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Wildlife in Tanzania
Klik op een van de namen voor
een beschrijving van enkele veel voorkomende dieren in het hart van Afrika:
Cheeta,
olifant,
gnoe,
leeuw,
buffel,
luipaard,
neushoorn.

|
Dutch
Name: |
Cheeta |
|
English Name: |
Chetaah |
|
Swahili Name: |
Duma |
|
Scientific Name: |
Acinonyx jubatus |
|
Size: |
30 inches at the shoulder |
|
Weight: |
110 to 140 pounds |
|
Lifespan: |
10 to 20 years |
|
Habitat: |
Open plains |
|
Diet: |
Smaller antelopes |
|
Gestation: |
90 to 95 days |
|
Predators: |
Changing habitat, eagles, humans, hyenas,
lions |
|
The lion is said to be majestic, the
leopard ferocious and shrewd. But elegant and graceful best describes
the cheetah. The cheetah is smaller than the other two cats, but by far
the fastest at speeds of 70 miles per hour it can run faster than all
other animals.
Now restricted to sub-Saharan Africa,
wild cheetahs once were found in most of Africa, the plains of southern
Asia, the Middle East and India.
Physical Characteristics.
The cheetah is built for speed. It has long, slim, muscular legs, a
small, rounded head set on a long neck, a flexible spine, a deep chest,
nonretractable claws, special pads on its feet for traction and a long,
tail for balance. Although fast, the cheetah cannot run at full speed
for long distances (100 yards is about the limit) because it may
overheat.
Cheetahs have distinctive black "tear
stripes" that connect from the inside corner of each eye to the mouth
that may serve as an antiglare device for daytime hunting.
Habitat.
Cheetahs are found in open and partially open savannas.
Behavior.
Cheetah mothers spend a long time teaching their young how to hunt small
live antelopes are brought back to the cubs and released so they can
chase and catch them. Unlike most other cats, the cheetah usually hunts
during daylight, preferring early morning or early evening, but is also
active on moonlit nights.
Cheetahs do not roar like lions, but
they purr, hiss, whine and growl. They also make a variety of contact
calls, the most common is a birdlike chirping sound.
Diet.
Once a cheetah has made a kill, it eats quickly and keeps an eye out for
scavengers lions, leopards, hyenas, vultures and jackals will
occasionally take away their kills. Although cheetahs usually prey on
the smaller antelopes such as Thomson's gazelles and impalas, they can
catch wildebeests and zebras if hunting together. They also hunt hares
and other small mammals and birds.
Although known as an animal of the
open plains that relies on speed to catch its prey, research has shown
that the cheetah depends on cover to stalk prey. The cheetah gets as
close to the prey as possible, then in a burst of speed tries to outrun
its quarry. Once the cheetah closes in, it knocks the prey to the ground
with its paw and suffocates the animal with a bite to the neck.
Caring for the young.
With a life span of 10 to 12 years, the cheetah is basically a solitary
animal. At times a male will accompany a female for a short while after
mating, but most often the female is alone or with her cubs. Two to four
cubs are born in a secluded place. Their eyes do not open for a week or
two, and they are helpless at first. When the mother is hunting, she
leaves them hidden, but by 6 weeks of age they are able to follow her.
They are suckled for 2 to 3 months but begin to eat meat as early as 3
weeks.
By 4 months the cheetah cub is a tawny
yellow and almost completely spotted; the tail has bands of black and by
adulthood a white tip. The grayish mantle disappears more slowly; the
last traces are still visible when the cubs are adult-sized at 15 months.
Predators.
A shy creature that roams widely, the cheetah is not seen as easily as
some other cats. Never numerous, cheetahs have become extinct in many
areas, principally due to shrinking habitat, loss of species to prey
upon, disease and a high rate of cub mortality. In some areas 50 to 75
percent of all cheetah cubs die before 3 months.
Met
toestemming van het AWF
 |

|
Dutch
Name: |
Olifant |
|
English Name: |
Elephant |
|
Swahili Name: |
Tembo or ndovu |
|
Scientific Name: |
Loxodonta africana |
|
Size: |
Up
to 11 feet |
|
Weight: |
31/2 - 61/2
tons (7,000 13,200 lb) |
|
Lifespan: |
60
to 70 years |
|
Habitat: |
Dense forest to open plains |
|
Diet: |
Herbivorous |
|
Gestation: |
About 22 months |
|
Predators: |
Humans |
|
The African
elephant and the Asian elephant are the only two surviving species of
what was in prehistoric times a diverse and populous group of large
mammals. Fossil records suggest that the elephant has some unlikely
distant relatives, namely the small, rodentlike hyrax and the ungainly
aquatic dugong. They all are thought to have evolved from a common stock
related to ungulates. In East Africa many well-preserved fossil remains
of earlier elephants have aided scientists in dating the archaeological
sites of prehistoric man.
Physical Characteristics.
The African elephant is the largest living land mammal, one of the most
impressive animals on earth.
Of all its specialized features, the muscular trunk is
the most remarkable it serves as a nose, a hand, an extra foot, a
signaling device and a tool for gathering food, siphoning water, dusting,
digging and a variety of other functions. Not only does the long trunk
permit the elephant to reach as high as 23 feet, but it can also perform
movements as delicate as picking berries or caressing a companion. It is
capable, too, of powerful twisting and coiling movements used for
tearing down trees or fighting. The trunk of the African elephant has
two finger-like structures at its tip, as opposed to just one on the
Asian elephant (Elephas maximus).
The tusks, another remarkable feature, are greatly
elongated incisors (elephants have no canine teeth); about one-third of
their total length lies hidden inside the skull. The largest tusk ever
recorded weighed 214 pounds and was 138 inches long. Tusks of this size
are not found on elephants in Africa today, as over the years hunters
and poachers have taken animals with the largest tusks. Because tusk
size is an inherited characteristic, it is rare to find one now that
would weigh more than 100 pounds.
Both male and female African elephants have tusks,
although only males in the Asiatic species have them. Tusks grow for
most of an elephant's lifetime and are an indicator of age. Elephants
are "right- or left-tusked," using the favored tusk more often as a tool,
thus, shortening it from constant wear. Tusks will differ in size, shape
and direction; researchers use them (and the elephant's ears) to
identify individuals.
Although the elephant's remaining teeth do not attract
the ivory poacher, they are nonetheless interesting and ultimately
determine the natural life span of the elephant. The cheek teeth erupt
in sequence from front to rear (12 on each side, six upper and six lower),
but with only a single tooth or one and a part of another, being
functional in each half of each jaw at one time. As a tooth becomes
badly worn, it is pushed out and replaced by the next tooth growing
behind. These large, oblong teeth have a series of cross ridges across
the surface. The last molar, which erupts at about 25 years, has the
greatest number of ridges but must also serve the elephant for the rest
of its life. When it has worn down, the elephant can no longer chew food
properly; malnutrition sets in, hastening the elephant's death, usually
between 60 and 70 years of age.
The African elephant's ears are over twice as large as
the Asian elephant's and have a different shape, often described as
similar to a map of Africa. The nicks, tears and scars as well as
different vein patterns on the ears help distinguish between individuals.
Elephants use their ears to display, signal or warn when alarmed or
angry, they spread the ears, bringing them forward and fully extending
them. The ears also control body temperature. By flapping the ears on
hot days, the blood circulates in the ear's numerous veins; the blood
returns to the head and body about 9 F cooler.
The sole of the elephant's foot is covered with a
thick, cushionlike padding that helps sustain weight, prevents slipping
and deadens sound. When they need to, elephants can walk almost silently.
An elephant usually has five hoofed toes on each forefoot and four on
each hind foot. When it walks, the legs on one side of the body move
forward in unison.
Sometimes it is difficult for the layman to
distinguish between male and female elephants as the male has no scrotum
(the testes are internal), and both the male and the female have loose
folds of skin between the hind legs. Unlike other herbivores, the female
has her two teats on her chest between her front legs. As a rule, males
are larger than females and have larger tusks, but females can usually
be identified by their pronounced foreheads.
Habitat.
Elephants can live in nearly any habitat that has adequate quantities of
food and water. Their ideal habitat consists of plentiful grass and
browse.
Behavior.
Elephants are generally gregarious and form small family groups
consisting of an older matriarch and three or four offspring, along with
their young. It was once thought that family groups were led by old bull
elephants, but these males are most often solitary. The female family
groups are often visited by mature males checking for females in estrus.
Several interrelated family groups may inhabit an area and know each
other well. When they meet at watering holes and feeding places, they
greet each other affectionately.
Females mature at about 11 years and stay in the group,
while the males, which mature between 12 and 15, are usually expelled
from the maternal herd. Even though these young males are sexually
mature, they do not breed until they are in their mid- or late 20s (or
even older) and have moved up in the social hierarchy. Mature male
elephants in peak condition experience an annual period of heightened
sexual and aggressive activity called musth. During this period, which
may last a week or even up to three to four months, the male produces
secretions from swollen temporal glands, continuously dribbles a trail
of strong-smelling urine and makes frequent mating calls. Females are
attracted to these males and prefer to mate with them rather than with
males not in musth.
Smell is the most highly developed sense, but sound
deep growling or rumbling noises is the principle means of communication.
Some researchers think that each individual has its signature growl by
which it can be distinguished. Sometimes elephants communicate with an
ear-splitting blast when in danger or alarmed, causing others to form a
protective circle around the younger members of the family group.
Elephants make low-frequency calls, many of which, though loud, are too
low for humans to hear. These sounds allow elephants to communicate with
one another at distances of five or six miles.
Diet.
An elephant's day is spent eating (about 16 hours), drinking, bathing,
dusting, wallowing, playing and resting (about three to five hours). As
an elephant only digests some 40 percent of what it eats, it needs
tremendous amounts of vegetation (approximately 5 percent of its body
weight per day) and about 30 to 50 gallons of water. A young elephant
must learn how to draw water up into its trunk and then pour it into its
mouth. Elephants eat an extremely varied vegetarian diet, including
grass, leaves, twigs, bark, fruit and seed pods. The fibrous content of
their food and the great quantities consumed makes for large volumes of
dung.
Caring for the Young.
Usually only one calf is born to a pregnant female. An orphaned calf
will usually be adopted by one of the family's lactating females or
suckled by various females. Elephants are very attentive mothers, and
because most elephant behavior has to be learned, they keep their
offspring with them for many years. Tusks erupt at 16 months but do not
show externally until 30 months. The calf suckles with its mouth (the
trunk is held over its head); when its tusks are 5 or 6 inches long,
they begin to disturb the mother and she weans it. Once weaned usually
at age 4 or 5, the calf still remains in the maternal group.
Predators.
Elephants once were common throughout Africa, even in northern Africa as
late as Roman times. They have since disappeared from that area due to
overhunting and the spread of the desert. Even though they are
remarkably adaptable creatures, living in habitats ranging from lush
rain forest to semidesert, there has been much speculation about their
future. Surviving populations are pressured by poachers who slaughter
elephants for their tusks and by rapidly increasing human settlements,
which restrict elephants' movements and reduce the size of their
habitat. Today it would be difficult for elephants to survive for long
periods of time outside protected parks and reserves. But confining them
also causes problems without access any longer to other areas, they may
harm their own habitat by overfeeding and overuse. Sometimes they go out
of protected areas and raid nearby farms.
Met toestemming van
het AWF  |

|
Dutch
Name: |
Gnoe |
|
English Name: |
Wildebeest |
|
Swahili Name: |
Nyumbu Ya Montu |
|
Scientific Name: |
Connochaetes taurinus |
|
Size: |
50 to 58 inches at the shoulder |
|
Weight: |
265 to 600 pounds |
|
Lifespan: |
20 years |
|
Habitat: |
Open woodland and open grassy plains |
|
Diet: |
Grazers |
|
Gestation: |
8 to 81/2 months |
|
Predators: |
Lions, cheetahs, hunting dogs, hyenas |
|
The largest mammal migration in the world
is that of the Serengeti wildebeest. Huge scores of these antelopes
congregate on the East African savannas, a sight which few who have seen
will forget.
Several races of wildebeest (also
called gnu) exist. The species that forms the large herds of the
Serengeti-Mara ecosystem of Tanzania and Kenya is known as the western
white-bearded wildebeest (C. t. mearnsi). The brindled or blue
race occurs south of the Zambezi River; the eastern white-bearded race
inhabits Kenya and Tanzania east of Gregory Rift.
Physical Characteristics.
The head of the wildebeest is large and box-like. Both males and females
have curving horns that are close together at the base, but curve
outward, then inward and slightly backward. The body looks
disproportionate, as the front end is heavily built while the
hindquarters are slender and the legs spindly.
The wildebeest’s hide is gray with
several darker vertical stripes. It has a dark mane and a long tail.
Newborns are yellowish-brown, but reach mature coloration in about two
months.
Habitat.
Wildebeest occupy the plains and acacia savannas of eastern Africa.
Behavior.
In the Serengeti-Mara ecosystem the
animals make an annual migratory circle of 300 miles. The migration
starts after the calving season in May on the short grass plains in the
southeastern Serengeti. Wildebeests move west toward Lake Victoria,
across the grass savanna to the open woodlands, then turn north into the
Mara. In November they begin the return trip to the south. They are
relentless in their advance and will cross rivers and lakes in such huge
masses that many are injured, lost (especially in the case of calves) or
killed.
Wildebeest are continually on the move
as they seek favorable supplies of grass and water. Active both day and
night, they often string out in long single columns when on the move.
During mating season wildebeest form
smaller breeding groups of up to 150 animals within the massive herds.
The most active bulls establish and defend territories that females
wander through. Males display various mating behaviors like bucking and
galloping; rubbing their heads on the ground, spreading secretions
produced by the preorbital and interdigital glands. They also urinate
and defecate in certain spots and roll in it to demarcate property.
When neighboring bulls meet they go
through a highly ritualized “challenge” in which they scrape the ground
with their hooves, buck, snort and fight. The typical combat position is
on their knees, facing one another, with their foreheads flat on the
ground – they knock heads and hit at the base of the horns but seldom
injure one another.
Diet.
Strictly grazers, wildebeest prefer short grass. They are unable to go
without water for more than a few days.
Caring for the Young.
Wildebeest females give birth to a
single calf in the middle of the herd, not seeking a secluded place, as
do many antelopes. 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. A calf
can stand and run within minutes of birth. It immediately begins to
follow its mother and stays close to her to avoid getting lost or preyed
upon. Within days, it can run fast enough to keep up with the adult herd.
A calf eats its first grass at about
10 days, although it is still suckled for at least 6 months. Even after
weaning, many remain with the mother until the next year’s calf is born.
At that time the young males are driven away, but the females often
remain in the same groups as their mothers.
Predators.
Wildebeest are the preferred prey of
lions and spotted hyena. They find strength in numbers: large herds mean
smaller chances of being preyed upon. If a calf loses its mother it will
follow whatever is closest – a car, a person or occasionally even a
predator, but in the latter case, probably not for long.
Met
toestemming van het Awf  |

|
Dutch Name: |
Leeuw |
|
English Name: |
Lion |
|
Swahili Name: |
Simba |
|
Scientific Name: |
Panthera leo |
|
Size: |
48 inches high |
|
Weight: |
330 to 500 pounds |
|
Lifespan: |
13 years in
captivity |
|
Habitat: |
Grassy plans and
open woodlands |
|
Diet: |
Carnivorous |
|
Gestation: |
About 105 days |
|
Predators: |
Humans |
|
The lion is a magnificent animal that
appears as a symbol of power, courage and nobility on family crests,
coats of arms and national flags in many civilizations. Lions at one
time were found from Greece through the Middle East to northern India,
but today only a very small population remains in India. In the past
lions lived in most parts of Africa, but are now confined to the
sub-Saharan region.
Most cat species live a fundamentally
solitary existence, but the lion is an exception. It has developed a
social system based on teamwork and a division of labor within the pride,
and an extended but closed family unit centered around a group of
related females. The average pride consists of about 15 individuals,
including five to 10 females with their young and two or three
territorial males that are usually brothers or pride mates.
Physical Characteristics
Generally a tawny yellow, lions, like
other species, tend to be lighter in color in hot, arid areas and darker
in areas of dense vegetation. Mature male lions are unique among the cat
species for the thick mane of brown or black hair that encircles the
head and neck. The tails of lions end in a horny spine covered with a
tuft of hair.
Habitat.
Lions are found in savannas,
grasslands, dense bush and woodlands.
Behavior.
Females do 85 to 90 percent of the
pride's hunting, while the males patrol the territory and protect the
pride, for which they take the "lion's share" of the females' prey. When
resting, lions seem to enjoy good fellowship with lots of touching, head
rubbing, licking and purring. But when it comes to food, each lion looks
out for itself. Squabbling and fighting are common, with adult males
usually eating first, followed by the females and then the cubs.
Lions are the laziest of the big cats.
They usually spend 16 to 20 hours a day sleeping and resting, devoting
the remaining hours to hunting, courting or protecting their territory.
They keep in contact with one another by roaring loud enough to be heard
up to five miles away. The pride usually remains intact until the males
are challenged and successfully driven away or killed by other males,
who then take over. Not all lions live in prides. At maturity, young
males leave the units of their birth and spend several years as nomads
before they become strong enough to take over a pride of their own. Some
never stop wandering and continue to follow migrating herds; but the
nomadic life is much more difficult, with little time for resting or
reproducing.
Within the pride, the territorial
males are the fathers of all the cubs. When a lioness is in heat, a male
will join her, staying with her constantly. The pair usually mates for
less than a minute, but it does so about every 15 to 30 minutes over a
period of four to five days.
Lions may hunt at any hour, but they
typically go after large prey at night. They hunt together to increase
their success rate, since prey can be difficult to catch and can outrun
a single lion. The lions fan out along a broad front or semicircle to
creep up on prey. Once with within striking distance, they bound in
among the startled animals, knock one down and kill it with a bite to
the neck or throat. Hunts are successful about half the time.
Diet.
Cooperative hunting enables lions to
take prey as large as wildebeests, zebras, buffaloes, young elephants,
rhinos, hippos and giraffes, any of which can provide several meals for
the pride. Mice, lizards, tortoises, warthogs, antelopes and even
crocodiles also form part of a lion's diet. Because they often take over
kills made by hyenas, cheetahs and leopards, scavenged food provides
more than 50 percent of their diets in areas like the Serengeti plains.
Caring for the Young.
Litters consist of two or three cubs
that weigh about 3 pounds each. Some mothers carefully nurture the young;
others may neglect or abandon them, especially when food is scarce.
Usually two or more females in a pride give birth about the same time,
and the cubs are raised together. A lioness will permit cubs other than
her own to suckle, sometimes enabling a neglected infant to survive.
Capable hunters by 2 years of age, lions become fully grown between 5
and 6 years and normally live about 13 years.
Predators.
Lions have long been killed in rituals
of bravery, as hunting trophies and for their medicinal and magical
powers. Although lions are now protected in many parts of Africa, they
were once considered to be stock-raiding vermin and were killed on sight.
In some areas, livestock predation remains a severe problem.
Met
toestemming van het AWF  |

|
Dutch Name: |
Buffel |
|
English Name: |
Buffalo |
|
Swahili Name: |
Nyati |
|
Scientific Name: |
Syncerus caffer |
|
Size: |
About 65 inches at the shoulder |
|
Weight: |
1,500 pounds |
|
Lifespan: |
20 years |
|
Habitat: |
Dense forest to open plains |
|
Diet: |
Herbivorous/grazer |
|
Gestation: |
Between 11 and 12 months |
|
Predators: |
Humans and lions |
|
The African, or Cape, buffalo is a member
of the so-called "Big Five" group of animals, with the elephant, rhino,
lion and leopard. Once popular trophies for hunters, these large and
often dangerous animals have continued to capture the imagination.
Buffaloes have earned a bad reputation from hunters and other people who
come in close contact with them. They are unpredictable and can be
dangerous if cornered or wounded. Though they have been known to ambush
men and are often accused of deliberate savagery, they are usually
placid if left alone.
There is only one genus and one species
of buffalo in Africa, but this single species has two different types:
the large savanna buffalo and the much smaller dwarf forest buffalo.
There are also several intermediate types. The buffaloes found in the
forests of Kenya and Tanzania are the savanna type, however, and not the
true forest buffalo, which occurs only in West Africa.
Physical Characteristics.
Savanna buffaloes are large, heavy cowlike animals. They vary greatly
not only in size, but in the shapes of their horns and color. Adults are
usually dark gray or black (or even look red or white if they have been
wallowing in mud of that color) and the young are often reddish-brown.
The smaller forest buffalo maintains the red color even as an adult,
although in western Uganda, many savanna buffaloes are also red or pale
orange instead of black. Adults lose hair as they age.
Both male and female buffaloes have
heavy, ridged horns that grow straight out from the head or curve
downward and then up. The horns are formidable weapons against predators
and for jostling for space within the herd; males use the horns in
fights for dominance.
Habitat.
Both savanna buffaloes and forest buffaloes live close to water. In
general buffaloes are found throughout the northern and southern savanna
as well as the lowland rain forest.
Behavior.
Buffaloes can live in herds of a few hundred, but have been known to
congregate in thousands in the Serengeti during the rainy season. The
females and their offspring make up the bulk of the herd. Males may
spend much of their time in bachelor groups. These groups are of two
types, those that contain males from 4 to 7 years of age and those that
have males 12 years and older. The older bulls often prefer to be on
their own. Males do not reach their full weight until about age 10.
After this, however, their body weight and condition decline, probably
because the teeth become worn.
Sight and hearing are both rather poor,
but scent is well developed in buffaloes. Although quiet for the most
part, the animals do communicate. In mating seasons they grunt and emit
hoarse bellows. A calf in danger will bellow mournfully, bringing herd
members running at a gallop to defend it.
Diet.
Food sources play more of an important role than predation in regulating
buffalo numbers. Without fresh green feed, buffaloes lose condition
faster than other savanna ungulates, and so death is often due to
malnutrition.
Grass forms the greatest part of the
savanna buffalo's diet, although at certain times of the year browse
plants other than grass is also consumed. Buffaloes spend more time
feeding at night than during the day. They seem to have a relatively
poor ability to regulate body temperature and remain in the shade for
long periods of time in the heat of the day, or wallow in mud.
Caring for Young.
Females have their first calves at age 4
or 5. They usually calve only once every two years. Although young may
be born throughout the year, most births occur in the rainy season when
abundant grass improves the nutritional level for the females when they
are pregnant or nursing. The female and her offspring have an unusually
intense and prolonged relationship. Calves are suckled for as long as a
year and during this time are completely dependent on their mothers.
Female offspring usually stay in the natal herd, but males leave when
they are about 4 years old.
Predators.
If attacked, the adults in the herd form
a circle around the young and face outward. By lowering their heads and
presenting a solid barrier of sharp horns, it is difficult for predators
to seize a calf. This effective group defense even allows blind and
crippled members of the herd to survive. Thus predators do not have a
major impact on buffalo herds; it is the old, solitary-living males that
are most likely to be taken by lions.
Outside the national parks in East Africa,
buffaloes frequently come into conflict with human interests. They break
fences and raid cultivated crops and may spread bovine diseases to
domestic stock. They are still numerous in many parts of East Africa,
even though they have been periodically devastated by the rinderpest
virus. In other areas of Africa, buffaloes have been eliminated or their
numbers greatly reduced.
Met toestemming van het AWF |

|
Dutch
Name: |
Luipaard |
|
English Name: |
Leopard |
|
Swahili Name: |
Chui |
|
Scientific Name: |
Panthera pardus |
|
Size: |
About 28 inches at the shoulder |
|
Weight: |
Up to 140 pounds |
|
Lifespan: |
21 years in captivity |
|
Habitat: |
Bush and riverine forest |
|
Diet: |
Carnivorous |
|
Gestation: |
Approximately 21/2
months |
|
Predators: |
Humans |
|
The most secretive and elusive of the
large carnivores, the leopard is also the shrewdest. Pound for pound, it
is the strongest climber of the large cats and capable of killing prey
larger than itself.
Physical Characteristics.
Leopards come in a wide variety of coat
colors, from a light buff or tawny in warmer, dryer areas to a dark
shade in deep forests. The spots, or rosettes, are circular in East
African leopards but square in southern African leopards.
Habitat.
Dense bush in rocky surroundings and
riverine forest are their favorite habitats, but leopards adapt to many
places in both warm and cold climates. Their adaptability, in fact, has
helped them survive the loss of habitat to increasing human settlement.
Leopards are primarily nocturnal, usually resting during the daytime in
trees or thick bush. The spotted coat provides almost perfect
camouflage.
Behavior.
When a leopard stalks prey, it keeps a
low profile and slinks through the grass or bush until it is close
enough to launch an attack. When not hunting, it can move through herds
of antelopes without unduly disturbing them by flipping its tail over
its back to reveal the white underside, a sign that it is not seeking
prey.
Leopards are basically solitary and go
out of their way to avoid one another. Each animal has a home range that
overlaps with its neighbors; the male's range is much larger and
generally overlaps with those of several females. A leopard usually does
not tolerate intrusion into its own range except to mate. Unexpected
encounters between leopards can lead to fights.
Leopards growl and spit with a screaming
roar of fury when angry and they purr when content. They announce their
presence to other leopards with a rasping or sawing cough. They have a
good sense of smell and mark their ranges with urine; they also leave
claw marks on trees to warn other leopards to stay away.
Leopards continually move about their
home ranges, seldom staying in an area for more than two or three days
at a time. With marking and calling, they usually know one another's
whereabouts. A male will accompany a female in estrus for a week or so
before they part and return to solitude.
Diet.
As they grow, cubs learn to hunt small
animals. The leopard is a cunning, stealthy hunter, and its prey ranges
from strong-scented carrion, fish, reptiles and birds to mammals such as
rodents, hares, hyraxes, warthogs, antelopes, monkeys and baboons.
Caring for the Young.
A litter includes two or three cubs,
whose coats appear to be smoky gray as the rosettes are not yet clearly
delineated. The female abandons her nomadic wandering until the cubs are
large enough to accompany her. She keeps them hidden for about the first
8 weeks, giving them meat when they are 6 or 7 weeks old and suckling
them for 3 months or longer.
Predators.
Leopards have long been preyed upon by
man. Their soft, dense, beautiful fur has been used for ceremonial robes
and coats. Different parts of the leopard the tail, claws and whiskers
are popular as fetishes. These cats have a reputation as wanton killers,
but research does not support the claim. In some areas farmers try to
exterminate them, while in others leopards are considered symbols of
wisdom. Leopards do well in captivity, and some have lived as long as 21
years.
Met toestemming van het AWF |

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Dutch name: |
Neushoorn |
|
English Name: |
Rhinoceros |
|
Swahili Name: |
Faru |
|
Scientific Name: |
Black (Diceros bicornis), white (Ceratotherium simum) |
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Size: |
About 60 inches at the shoulder |
|
Weight: |
1 to 11/2 tons
(black rhino), over 2 tons (white rhino) |
|
Lifespan: |
35 to 40 years |
|
Habitat: |
Grassland and open savannas |
|
Diet: |
Vegetarian |
|
Gestation: |
16 months |
|
Predators: |
Humans |
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The rhinoceros is a large,
primitive-looking mammal that in fact dates from the Miocene era
millions of years ago. In recent decades rhinos have been relentlessly
hunted to the point of near extinction. Since 1970 the world rhino
population has declined by 90 percent, with five species remaining in
the world today, all of which are endangered.
The white or square-lipped rhino is one
of two rhino species in Africa. It in turn occurs as two subspecies, the
southern and the northern. The southern dwindled almost to extinction in
the early 20th century, but was protected on farms and reserves,
enabling it to increase enough to be reintroduced. The northern white
rhino has recovered in Democratic Republic of Congo from about 15 in
1984 to about 30 in the late 1990s. This population, however, has
recently been severely threatened by political conflict and instability.
Physical Characteristics.
The white rhino's name derives from the
Dutch "weit," meaning wide, a reference to its wide, square muzzle
adapted for grazing. The white rhino, which is actually gray, has a
pronounced hump on the neck and a long face.
The black, or hooked-lipped, rhino, along
with all other rhino species, is an odd-toed ungulate (three toes on
each foot). It has a thick, hairless, gray hide. Both the black and
white rhino have two horns, the longer of which sits at the front of the
nose.
Habitat.
Black rhinos have various habitats, but
mainly areas with dense, woody vegetation. White rhinos live in savannas
with water holes, mud wallows and shade trees.
Behavior.
Rhinos live in home ranges that sometimes
overlap with each other. Feeding grounds, water holes and wallows may be
shared. The black rhino is usually solitary. The white rhino tends to be
much more gregarious. Rhinos are also rather ill-tempered and have
become more so in areas where they have been constantly disturbed. While
their eyesight is poor, which is probably why they will sometimes charge
without apparent reason, their sense of smell and hearing are very good.
They have an extended "vocabulary" of growls, grunts, squeaks, snorts
and bellows. When attacking, the rhino lowers its head, snorts, breaks
into a gallop reaching speeds of 30 miles an hour, and gores or strikes
powerful blows with its horns. Still, for all its bulk, the rhino is
very agile and can quickly turn in a small space. The rhino has a
symbiotic relationship with oxpeckers, also called tick birds. In
Swahili the tick bird is named "askari wa kifaru," meaning "the rhino's
guard." The bird eats ticks it finds on the rhino and noisily warns of
danger. Although the birds also eat blood from sores on the rhino's skin
and thus obstruct healing, they are still tolerated.
Diet.
The black rhino is a browser, with a
triangular-shaped upper lip ending in a mobile grasping point. It eats a
large variety of vegetation, including leaves, buds and shoots of plants,
bushes and trees. The white rhino, on the other hand, is a grazer
feeding on grasses.
Caring for the Young.
The closest rhino relationship is between
a female and her calf, lasting from 2 to 4 years. As the older calves
mature, they leave their mothers and may join other females and their
young, where they are tolerated for some time before living completely
on their own.
Predators.
Man is the cause of the demise of the
rhino. In the wild, the adult black or white rhino has no true natural
predators and, despite its size and antagonistic reputation, it is
extremely easy for man to kill. A creature of habitat that lives in a
well-defined home range, it usually goes to water holes daily, where it
is easily ambushed. The dramatic decline in rhino numbers is unfortunate
in an era of increasing conservation and wildlife awareness, but efforts
are underway to save the rhino from extinction.
Met toestemming van het AWF
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