females are however sometimes found in small groups. Their distribution is somewhat uncertain, from a small population in the forests of western Uganda they are found westward: in northeast DRC, the Congo, Cameroon, Gabon and an isolated population in southeastern Nigeria. 159 Tragulidae The Water chevrotain (Hyemoschus aquaticus) does not belong to the Bovidae family like the antelopes; it belongs to the Order Cetartiodactyla, the sub-order Ruminatia, and the family Tragulidae. It is found in the wet equatorial lowland forests from Guinea in West Africa through to western Uganda. It is a small spotted ungulate that is duiker look-alike. They are the most primitive of all ruminants and represent the last of an ancient extinct family. They are at home in the dark, shaded forests floors of equatorial Africa and hardly ever come out in the open during the day. During night time they may however forage in clearings and on floodplains. They are strictly nocturnal and hide in dense cover during the day. Water chevrotains are solitary, secretive animals and live on fallen fruits, nuts, insects, and even scavenged meat and fish. When threatened they usually freeze, but may also flee into water. They are able to dive and to remain under water for short periods. This specie is threatened by intensive hunting and disturbance by humans and has become rare in much of its range 160 Glossary Antelope A deer-like mammal with horns rather than antlers. Unlike deer, antelope do not shed their horns and the horns are hollow. Africa does not have deer, only antelope – with one exception. Antler One of a pair of deciduous (non-permanent) bony structures on the heads of the Cervidae. Antlers are almost always branched, and grow from pedicels on the frontal bones. They are generally shed and regrown every year. Artiodactyl Member of the family of even-toed ungulates, belonging to the order Cetartiodactyla. This term originally referred to members of the order Artiodactyla, but has changed with the inclusion of whales into this order (and subsequent changing of the name to Cetartiodactyla). Aquatic Animals that live in fresh water. Bovid Member of the Cetartiodactyls family, Bovidae, which is cow-like Browser An herbivore which eats primarily leaves, shoots, twigs of trees, bushes, and forbs. Bushveld A region in Southern Africa that is characterised by a variety of tree species, bushes and shrubs. Carnivore Meat-eating animal. Member of the order Carnivora. Crepuscular Active primarily around dawn and dusk. Concentrate feeder An herbivore feeding on selected plant parts such as fruits which are rich in nutrients Cud Food that is only partly digested and is regurgitated by ruminants for rechewing before being swallowed again Dambo Low-lying swampy depression 161 Digit Mammalian finger or toe Diurnal Active primarily during the day Domestic livestock Cattle, donkeys, goats, camels, horses, pigs and sheep Dorsal Where the spine or backbone is located – the back Ecotone An area or boundary between two major plant communities Endemic Referring to a species which is found nowhere else but in a specific area Family A taxonomic division which falls between an Order and a Genus Frugivore An animal that feeds mainly on fruit Gallery forest Trees and other plant lining watercourses Genus The major taxonomic category between family and species, generally consisting of a group of species exhibiting similar characteristics Grazer An herbivore feeding predominantly on grass Gregarious Living together in herds Habitat A combination of different plant species, in a defined area, that provide a natural home for specific animal species Herbivore Animal living on plant material Herd A social group of gregarious ungulates 162 Highveld An Afrikaans term for land above 1200m Home range The area which an animal utilises for his daily living activities. This area is always larger than the territory. Horn One of a pair of hard, permanent structures on the frontal bones of the head in members of the family Bovidae. True horns consist of a bony core covered with a sheath of keratinous material. Inguinal Situated in the groin Interdigital Between the toes Mammal A warm blooded vertebrate with mammary glands that suckles its young and has body hair Midden An accumulation of droppings or faeces by mammals, also known as a latrine. Migration Seasonal relocation from one area to another in order to breed or to find better quality food Mixed feeder Animal feeding on both grass and leaves Nocturnal Active primarily at night Oestrus In heat Omnivore Animal that eats both plants and meat Pelage Coat or hair cover 163 Pre-orbital glands Glands occurring just in front of the eyes Perissodactyl An odd-toed ungulate; a member of the order Perissodactyla Pronking Exaggerated stotting; the back is arched and the feet are normally held together Race A sub-specie Range The geographical area in which an organism is found. Rain forest Tropical and sub-tropical forest with abundant year round rainfall Rumen First chamber of the ruminant‟s stomach, where the food is liquefied, kneaded by muscles and subjected to fermentation by bacteria Ruminant Even-toed ungulates that have four-chambered stomachs and that regurgitate plant material to rechew it as part of the digestive process. Rut A period of concentrated mating; the mating season. Savannah Vegetation combination of trees and grasses that is typical of large parts of Africa. Savannah is subject to predominantly wet and dry seasons. Sedentary Remaining in the same place; generally used for non-migratory animals with a small home range. Species The major taxonomic subdivision of a genus or subgenus. Species are regarded as the basic category of biological classification, composed of related individuals that resemble one another. Stotting A bouncing type of gait with straightened legs Subspecies A uniform, genetically distinct population of a species, usually in a specific geographic region. 164 Taxonomy The science of classification and naming of animals Territory An area defended from intruders by an individual or group. It is usually a smaller part of the home range. Testosterone A hormone present in males and responsible for certain male behaviours Ungulate A mammal with hooves. Vertebrate An animal with an internal supporting skeleton and a main nerve cord running down the dorsal length of the body, which nerve cord is protected by a spine or backbone. 165 References and further reading Books Apps, Peter; “Wild Ways”, Struik Publishers, Cape Town, South Africa, 2000 Bolton, Melvin; “Ethiopian Wildlands”, Collins and Harvill Press, London, 1976 Carnaby, Trevor: “Beat about the bush”, Jacana media, Johannesburg, 2006 Dorst, Jean and Dandelot, Pierre; “Larger Mammals of Africa”, HarperCollins Publishers, London, 1995 Estes, Richard D.; “The Safari Companion”, Chelsea Green Publishing Company, White River Junction, VT 05001, 1999 Hall-Martin, Anthony; Walker, Clive & Bothma JduP; “Kaokoveld, the Last Wilderness”, Southern Book Publishers, Johannesburg, 1988 Haltennorth, T. and Diller, H; “Mammals of Africa including Madagascar”, HarperCollins Publishers, London, 1997 Kingdon, Jonathan; “The Kingdon Field Guide to African Mammals”, Academic Press Limited, London, 1997 Mellon, James; “African Hunter”, Safari Press, Long Beach, USA, 1995 Mills, Gus and Hess, Lex: “The Complete Book of Southern African Mammals”, Struik Publishers, Cape Town, South Africa, 1997 Smithers, Reay H. N.; Die Soogdiere van die Suider-Afrikaanse Substreek “, University of Pretoria, South Africa, 1983 Sommer, Francois; “Man and beast in Africa “, Herbert Jenkins Ltd., London, 1953 Thompson, Ron; “Mahohboh”, Africa Safari Press, Hartbeespoort, South Africa, 1997. Wilson, Vivian J.; “Duikers of Africa – Masters of the African Forest Floor “, Zimbi Books, Pretoria, 2005 166 Magazines: “Game & Hunt”, Volume 1 Number 1 to Volume 15 Number 12 Articles: Baldus, R.D.; “Africa’s most endangered duiker lives in Zanzibar”, African Indaba eNewsletter, Volume 1 Number 4 Baldus, R.D.; “The Zanzibar Duiker: On the road to recovery or to extinction?” African Indaba e-Newsletter, Volume 2 Number 3 Baldus, R.D.; “The Geographical Distribution of Roosevelt Sable in East Africa “, African Indaba e-Newsletter, Volume 2 Number 5 Berry, H.: “The blue wildebeest problem at Etosha National Park”, African Wildlife, Volume 37 number 5 David, J.H.M.; “Territorial behavior of bontebok”, African Wildlife, Volume 25 Number 2 Games, Ian; “The Okavango sitatunga”, African Wildlife, Volume 37, Number 3 Mostafa, Hadia; “Death of a species?” African Indaba e-Newsletter, Volume 3 Number 2 O‟Keeffe, B.W.J.; “Our Search for the Giant Sable 1997 to 2004 “, African Indaba eNewsletter, Volume 3 Number 3 Refera, Befekadu; “Swayne’s Hartebeest in Ethiopia”, African Indaba e-Newsletter, Volume 3 Number 5 Spevak, Edward; “The Addra and Mhorr Gazelles (Gazella dama ruficolis and G.d. Mhorr) “, African indaba e-Newsletter, Volume 3 Number 5 Stuart, Chris & Tilde; “A dik-dik interlude”, African Wildlife, Volume 43, Number 1 Stuart, Chris & Tilde; “The puku: out of sight, out of mind?”, African Wildlife, Volume 43, Number 3 “Bongo return to Kenya”, African Indaba e-Newsletter, Volume 2 Number 2 Tempelhoff. Elise: “Krugerwildtuin nou Anders Bestuur “, Beeld, 18 October 2006 Bettine van Vuuren, Terry Robinson, Pedro vaz Pinto, Richard Estes & Conrad Matthee; “Western Zambian sable: What is all the hype about?”, Game & Hunt, Volume 16, Number 4. Pedro vaz Pinto, “Angola: Giant Sable Update”, African Indaba e-Newsletter, Volume 8, Issue 4 & 5 167 Websites: IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: http://www.iucnredlist.org. International Union for the Conservation of Nature: http://www.iucn.org. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora: http://www.cites.org Convention on Migratory Species: http://www.cms.int African Indaba: http://www.africanindaba.co.za Wildlife Conservation Society: http://www.wcs.org Ultimate ungulates: www.ultimateungulate.com Mammals’ Planet: http://mammals-planet.org