Safari West Animals
Birds
Birds in our open-air aviary
African Spoonbill
|
Classification:
Common Name: African Spoonbill
Class: Aves
Order: Ciconiiformes
Family: Threskiornithidae
Genus Species: Platalea alba
Key Facts:
Size: Height of 36 in. Wing is 365-403 mm long.
General Description:
A long-legged wading bird whose body is predominantly white, except for its red legs, face, and bill. This bird can easily be identified by its uniquely spoon-shaped beak. It is born with a short beak that gradually develops into is spoon-like shape. Both the males and females are similar in appearance.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Gregarious, usually in small groups of 3-30, occasionally alone. It is usually a shy and alert bird.
Habitat: Is commonly found in Africa south of the Sahara and in Madagascar and usually resides by shallow inland waters. Its habitat includes river banks, lake shores, marshes, plains, savannas, swamps and water-meadows.
Diet: It fishes for its food by swinging open its bill from side to side in the water, feeding on fish and aquatic invertebrates such as crustaceans or shellfishes, insects, larvae and mollusks.
Reproduction:
Mating season: Winter thru spring.
Birth season: April or May.
Incubation: 25-29 days. Incubated by the female during the day and the male during the night.
Number of young: 3-5 eggs that are white to pale buff with red, brown, or blue spots.
Ecology and Conservation:
The African spoonbill is common.
Fun Facts:
- Its bill acts as a scythe (hooked tool) to catch its food.
- Prey is trapped between the broad mandibles and tossed into the back of the throat.
- African spoonbills nest in colonies of up to 250 or more pairs, often nesting with comorants, dartes, herons or sacred ibis.
|
Delilah- Great Indian Hornbill
|
Classification:
Common Name: Great (Indian) Hornbill
Class: Aves
Order: Coraciiformes
Family: Bucerotidae
Genus Species: Buceros (big horn) bicornis (two horns)
Key Facts:
Size: 47 in from bill to tail tip with a 4-foot wingspan.
Weight: Average 6.6 lbs.
General Description:
Great Indian hornbills have a large beak made of keratin, the same material as horn. The projection on the top of the head is called a casque. The casque may support the large beak, or may help amplify their calls.
Life Style:
Habitat: India, Southwest China, Bangladesh, Burma, mainland Southeast Asia, Malaya and Sumatra in tall forest canopies.
Diet: Mainly fruit eaters but they also actively hunt and eat insects, lizards, snakes and even nesting birds. Having such a large beak can make eating an awkward business. Sometimes the birds just flick their heads back, throwing the food from the tip of the beak into the throat. At other times they have to crush the food item in the beak before swallowing.
Life Span: Up to and exceeding 35 years.
Reproduction:
Incubation: 25-40 days.
Number of young: 1-2 eggs.
Ecology and Conservation:
Great Indian hornbills are rare and threatened with extinction. These birds are hunted in India for food and medicine. Asian tribes also use their feathers in their headdress. In an attempt to conserve the tribes' culture and the hornbills, several zoos collect feathers from the birds in their collection and send them to the tribes. In return, the tribes do not hunt wild horbills. The main threat, however, is the destruction of their habitat. This species requires large, mature trees with cavities to nest in. These forests are often harvested for lumber.
Fun Facts:
- This species is the largest of the Asian hornbills.
- The feathers around the eyes look like eyelashes.
|
East African Crowned Crane
|
Classification:
Common Name: East African Crowned Crane
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Gruidae
Genus Species: Balearica regulorum gibbericeps
Key Facts:
Size: Adult height is approximately 3 feet.
Weight: 6-9 lbs.
General Description:
A tall, majestic bird with a “crown” of golden feathers. It has large white cheek patches with a small red patch at the top. They are slate gray with white upper and under wing coverts, black legs, and a black bill.
Lifestyle:
Social life: East African crowned cranes are social and gregarious during most of the year, moving about in flocks of up to 100 and roosting in trees or riverbeds.
Habitat: Eastern Zaire, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania. They are found in marshes and grasslands near rivers and lakes as well as near cultivated land.
Diet: Omnivorous, feeding on grains, berries, small fruits, tender roots, insect larvae, worms, snails, amphibians, reptiles, small birds and mammals, and a few fish.
Lifespan: 22 years in the wild, but the oldest captive crane on record lived for 43 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 3 years.
Incubation: 28-35 days.
Number of young: 2-3 pale blue eggs.
Ecology and Conservation:
Many swamps and marshes where crowned cranes nest are being drained for agriculture. They are popular attractions in zoos and are often the victims of illegal trade. Although not yet considered endangered, their future is far from certain.
Fun Facts:
- Young able to fly at 10 weeks of age. Chicks are precocial, able to run as soon as they hatch.
- A symbol of longevity in the Japanese culture.
- Stamping their feet as they walk, East African crowned cranes flush out insects which are quickly caught and eaten.
- Loud, melodious call, usually given in flight, may have given rise to some of the beliefs held by the African people who share their habitat.
- The crane’s long legs and necks and excellent peripheral vision help them spot predators in the tall savannah grasses.
- All cranes are noted for their spectacular dances which involves head-bobbing, wing fluttering, leaps and bows. Both sexes dance, and immature birds join the adults. Dancing is an integral part of courtship, but also may be done at any time of the year.
- Crowned crane parents often pretend to be injured to lure predators away from their nestlings.
|
Kenya Crested Guinea Fowl
|
Classification:
Common Name: Kenya Crested Guinea Fowl
Class: Aves
Order: Galliformes
Family: Numididae
Genus Species: Guttera pucherani
General Description:
Chicken-sized birds. Head is topped with a crest of small black feathers. The red skin of the chin, throat, down the front of the neck, around the eyes and behind the crest is bare. The neck is bare with cobalt blue skin. The flight feathers have white edging and spots and the outer secondary feathers have broad white edges. The sexes look alike.
Lifestyle:
Social Life: Usually found in flocks of twenty or more, separating into pairs during the breeding season, then returning to large flocks once the young are able to fend for themselves.
Habitat: Scrub or dense thickets, but occationally in grass. Found in southern Somalia, Kenya east of the Rift Valley from Mt. Kenya southwards, northeastern Tanzania and on the islands of Zanzibar and Tumbatu.
Diet: Insects, seeds, roots and shoots.
Reproduction:
Mating season: April to June and in December.
Number of young: 3-4 cream eggs with brown spots.
Fun Facts:
- Their alarm call ia a piercing, rattling cry and when disturbed, they will fly up into trees crying loudly.
- They make a soft chuckling sound when feeding.
|
Ostrich
|
Classification:
Common Name: Ostrich
Class: Aves
Order: Struthioniformes
Family: Struthionidae
Genus Species: Struthio (ostrich) camelus(camel-like)
Key Facts:
Size: Approximate height of 9 ft.
Weight: Up to 345 lbs.
General Description:
The largest living bird, male ostriches are jet black with white plumage and bright red or blue skin and females are fairly uniform in color, with earthy gray-brown plumage and skin color. The feet are designed for running with only two toes on each foot, and a large nail for protection.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Ostriches live in flocks with one male and two to six females.
Habitat: In open country, deserts, and dry savannah of the wild in East Africa.
Diet: The bulk of their food is vegetation, fruit, seeds, leaves, shoots, shrubs, succulent plants, invertebrates, and occasionally lizards and other small vertebrates. Stones are ingested to aid in digestion.
Lifespan: Around 30-70 years in managed situations.
Reproduction:
Mating season: Begins in March or April and can last until September.
Birth Season: Dry season.
Incubation: Around 40 days.
Number of young: Between 12-15 eggs, one laid every other day after mating. If eggs are taken immediately from the nest, the female may lay up to 80 eggs.
Ecology and Conservation:
Ostrich feathers have been used for adornment by humans for at least 5000 years and the eggs are still used by bushmen as jewelry and receptacles for carrying water. Extensive hunting for feathers, meat, and skin coupled with overgrazing by domestic animals on their habitat has lead to the near extinction of the ostrich from the Middle East and North and South Africa. Although they are not globally threatened, the four subspecies of ostrich require strict protection and farming has helped to conserve the wild populations.
Fun Facts:
- One ostrich egg equals up to 24 chicken eggs and takes approximately 2 hours to boil!
- Ostriches can run up to 40 mph and can outpace most pursuers, such as lions, leopards, and hyenas.
- It is the largest and heaviest living bird. It is unable to fly and does not possess a keeled sternum (breastbone) common to most birds.
- Ostriches stretch out their neck and lay their head on the ground to keep from being seen, hence the myth that ostriches hide in the sand.
- Ostriches are so powerful that a single kick at a predator, such as a lion, can be fatal.
- A female ostrich shows a remarkable ability to recognize her own eggs even when mixed in with those of other females in their communal nest.
|
Rupell's Griffon Vulture
|
Classification:
Common Name: Rupell's Griffon Vulture
Class: Aves
Order: Falconiformes
Family: Accipitridae
Genus Species: Gyps rueppellii
Key Facts:
Size: Wingspan: 7 - 8 ft.
Weight: 14-19 lbs.
General Description:
A large vulture with a bare head and neck, cream and black feathers, and a heavy bill. The feet are broad and chicken-like with weak talons that are adapted for walking and are not suitable for grasping.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Nests in colonies of up to 1000 pairs or more. In flight, each bird scans 50 square miles from altitude of 2000 feet, keeping each other in sight. They follow carnivorous mammals and migratory herds. They have no territorial behavior.
Habitat: Central Africa, the Serengetti plains in Tanzania, Kenya in open savanna or semi-desert.
Diet: Scavenge for carrion. A full crop may contain over 3 lbs of meat. Lifespan: Up to 75 years in captivity.
Reproduction:
Mating season: The vultures nest in colonies on cliffs year-round, with a peak in the dry season.
Birth season: Rainy season.
Incubation: 55 days.
Number of young: 1 egg.
Ecology and Conservation:
This species is the most common vulture of the arid Sahel and northwest African mountains.
Fun Facts:
- This vulture can spot an object 5 inches long from a height of ½ mile.
- Its huge wings allow the bird to glide for hours with little effort.
- It lacks a syrinx (vocal organ for birds) and therefore can only grunt, cackle and hiss.
- During a dry spell, the vulture may travel over 60 miles to find food for its young.
- This species has the highest credible altitude record for any bird; one having been killed by a jet aircraft at 37,000 ft.
|
Saurus Crane
|
Classification:
Common Name: Saurus Crane
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Gruidae
Genus Species: Grus antigone
Key Facts:
Size: One of the talles cranes, up to 5 ft tall.
General Description:
It is massive in size, has red skin on the head and light gray feathers. It has a high pitched call, louder then any other crane.
Lifestyle:
Habitat: Wetlands of northern India and Indo China.
Diet: Fish, frogs, insects and plant matter.
Reproduction:
Mating season: May to July.
Number of young: Usually two eggs are laid.
Conservation and Ecology:
This species is listed as vulnerable due to the loss and degradation of wetlands due to agricultural expantion, industrial development, pollution and pesticides.
Fun Facts:
- Saurus cranes mate for life. The bond is so strong, these birds are a symbol of marital fidelity in many Asian cultures.
|
Scarlet Ibis
|
Classification:
Common Name: Scarlet Ibis
Class: Aves
Order: Ciconiiformes
Family: Threskiornithidae
Genus species: Eudocimus rubber
Key Facts:
Size: Body length- 22 to 24 inches.
General Description:
Bright red feathers in both sexes with a long neck, long curved probing bill, black tipped feathers and perching feet that are only slightly webbed.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Ibis nest in large breeding colonies.
Habitat: Tropical regions and rainforests in Central America and Northern South America.
Diet: Crustaceans, mollusks, fish, insects, frogs, small snakes.
Lifespan: Up to 18 years in captivity.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 2 years.
Incubation: 19-23 days, with both parents incubating.
Number of young: 3-5 eggs.
Fun Facts:
- The young are first featherless, and then grow dark brown feathers, which slowly change to the red of their parents as they age.
- The brilliant red color of the bird comes from pigments in the bodies of crustaceans on which it feeds.
|
Victoria Crowned Pigeon
|
Classification:
Common Name: Victoria Crowned Pigeon
Class; Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Genus species: Goura victoria
Key Facts:
Size: The largest of the pigeons, 24-28 inches long.
General Description: The pigeon is very similar in color & shape to the other "crowned" pigeons. The breast area is dark purplish red or maroon becoming greyish towards the rear & merging into the blue grey belly, thighs & undertail coverts. The wing patch is a pale greyish blue edged with dark purple red or maroon. The iris is dark red, the orbital skin dark grey, the bill slaty-grey with brownish tip, and the feet a dull purplish red.
Lifestyle:
Social life: These beautiful birds forage the forest floor for fruit, seeds and snails. They spend time in small flocks. Very little is known about them in the wild as they live in dense forest.
Habitat: Lowland forests, seasonally flooded & drier forests in New Guinea.
Diet: Seeds, berries, fruits, insects.
Reproduction:
Sexual Maturity: 18-24 months.
Incubation: 28-30 days.
Number of young: One egg.
Conservation and Ecology:
Adult birds are prized by hunters for meat and feathers and nestlings are taken and reared for food. Logging is a major threat to the Victoria crowned pigeon. In addition to destroying habitat, the logging roads open up access areas for bird hunters. When scared, Victoria crowned pigeons fly into trees, roosting in low-lying branches, making them easy targets for hunters. Today, laws are in place to help protect the Victoria crowned pigeon.
Fun Facts:
- Victoria crowned pigeons exhibit a large variety of vocalizations including a rumbling threat call and a loud “boom” that is returned by flock members.
- Adults feed the young with a substance called "pigeon milk" or "crop milk" which is produced in the lining of the crop.
|
Waldrapp Ibis
|
Classification:
Common Name: (Northern Bald ibis, Hermit Ibis, Waldrapp, Bald Ibis)
Class: Aves
Order: Ciconiiformes
Family: Threskiornithidae
Genus Species: Geronticus eremita
Key Facts:
Size: 27-31 in.
General Description:
Waldrapp ibis have a bare head and neck that is red and a black feathered crown. The red bill is long and curved. Blue/purple feathers cover the body, and the the feathers on the upper wing are purple/red.
Lifestyle:
Social Life: Gregarious, found in large loose flocks.
Habitat: Rocky coastline and shrubland. Historical distribution throughout central Europe, North Africa, and Middle East. Now confined to Morocco, Tamri, and central Syria.
Diet: Lizards, insects, snails, worms, small crabs.
Lifespan: 24 yrs.
Reproduction:
Mating Season: March to April.
Number of Young: 2-4 eggs.
Conservation and Ecology:
Critically Endangered. Threats include hunting, habitat loss and degradation due to increasing agriculture, development, and pollution. Fortunately, Waldrapp ibis breed well in captivity and the captive population is more than 700 birds. There are plans to reintroduce this species to Italy and Spain.
Fun Facts:
- Waldrapp ibis were once revered as a holy bird in Ancient Egypt.
|
Mammals
Wildlife from addax to zebra
Addax Antelope
Addax nasomaculatus
Classification:
Common Name: Addax
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Addax nasomaculatus (Nasus – the nose, macula-a spot or mark)
Key Facts:
Size: Body, 4.25 feet; tail, 9-14 inches.
Weight: 132-275 pounds.
General Description:
Both sexes have horns. Unlike many antelope species, the female's horns are as long as the males. They have a mat of brown hair on their forehead while the rest of their body is grayish-white.
Lifestyle:
Social Life: Historically, addax traveled in large groups of hundreds in a nomadic fashion. Today, they travel in groups of 1 to 4. Each group is led by an older male.
Habitat: Addax are found in sandy and stony regions of the Sahara Desert, particularly dune regions.
Diet: Addax eat desert succulents, grasses and herbs, and leaves of small bushes.
Lifespan: They usually live at least 20 years in captivity.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 2 years.
Mating Season: December-April.
Birth Season: Autumn-winter (September-January).
Gestation: 257 to 264 days.
Number of Young: Usually just one.
Ecology and Conservation:
Addax are nearly extinct in the wild, having been eliminated from much of their original range. These antelope have been hunted for their skin and meat. Since they are so heavily built they are not capable of great speeds and are easily overtaken by horses and dogs. Antelope are an important component of habitats as grazers and browsers. They are also important as prey for carnivores.
Fun Facts:
- Addax possess broad, flat hooves with flat soles that help prevent them from sinking into the desert sand.
- These desert antelope's coat color changes from dark grayish-brown in winter to white in the summer.
- Addax dig depressions in the sand in which to rest. These are often located partly underneath boulders that give shade and protection from the wind and sun.
- They rarely drink since they are able to get most of the water they need from the plants they eat.
|
Aoudad
Aoudad, Barbary sheep
|
Classification:
Common Name: Aoudad, Barbary sheep
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Ammotragus lervia
Key Facts:
Size: Body length, 4.3-5.5 feet; Tail length, 6-8 inches.
Weight: 66-319 pounds.
General Description:
They are generally uniform brown, and sometimes lighter- almost beige. Their coat is dense and of average length, with a long fringe of soft and very light-colored hairs on the throat, chest, and front legs. Their horns are thick and up to 33 inches long in males.
Lifestyle:
Social Life: Generally solitary or in small groups.
Habitat: Auodad live in the mountain regions of the Sahara, and in the rocky arid mountains in isolated pockets throughout northern Africa.
Diet: Audod eat sparse grasses, bushes, acacia, and lichens. Because of the sparse distribution of water sources in arid habitat, aoudad rely on vegitation for most of its water.
Lifespan: 20 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual Maturity: After 18 months.
Mating season: Throughout the year, but with a peak between September and November.
Birth Season: March to May.
Gestation: 160 days.
Number of Young: Usually one, but up to 3.
Ecology and Conservation:
Areas have been set aside to protect aoudad and captive breeding with an aim toward reintroduction is in process at several facilities.
Fun Facts:
- They can clear a 6.6 foot obstacle with ease from a standing start.
|
Black and White Ruffed Lemur
|
Classification:
Common Name: Black and White Ruffed Lemur
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Primates
Family: Lemuridae
Genus Species: Varecia variegate
Key Facts:
Size: When full grown, 4 ft. in length including the long tail of about 2 ft. Largest of the true lemurs.
Weight: 8-10 lbs.
General Description: Staring eyes (which glow reddish in the dark) and silent, secretive habits. Are the most primitive primates. The fur is long and soft, and the ears are hidden by a ruff of hair. The color pattern varies and may be different on the right and left sides of a specimen.
Lifestyle:
Life Span: 19 years in captivity.
Gestation: 99-102 days.
Birth Season: In November, the female produces one to four young in a nest in a hole in a tree or on a forked branch, which she lines with her own fur. Over half of the births are twins, and the remainder are single or triplets. By five weeks of age the young can climb to the tops of trees.
Habitat: Eastern Madagascar. It is a forest species found in humid rain forests.
Diet: Mainly sweet fruits. It is especially fond of bananas. Lemurs have also been known to eat insects, small birds, birds’ eggs and occasionally, small mammals.
Ecology and conservation:
Endangered. They live in groups of 2-5 individuals, thought to be an adult mated pair and their young. Greetings are very ceremonious involving reciprocal grooming. They mark their territory by screaming and by scent. During the day the lemur sleeps in a hollow tree curled up into a ball. It is a nimble climber, most active at dusk and during the first part of the night, when it forages for fruit. It normally progresses by walking or running on larger branches and leaping from tree to tree, rarely descending to the ground.
Fun Facts:
- Ruffed lemurs are quadrupedal, using all their limbs for locomotion. Their long tails allow for even better stability in the trees. In fact, most hang upside down, holding on by their feet, when feeding!
|
Blue Wildebeest
|
Classification:
Common Name: Blue Wildebeest
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Connochaetes taurinus
Key Facts:
Size: 1.5m at shoulders for bulls and 1.4m for cows/ 5o-58 inches males/46-57 females.
Weight: 250 kg bulls/cows 180 kg / 440-600 lbs. males and 370-516 females.
General Description:
The dark silver-grey body is marked with dark vertical bands on the front quarters. They have a long black mane and a beard of hair hanging from the throat and neck. Both sexes grow short curved horns. In adult bulls, the horns are heavily bossed.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Wildebeest are social creatures. They live in groups of 20-40 animals. Bulls maintain territories when the herd is sedentary.
Habitat: North-eastern regions of South Africa, and all over in the open savannah.
Diet: They graze when it is cool, and are gregarious herbivores.
Life Span: 15-20 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 1-2 yrs.
Mating season: Seasonal breeders.
Birth Season: Births occur during the summer.
Gestation: 8-8.5 months.
Number of young: One calf.
Ecology and Conservation:
Not regarded as endangered but mostly found in conservation areas. Today about 1.5 million white-bearded wildebeest are believed to be present. However, the expansion of human settlements along their northern migration routes has begun to disrupt their natural patterns.
Fun Facts:
- Calves can run with the herd within minutes after birth.
- Has to drink every day or 2 in dry season.
- The bull's deep grunts sound like a giant croaking frog.
- Amazingly, about 80 percent of the females calve within the same 2- to 3- week period, creating a glut for predators and thus enabling more calves to survive the crucial first few weeks.
|
Chapman's Zebra
|
Classification:
Common Name: Chapman's Zebra
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Equidae
Genus Species: Equus burchelli
Key Facts:
Size: 56-64 inches.
Weight: 945 lbs. males and 850 females.
General Description: Characterized by a pattern of broad, dark stripes alternating with thin, light shadow-stripes. The stripes fade into the brownish color of the body on the hindquarters and are absent altogether on the legs.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Zebras live in family groups of up to 15 members, led by a dominant stallion. They are highly sociable; zebra herds may number from 5 to 30 and are often associated with wildebeest.
Habitat: Angola and Namibia across northern South Africa to Transvaal.
Diet: Zebras typically graze on a variety of grasses, but will occasionally browse or dig for rhizomes or roots. They are water dependent and so will travel many kilometers when water is lacking and when necessary will dig for water.
Life Span: 20 years in the wild, up to 40 years in captivity.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: Between 1-2 years.
Mating season: Throughout the year, with a peak in August and September.
Birth Season: Rainy season.
Gestation: 13 months.
Number of young: One.
Fun Facts:
- Resting zebras often sleep soundly, but at least one herd member remains standing and alert.
- No two zebras have the same set of stripes, just like human fingerprints!
- Stripes may help to confuse predators, but because the stripes make zebras easily recognizable to each other, they encourage zebras to make friends.
|
Cheetah
Acinonyx jubatus
|
Classification:
Common Name: Cheetah
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Genus Species: Acinonyx jubatus
Key Facts:
Size: A Cheetah’s head and body grow to 44-53 inches long. Its tail, fully grown, measures 26-33 inches long. Shoulder height 2.3-2.8 feet.
Weight: 75-150 lbs.
General Description:
Unlike other cats, it has a leaner body, longer legs and has been referred to as the “greyhound” of the cats. It is built for speed. Distinguishing marks are the long tear-drop shaped lines on each side of the nose from the corner of its eyes to its mouth. The coat is tan, or buff colored, with black spots measuring from ¾ to 1 ¼ inches across. There are no spots on its white belly and the tail has spots which merge to form 4-6 dark rings at the end. Male cheetahs are slightly larger than females and have a slightly bigger head. Only cat that, while sprinting, can turn in midair to follow their prey. Their paws have only semi-retractable claws and offer the cat extra grip in its high speed pursuits. It hunts mainly by day and follows its prey from a distance. Cheetahs seldom drink water, obtaining most of their moisture from their prey.
Lifestyle:
Habitat: Open grasslands and bushy areas in parts of Africa. They like areas that have tall grass.
Diet: Cheetahs eat small to medium-size animals, such as hares, impalas, wildebeest calves and gazelles.
Life span: 8 to 10 years in the wild, longer in captivity.
Reproduction:
Sexual Maturity: 18-36 months.
Mating Season: Female comes into estrus when her cubs leave her at 2 years of age.
Birth Season: Cheetah cubs stay with their mothers until they are 12-20 months old.
Gestation: 90-95 days.
Number of young: They usually bear three to five cubs in a litter.
Ecology and Conservation:
Once widely shot for its fur, the cheetah now suffers more from the loss of both habitat and prey. Endangered species. Its habitat in being destroyed by humans and there is also the problem of poachers. Governmental laws have been implemented to protect the cheetah.
Fun Facts:
- The cheetah’s excellent eyesight helps it find prey during the day.
- Can reach speeds of 70 miles an hour over short distances.
- After a chase, a cheetah needs up to half an hour to catch its breath before it can eat.
- When a cheetah is running at top speed, it covers about 23 feet in only four footfalls.
- Female cheetahs have been known to catch live prey for their cubs to use as hunting practice.
|
Gemsbok
|
Classification:
Common Name: Gemsbok
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Oryx gazelle
Key Facts:
Size: 49” shoulder height for males and 47” for females.
Weight: 367-460 lbs for males and 255-414 lbs for females.
General Description:
The gemsbok is a very striking animal with dramatic features and long spear like horns. It has a thick horse like neck with a short mane that runs from the head to the shoulders. The distinctive black and white markings on their faces are said to have contributed to their name gemsbok, given to them by the Boers, which means chamois. There is a black band that separates their gray-fawn colored flanks and the white under parts. All four legs are black on their top half, with white below the knees and black patches on the shins. Males and females are difficult to tell apart. Both sexes have horns that are long and extend straight back from the head and diverge rather widely at the tips.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Usually found in groups of 30 to 40 individuals, but can number in the hundreds during the wet season or migration.
Habitat: They have adapted to many areas that most large mammals are unable to live in. Gemsbok prefer the arid and semi-arid open grassland, scrub and light open woodland. It is very well adapted for desert and semi-desert life with the ability to go for extended periods without water.
Diet: Mainly a grazer, feeding mostly on the sparse dry desert grasses. If grass is not available they will browse and dig for roots. They will drink water if it is available from waterholes and streams but can survive days or even weeks without it. They feed early in the morning, late in the afternoon and on moonlight nights when the water content of the plants are at their highest, and will also eat wild melons for their water content.
Life Span: 20 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual Maturity: 1.5 to 2 years.
Mating season: Typically breeding is year round.
Birth Season: Calves are born throughout the year with a peak in August and September.
Gestation: 8.5 months.
Number of Young: They give birth to a single calf.
Ecology and conservation:
Excessive hunting has wiped out many gemsbok populations. The gemsbok's natural enemies include lions, leopards, hunting dogs and hyenas. Cheetahs and jackals pose additional threats to young. Recent estimates have placed the total gemsbok population at over 275,000. Although their numbers are relatively high, habitat loss, climatic changes, agriculture and grazing by domestic livestock continue to threaten the gemsbok.
Fun Facts:
- The tips of their horns are pointed and sharp and native Africans have used the tips for spear points.
- The horns of the calves grow extremely fast and when they emerge from concealment after birth their horns are very evident.
- Both sexes are ranked on the basis of age and dominant characteristics and are led by a territorial male.
- In marking his territory, the territorial male exhibits a ritual of crouching low and depositing dung piles so the pellets don’t scatter, thus retaining their odor longer.
- They have excellent eyesight, hearing and smell.
- They are swift runners able to outpace a horse and packs of hunting dogs.
- They don’t shy away from big animals of prey.
- Calves stay hidden for a period of 3-6 weeks before the mother and calf rejoin the herd.
- Adapted for waterless wastelands uninhabitable for most large mammals.
|
Giraffe
|
Classification:
Common Name: Giraffe
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed mammals)
Family: Giraffidae
Genus Species: Giraffa (one who walks swiftly) camelopardalis (camel marked like a leopard)
Key Facts:
Size: Height to top of head: newborns average 6 ft, adults range 14-18 ft.
Weight: Adult males 2420-4215 lbs.; adult females 1540-2600 lbs.; Newborns about 150 lbs.
General Description:
White to cream background color with light brown to almost black spots within a lattice pattern. They have two to four short, blunt horns on their head.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Giraffe form scattered herds, the compositions of which are constantly changing. Although gregarious, the individual is the social unit in giraffe society.
Life Span: 20-25 years.
Habitat: African savannah, scrub and open acacia woodlands south of the Sahara.
Diet: Giraffes are selective browsers that prefer new growth foliage of acacia and mimosa brush 6.6-16.5 feet high; they feed on over 100 plant species; their choice is determined by seasonal and local availability.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 42 months.
Mating Season: No strict season.
Birth Season: No strict season, although there is a tendancy towards giving birth during the dry months.
Gestation: 450-465 days (approximately 15 months).
Number of young: Usually one.
Ecology and conservation:
Giraffes are currently not protected except within national parks. The continuous, selective browsing habits of giraffes slow the growth of favorite bush and tree species. This foraging behavior maintains the open woodlands inhabited by many African ruminants. Giraffe tail hairs are still collected for jewelry, and hide is used to make sandals and ceremonial shields. Natural predators include lions, hyenas, wild dogs, and leopards, which may take young giraffes.
Fun Facts:
- Giraffes strip leaves from thorny acacia trees, sometimes colonized by ants, with their 18 inch long, prehensile tongues. Prehensile means it can grab and hold onto objects.
- Bull giraffes forage higher in trees than cow giraffes which reduces food competition between the sexes.
- Long-legged giraffes walk with the limbs on one side of the body lifted at the same time. This gait is called a pace and allows a longer stride which saves steps and energy.
- A mother giraffe often gives birth while standing so that the newborn’s first experience outside the womb is a 6 ft. drop.
- Can run 35-miles and hour when threatened.
- For the first four to five months, calves congregate in nursery groups called crèches to rest and socialize while mothers forage in the distance.
- Usually giraffes drink or rest in shifts so that at least one giraffe is always on the lookout for approaching predators.
- Some scientists believe that other animals – such as zebras, antelope and wildebeests – often congregate near giraffes to take advantage of their ability to see danger from a distance.
- Giraffes rarely sleep, usually only getting about 20 minutes of sleep a day.
- The Swahili name for giraffe is "Twiga".
|
Greater Kudu
|
Classification:
Common Name: Greater Kudu
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Tragelaphus strepsiceros
Key Facts:
Size: Maximum shoulder height is over five feet. 48-60 inches in males and 40-56 inches in females.
Weight: Males weigh as much as 720 lbs., but typically weigh 418-693 lbs.; females weigh 264-473 lbs.
General Description: These spiral-horned antelope are bluish gray to grayish-brown in color and have seven to ten vertical white stripes on their flanks. A fringe of long erectile hair extends from their chins down the length of their necks, and another stretches along the back of the tail. They have small heads with huge, cupped ears.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Males may form small bachelor groups, but are more commonly solitary and widely dispersed. Females and their offspring form small groups of six to 10. The males usually only join them during mating season.
Habitat: Woodlands and thickets, especially the hilly rough terrain of East, Central and South Africa.
Diet: Feeds mainly by browsing and is able to pick out scant, high quality foods from much poorer surrounding vegetation. It eats fruits, seed pods, flowers and leaves, often choosing plants that other herbivores reject because of unpleasant taste.
Life Span: 20 years in captivity, 7-8 years in the wild.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 5 years for males, 3 years for females.
Mating season: Kudu calve in February and March when the grass is high. Near the equator, mating peaks as the rains end and calving peaks during the rainy season.
Birth Season: The early part of the wet season (January-March).
Gestation: 9 months.
Number of young: Usually one.
Ecology and conservation:
The greater kudu is extremely wary and depends on woodlands and thickets for concealment as it browses, limiting habitat choices. The horns of the greater kudu are prized by sportsmen for their trophy value. Kudu are harvested as a meat source and sometimes killed by farmers when they damage crops. These factors, along with habitat destruction, have greatly reduced their range and overall numbers.
Fun Facts:
- The male is further distinguished by his long horns which make two or three complete twists as they diverge. The horns can grow over four feet long.
- Greatly enlarged ears suggest an acute sense of hearing.
- Seldom vocalizes except for an alarm bark and a few mother/infant calls.
- Has the often fatal habit of stopping after a short run from danger to look back.
- The gait of the greater kudu may appear clumsy but its leaping ability is remarkable.
- Second tallest antelope with the most spectacular horns.
|
Impala
|
Classification:
Common Name: Impala
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order:Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Aepyceros melampus
Key Facts:
Size: 30-36 inches height in males and 28-34 inches for females.
Weight: 117-167 lbs. in males and 88-117 in females.
General Description:
With its slick reddish coat, long legs and lyre-shaped horn, the impala is perhaps the most elegant of all African antelope. Only male impala have s-shaped and wide set horns, reaching their full length and thickness at about four years of age.
Lifestyle:
Habitat: Impala favor “ecotone” or fringe habitats, where savannah meets woodland, or where grassland meets savannah.
Diet: Unlike most herbivores, impala are both grazers and browers, allowing them to have an adaptable diet. During the rainy season they feed primarily on green grass (70% moisture content). Impala also feed on acacia foliage, seed pods, pioneer herbs unpalatable to most other herbivores, and dry leaves.
Reproduction:
Gestation: 194-200 days.
Birth Season: Lambs are born in a synchronous fashion with all females in an area giving birth within two or three weeks during the rainy season (November in Southern Africa) when food and cover are most plentiful.
Ecology and conservation:
Despite their great leaping abilities, impala form the bulk of the diet of all large carnivores excepting the lion which generally prefer larger prey. Individual males of four years or more challenge each other in noisy, boisterous challenges in a struggle to gain and hold a territory. The explosive barking call of the rutting males has frightened the wits out of more than a few trailists and campers, for it is often mistaken for the roar of a lion!
Fun Facts:
- The distinctive “fetlock glands” are perhaps the most conspicuous specialities. These tufts of black hair on the hind legs cover scent glands which release a pheromone (chemical) under certain circumstances (such as when being pursued by a predator).
- Famous jumpers. Alarmed impala high jump 10 ft. and broad jump 36 ft.
- Impala are actually able to survive without a drink for months on end in summer and for up to a week in the dry winter months.
- Extremely agile and capable of spectacular leaps and raised kick-backs. Long jumps of up to 11 meters have been recorded and individuals have been seen to clear 3 meter high obstacles.
|
Kob
|
Classification:
Common Name: Kob
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Kobus kob
Key Facts:
Size: 37-40 inches in height for males and 32-36 inches in females.
Weight: 140-200 lbs.
General Description:
Kob are similar in appearance to the impala, but are not related. The Ugandan Kob is typically reddish-brown but other subspecies range from light brown to almost black. The underside of the body is white, a white ring appears around each eye, a white patch or chevron appears on the throat and a black stripe runs down the front of each foreleg. Horns occur only in males and are short, thick, and ringed almost to the top.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Small herds come together into larger groups of up to 1,000 animals.
Habitat: Sub-Saharan Africa. Kob prefer low-lying flats or gently rolling country and must remain close to permanent water. They inhabit the northern savanna from Senegal to southeast Sudan, south to Queen Elizabeth NP, South Uganda.
Diet: Herbivorous/grazer. Since the grazing of larger animals such as hippos, topis, and hartebeest keep grass short, kob often associate with these animals, eating the short grass that it prefers.
Life Span: 20 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 13 to 14 months.
Birth Season: Breeds year round in East Africa.
Gestation: 8 months.
Number of Young: Single Birth.
Ecology and conservation:
Although still numerous in western Uganda, the kob is far less common now in other areas of East Africa. It was once found in western Kenya and northern Tanzania but has not been seen there in recent years, unable to compete with humans for the rolling country it prefers.
Fun Facts:
- Young males begin to grow their horns at 5 months.
- During the first 7 months of life, the mortality rate is high, with only about half of the young surviving predation.
- A male kob seldom holds a territory for more than a week.
- Female kob, along with their young, form herds of 30-50 animals.
|
Lechwe
|
Classification:
Common Name: Red Lechwe
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Kobus leche
Key Facts:
Size: About one meter at the shoulder, 41 inches for males and 38 for females.
Weight: About 80 kg. 227 lbs. in males and 174 lbs. for females.
General Description:
Medium-sized antelope, closely related to the waterbuck. The hindquarters are noticeably higher than the forequarters. Reddish brown on the upper parts and flanks and white on the under sides and inner legs. The fronts of the forelegs and of the hocks are black and it has white patches around the eyes. The hooves are distinctly elongated, which is an adaptation to the wet and soggy substrate of their preferred habitat. It has a greasy coat with a distinct smell and a shaggy neck mane.
Lifestyle:
Social life: No strict social system exists, and often the only lasting bonds are between a mother and her recent offspring. Due to the constant fluctuations in their habitat, male lechwe do not hold extended territories. Instead, 'lekking' is observed, with 20-200 males defending small patches (15-200 meters in diameter) within a common 'arena'. Each of these clusters is associated with a large herd of females.
Habitat: Marshlands, swamps and shallowly inundated floodplains of up to 500mm deep. In Southern Africa, the lechwe is found only in the Okavango swamps in Botswana and the Linyanti swamps of the Caprivi Strip, Namibia.
Diet: Browses on the lush green aquatic and semi-aquatic grasses.
Lifespan: 15 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: Females at 1.5 years, males at 2.5 years.
Mating season: Breeds year round in E. Africa.
Birth Season: There is a tendency for ewes to drop their calves during late winter and early summer when water levels recede.
Gestation: 225 days/7-8 months.
Number of young: Single lambs.
Ecology and conservation:
The lechwe is considered a low risk, conservation dependent species. A major threat to lechwe is the building of hydroelectric dams which eliminates their seasonal floodplain habitat.
Fun Facts:
- Only the rams carry lyrate-shaped horns.
- Lacks usual scent glands.
- Lives at water’s edge.
|
Monkey, DeBrazza's Guenon
Nyala
|
Classification:
Common Name: Nyala
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: artiodacctyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Tragelaphus agasi
Key Facts:
Size: Length of a male: 6.8 ft. (plus tail 1.4 ft.); females 5.8 ft (tail 1.2). Height of a male: 3 ½ feet; females 3 ft.
Weight: 216-275 lbs. males/ 121-132 lbs females.
General Description:
Nyala are sexually dimorphic (the male and female look different). The female and young have a smooth, bright chestnut coat with light stripes and spots, and a chest and nose chevron. The bull also has a chest and nose chevron, but the coat is hairy, charcoal gray with a fringe of dark hair from the throat to the hindquarters, a white dorsal crest, and tan lowers legs. Stripes that are reduced or absent on the male. Males have spiral horns that twist backwards in the plane of the face, with unpigmented lips. Both sexes have large ears.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Because of their more specialized diet, nyala groups are small and move very erratically as they forage. Their specialized diet may be the reason they are not numerous or widely spread. Males disperse into bachelor groups, becoming more solitary toward maturity. Female groups will be followed by a variety of males until the breeding season arrives. Then, only the dominant bull of the area will stay with the group.
Habitat: Dense bush near water only in southeast Africa, and in riverside thickets and dense brush and fringe forests in the eastern part of South Africa. They are never far from water.
Diet: Almost exclusively browsers. Fruits, pods, twigs and leaves. Foliage gleaners that carefully select higher quality food items including fruit, seed pods, flowers, and tender leaves.
Life Span: 14 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: Males 3 years; females 2 years.
Birth Season: The calving season is greatly tied to local seasonality and vegetative development.
Gestation: 7 months.
Number of young: 1 lamb.
Ecology and conservation:
Nyala are affected by habitat destruction and are susceptible to rinderpest.
Fun Facts:
- When nyala bulls fight, it is preceded by a display which involves raising the crest on the back, making the bulls look much bigger than they really are. In these fights, it is the male whith the longest hair that often wins.
|
Ring-Tailed Lemur
|
Classification:
Common Name: Ring-tailed Lemur
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Primate
Family: Lemuridae
Genus Species: Lemur catta
Key Facts:
Size: Head and body length: 19-20 inches; tail length: 24 inches.
Weight: 7-8 lbs.
General Description:
Active primate that lives in spiny desert and dry forest habitats. Has a fox-like nose and whiskers, gray fur on the back, white underparts, and a black and white ringed tail. Also called prosimians, which means “before apes.” Lemurs maintain primitive primate features such as a small brain case and a prominent nose.
Lifestyle:
Social Life: Ring-tailed lemurs are more terrestrial that other lemur species, often spending hours on the ground facing the sun with their arms outspread to warm up. A troup typically numbers between 5 and 30 individuals.
Habitat: Dry forest and spiny desert in Southern Madagascar.
Diet: Predominantly vegetation such as flowers, fruit, seeds, bark, nectar and leaves.
Life Span: Up to 27 years.
Reproduction:
Gestation: 134-138 days
Number of Young: 1 offspring per birth.
Ecology and conservation:
Lemurs fill an important ecological role in Madagascar. These primates often feed on an assortment of seasonal fruits and as they travel throughout the environment, they disperse undigested seeds in their manure within 2-3 hours. The seeds soon sprout to replenish the vegetation that sustains Madagascar’s unique habitants. This is very important on an island where 80% of the original habitats have been lost to logging and agriculture.
Fun Facts:
- Ring-tailed lemurs are quadrupedal, using all of their limbs for locomotion. Their long tails allow for even better stability in the trees.
- Lemurs rely on their sense of smell as a way of communicating with other animals. They have special scent glands on their wrists and bottoms that leave scent trails on branches to mark their territories.
- A lemur’s soft, broad fingers and toes have flat nails that allow it to grip objects and groom other lemurs.
- Ring-tailed lemur troops have a dominant female in charge!
Safari West Ring-tailed Lemurs:
- We have eight lemurs on lemur island. There are 4 males, 3 females and 1 unknown, and range in age from 1 year to 7 years old.
|
Scimitar-Horned Oryx
|
Classification:
Common Name: Scimitar-horned Oryx
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Oryx dammah
Key Facts:
Size: Body Length: 5.3-5.8 ft.; Tail Length: 2 ft.
Weight: 220 kg (480 lb).
General Description:
White coats that help to reflect the sun's heat, broad hooves to prevent sinking into the sand, and the ability to go for days without drinking, in part because they eat plants high in moisture.
Lifestyle:
Social life: It lives in groups with a wide range of sizes. Herds of 1000 individuals or more were found during migration, or in areas containing fresh pasture or surface water after rainfall.
Habitat: The scimitar-horned oryx inhabits the sub-desert lands: the transition zones between true desert (Sahara) and the Sahel. It is found in rolling dunes, grassy steppes and wooded inter-dunal depressions. It very rarely penetrates either true desert or true Sahel country.
Diet: Primarily grasses, but also legumes, leaves and the fruit of trees and shrubs. It is well adapted to arid lands, able to go for 9 - 10 months without drinking water by utilizing the moisture in the vegetation it eats.
Life Span: Up to 20 years in captivity.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: 2 years.
Mating season: Year-round.
Birth season: Births may occur throughout the year but with peaks occurring during the late cold/early hot season (February - April) and the late rainy/early cold season (September – November).
Gestation: 8.5 months.
Number of young: One young per birth.
Ecology and conservation:
The scimitar-horned oryx once inhabited the arid borders of the Sahara desert, but the last wild oryx was seen in the late 1980’s. Overhunting is the major cause of the decline, especially after motorized hunting with modern firearms began. Hunting has been carried out by nomads, oil surveyors, and military personnel, for meat, hides and sport. In addition, its habitat became increasingly drier and less suitable, due to long-term climate change as well as to overgrazing by livestock and man's destruction of tree cover. Furthermore, the increasing presence of livestock drove the oryx away from the pastures where it formerly obtained both food and water. Fortunately, this species has been bred in zoos and today small groups have been introduced into northern central Africa. Scimitar-horned oryx are an important example of how humans can impact animal populations, both negatively and positively.
Fun Facts:
- The scimitar-horned oryx has a number of physiological adaptations to conserve body water that help it survive in its desert habitat. For example, its kidneys are very efficient at minimizing the loss of water in urine, and it sweats only when its body temperature exceeds 46 deg C (116 deg F).
|
Springbok
|
Classification:
Common Name: Springbok
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Antidorcas marsupials
Key Facts:
Size: 31-35 inches for males/31-33 inches for females.
Weight: 90 lbs. males and 80 lbs. females.
General Description:
Its coat is cinnamon fawn above with a dark reddish fawn horizontal band extending from the upper foreleg to the edge of the hip. It has a conspicuous black side band contrasting with white under parts. The black-side bands may act as a visual signal to keep the herds together when fleeing a predator and may break up the outline of individuals in a herd. Its face is white with a dark band from eye to muzzle. The buttocks and rump are also white. Both sexes have short black ringed horns, sharply curved in at the tip. The springbok has a fold of skin extending along the middle of its back to the base of the tail. When alarmed, the animal turns the fold inside out displaying a crest of erect white hairs. These hairs probably serve as a warning signal.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Live in large groups and during the summer months huge herds of springbok concentrate in the dry riverbeds of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park in the Kalahari.
Habitat: Found in Southern Africa west of the Drakensberg Mountains and northwards to Angola on the open arid plains.
Diet: Springbok thrive on karoo shrubs and grass and are able to survive without much water as long as their food source has at least 10% water. They rest more by day and feed more by night in hot, dry weather.
Life Span: Up to 10 years.
Reproduction:
Mating season: They breed well in captivity. The mating season peaks in May.
Birth Season: November and December.
Gestation: 171 days/6.5-7 months.
Number of young: Single lamb.
Fun Facts:
- Their name arose from their habit of leaping 9-10 feet into the air when startled or at play.
- Males mark their territories with urine and dung piles.
- They have been clocked at 55 mph. They trot more often, however, and perform a variation of stotting called pronking. Stotting is when they jump in the air keeping all four legs straight when running from a predator.
|
Warthog
|
Classification:
Common Name: Warthog
Class: Mammalia (animal with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammal)
Family: Suidae
Genus Species: Phacoschoerus ( mole or wart, hog) aethiopicus (Africa)
Key Facts:
Size: 2.9-4.9 ft. in length, 2.1-2.8 ft. tall at shoulder/ 35 to 39 inches head and body in length. Their tails are 10-17 inches long.
Weight: 150-220 lbs. in males and 99-156 lbs. in females.
General Description:
Pig like animal, black or brown in color, with coarse but sparse hair covering the body. Its face is long with fleshy warts and protruding tusks. They have four tusks and large shovel-shaped heads. They attack with their sharp lower tusks which can measure 6 inches long. Older warthogs have long curved upper tusks that can grow as long as 2 feet. Instead of standing up and walking, they often kneel on their padded front legs to root for food with their snouts.
Lifestyle:
Habitat: Usually found in savannah and lightly forested areas; occurs in Central Africa and to the south, from the West Coast to the East Coast.
Diet: Grasses, roots, berries, bark and occasionally carrion.
Life Span: Over 18 years.
Reproduction:
Sexual Maturity: Females mature at 2 yrs., males at 4 yrs.
Mating Season: End of the rainy season.
Birth Season: Often have litters of three or four that are born in a burrow.
Gestation: 170-175 days.
Number of Young: 2-5.
Ecology and Conservation:
Warthogs allow birds, such as the yellow hornbills, to eat parasites that live on their bodies. This symbiotic relationship allows the birds to have a constant food source and the hogs to rid themselves of pests. These rooting animals are beneficial to the land by churning up the soil and allowing it to be aerated, which aids plant growth.
Fun Facts:
- Warthogs travel in groups called sounders consisting of 1-2 sows and young offspring. Boars usually travel alone.
- Boars have more prominent warts than sows. They are primarily used to protect the face during fights.
- Warthogs use burrows for shelter and when entering, back in, enabling them to defend themselves. In the mornings, warthogs burst out of their burrows at top speed to get a running start on any predators that may be lurking nearby.
- Although they look fierce, warthogs would rather run than fight. They can, however, be fierce opponents if forced. They can run as fast as 30 miles an hour.
- They mark their territories by rubbing a substance that comes from glands near their eyes against objects.
- Keep themselves cool by taking mud baths.
- Unlike many wild pigs, warthogs feed during the day and sleep in burrows at night.
|
Waterbuck
|
Classification:
Common Name: Waterbuck
Class: Mammalia (animals with milk glands)
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed hoofed mammals)
Family: Bovidae
Genus Species: Kobus ellipsiprymnus
Key Facts:
Size: Can reach lengths of more than 51 in. for males and 48 in. females.
Weight: 550 lbs. males and 409 females.
General Description:
A waterbuck's physique resembles that of a red deer. Only the males have horns, which can be up to 40 in. long and are slightly curved to the front. The waterbuck’s hair is long, straggly and of different shades of brown depending on the population’s distribution. It is permanently greased with an oily, water-repellent secretion of the perspiratory glands.
Lifestyle:
Social life: Although males do compete for and hold territories, the waterbuck is generally a quiet, sedentary animal. Like some other antelope, the male does not mark his territory with dung or urine, as his presence and smell are apparently sufficient. He tries to retain females that wander into his area, but is seldom successful for long, since the females have large home ranges and, in herds of five to 25, are constantly crossing in and out of males territories. Waterbuck do not migrate or move great distances, so territories are usually held year round.
Habitat: Africa’s savannahs and sparse forests along the rivers south of the Sahara.
Diet: Grazer on medium and short grasses rich in protein, herbs and foliage.
Life Span: Up to 18 years in captivity.
Reproduction:
Sexual maturity: Females at 12-14 months, males at 14-18 months.
Mating season: Calves are generally born throughout the year, although breeding becomes more seasonal in some areas.
Birth Season: Throughout the year.
Gestation: Usually no more than 8-8.5 months.
Number of young: Usually a single young.
Ecology and Conservation:
The greasing of the hair is significant for the waterbucks’ ecology, since they prefer living near lakes and rivers and enter the water often. They are good swimmers, which try to escape into the water when hunted by lions, leopards or African hunting dogs.
Fun Facts:
- Waterbuck is also known as “Heirschantilope” in German, which can be translated as “Deer Antelope.”
- Adult bucks may be territorial and defend an area of 150-600acres.
- Not until a buck has reached an age of six years is it endeavored to establish a territory.
- Lack usual scent glands but greasy coat emits musky smell.
- The meat of older waterbuck takes on an unpleasant odor from the waterproofing secretions of its sweat glands, prompting predators to choose other prey.
- The Swahili name for waterbuck is "Kuro".
|
|
|
Book Your Adventure
1 (800) 616-2695
or
An Authentic African Adventure...
Advanced Reservations are Required
|