Zimbabwe Wild Dogs

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Updates, and Pangolin!

Category: Random, Uncategorized, Wild Dogs | Date: Nov 12 2008 | By: zimbabwewilddogs

Hi guys,

We have found spoor of the Nyarushanga Pack, a less-known pack in the West of the Conservancy which we don’t have a radio-collar for, so we rarely see them except during the denning season, but it’s good to know they’re still around.

We also have good news from a data-collection perspective: the missing piece of the GPS collar that we recovered from the poacher’s house has been handed in, and should hopefully be brought to our house today. We are hoping this is the piece with the data on it…It should have logged the movements of the collared dog, Sandy, which can help us get a sense of home range size and core areas for the Mapari pack.

A number of other interesting things have happened recently including Rueben finding the rarely-seen Pangolin between our house and his. This attracted a small crowd because this animal is so rarely seen. No-one present had seen one before.

It curls up in a scaly ball when threatened:

Pangolin 1

And can easily be picked up….even the local policeman dropped by for the occasion:

Group pangolin

But it got tired of pretending to be scared of us and unfurled to wander away:

Pangolin 3

Then later that day when we were looking for the Bedford Pack, I met the legendary Greater Honey-Guide, a famous bird for its unique and wonderful behaviour. It evolved a special mutualistic relationship with people, in which, when it finds wild honey, it will come and find a human and attract his or her attention. Then it will lead you to the honey so you can smoke out the bees, on the understanding that you will share some of the honey (and bee larvae) with the Honey-Guide. Well, the one I met was trying to lead me to some honey, but sadly we were on other business and I wasn’t able to follow it! Here is a picture of the Honey-Guide who was inviting me to a possible feast.

Honeyguide

On the way home, just a couple of hundred metres from our house, we found the fresh drag marks of a leopard pulling away an impala it had killed. We followed them a short distance to find a mostly uneaten impala ewe with its unborn foetus lying cold against a rock nearby. By the next day, both were entirely eaten. Below is Rueben following the drag marks.

Rueben leopard drag

Living in the bush produces so many interesting stories!

All the best,

Roy

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6 Responses to “Updates, and Pangolin!”

zimbabwewilddogs, on 12 Nov 2008

Hi Roy,

NICE pictures of the pangolin - I’m jealous. Here is me slaving away on statitics and fundraising reports in the UK and there you are seeing pangolins! Mmph. What a wondeful sighting, and great that he attracted a crowd of interetsed spectators. Lucky you!

Rosemary

sheryl, washington, dc, on 12 Nov 2008

I have never heard of a pangolin. It looks like something from an episode of Star Trek!

Did the Greater Honey-guide once have another name? Or has this relationship with people and honeybees existed so long that it doesn’t have another name?

s.

Tom, on 12 Nov 2008

Pack of 31 dogs…leopard kills around your house…a pangolin!!!
You are a lucky man indeed. Out of interest, how much is a beer in Zim now? Last time I was there, the price doubled from Z$20000 to Z$40000 in one week. God knows how much it is now….

zimbabwewilddogs, on 13 Nov 2008

Hi Sheryl,

Well, in English, that’s always been the name of the Honeyguide, as far as I know. Of course, it has had names in African languages for a much longer time before English-speakers arrived here, and has guided people to honey for thousands of years–yes, this relationship between people and honey-guides has existed for a VERY long time, long enough for the species to have evolved this behaviour! -Roy

Christine C., on 13 Nov 2008

Fantastic picture of the Pagolin Roy!!

zimbabwewilddogs, on 25 Nov 2008

Hi Tom–thanks for your comment–actually probably the only reasonable way to answer your question about the price of beer in Zimbabwe is to say that it fluctuates massively all the time! I’m sure you know they knocked 11 zeros off the values of Zimbabwean dollars a couple of months ago, and apparently another 9 recently I think. Between one Friday and the following Tuesday a couple of weeks ago the value of the Zim dollar to one US dollar went from millions to billions. It’s breaking records. We’re far enough from anywhere you can buy anything that I actually have no idea of the price of beer at the moment. However, you can now legally buy things in US dollars in some places, which helps stabilize prices and means money is more meaningful to use. Even in US dollars, though, things are expensive here.

I’m enjoying everyone else’s comments too–it’s great to hear from you guys :)

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