Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts

Friday, 14 June 2019

14 lions on the loose in South Africa, with nowhere to go


JUNE 7, 2019
A pride of 14 lions is on the loose near a mining community bordering South Africa's Kruger National Park, officials said Friday, and warned members of the public to be alert.
The lions have been spotted roaming around the Foskor phosphate mine outside the town of Phalaborwa on the western boundary of the famed wildlife park, which is fenced in.
But a disagreement broke out what to do with the big cats, which are being monitored by a team of rangers until a new home is found where they cannot run into humans.
Officials from the Limpopo provincial government said the lions had escaped from the Kruger park and should be taken back.
But a Kruger spokesman said the big cats were not from the park and could not be moved there as well-established prides would drive them out.
"The widely reported pride of lions seen recently in the mining area outside Phalaborwa is not a known pride from the Kruger National Park," spokesman Ike Phaahla said in a statement, adding this meant they were the responsibility of provincial authorities.

Wednesday, 22 May 2019

100-Plus Neglected Lions Found With Mange, Neurological Problems, on South African Farm


More than 100 lions at a captive breeding facility in South Africa have been found to be neglected, ill and covered with mange.
According to the Humane Society International, the lions were discovered on April 11 by inspectors with the National Council of Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Inspectors told TimesLive, a South African news site, that two lion cubs were suffering from neurological problems and couldn't walk and that 27 lions had lost much of their fur because of the mange, which is caused by parasitic mites.
"Other issues — such as small enclosures and inadequate shelter, no provision of water, overcrowding, and filthy and parasitic conditions — were noted in the camps that contained the lions, caracals, tigers and leopards," senior inspector Douglas Wolhuter told the news site. [In Photos: The Lions of Kenya's Masai Mara]

Sunday, 17 February 2019

Are sharks being attacked by killer whales off Cape Town's coast?


February 4, 2019 by Alison Kock And Tamlyn Engelbrecht, The Conversation
Large, predatory sharks occupy the top of ocean food chains, where they play important roles in maintaining diverse and healthy ecosystems. The loss of these predators can therefore have significant impacts on ecosystems.
For a long time broadnose sevengill sharks have occupied the apex of the food chain alongside the more famous great white sharks in False Bay on the southern tip of South Africa. Both species feed on seals, dolphins, other sharks and fish.
However, the structure of the False Bay food chain began to change significantly in 2015 with the appearance of a "new" predator, shark-eating killer whales.
The change was noted with the discovery of several dead sevengill sharks by scuba divers from a popular dive site inside the Table Mountain National Park marine protected area. This site was home to an exceptionally large group of sevengill sharks. Divers could dive with up to 70 sharks on a single hour-long dive – no other place in the world had this many broadnose sevengill sharks in one place.
Initially, the cause of death remained a mystery because no dead sharks were recovered for examination. Initially fingers were pointed to humans, great white sharks or killer whales. It was only months later following the discovery of more dead sharks and examination of the carcasses by scientists that the fingers pointed straight at killer whales.
With this information in hand we set about reviewing the literature on killer whale behaviour, dietary specialisation, and population delineation globally and locally. Based on the review we hypothesised that the attacks on broadnose sevengill sharks in False Bay were possibly indicative of the arrival of a different sub‐group – or ecotype – of killer whale in the bay that feeds on sharks.

Thursday, 14 February 2019

A single gene turns socially organized bees into social parasites


January 23, 2019, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
A small change in the genetic makeup of the South African Cape bee turns the socially organised animal into a fighting parasite. This change ensures that infertile worker bees begin to lay their own eggs and fight other colonies. In the current issue of the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution, an international research team led by Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) outlines for the first time the genetic basis for this rare phenomenon.
Bees are social insects that live together in large colonies with a distinct social structure. Usually, roles are clearly distributed within a bee colony: In addition to male drones, there are numerous infertile female worker bees that care for the nest and provide for the queen. The queen is solely responsible for producing the colony's entire offspring, with the male drones developing from her unfertilised eggs and female bees from the fertilised ones. New queens only emerge when the colony divides or when the previous queen has died or is too old to continue to produce new offspring.
The situation is different for the South African Cape bee. Some of its worker bees are able to produce female offspring from unfertilized eggs. After the animals have been raised in their own colony, the false queens begin to reproduce more of their kind and can invade foreign but closely related bee colonies and ultimately take over their hives. The behaviour was first observed in the 1990s by beekeepers trying to establish the Cape bee in a region of South Africa where another honeybee subspecies lived.

Friday, 5 October 2018

Cobra cannibalism more prevalent than previously thought


Researchers in South Africa investigate cannibalism in cape cobras and others in the region
Date:  October 2, 2018
Source:  Ecological Society of America
Summary:
Researchers in South Africa's Kalahari Desert found a large male cape cobra devouring another smaller male of the same species. Surprised by the thought-to-be-rare event, they decided to investigate how common and widespread cannibalism was in cobras.
Last spring, researchers in South Africa's Kalahari Desert found a large male cape cobra devouring another smaller male of the same species. Surprised by the thought-to-be-rare event, they decided to investigate how common and widespread cannibalism was in cobras.
Apart from a few species, scientific understanding of snake diets is lacking. Snakes are elusive creatures that feed relatively infrequently, making feeding observations difficult to come by. Bryan Maritz, a researcher at the University of the Western Cape and lead author of the new study in the Ecological Society of America's journal Ecology, explains, "This work highlights a renewed effort to meaningfully quantify several aspects of snake natural history, especially in poorly studied regions such as Africa."
While cape cobras are known to eat other snake species -- up to a third of their diet -- recorded instances of cape cobras eating individuals of the same species, known as conspecifics, has been extremely rare. Scientists have treated such reported observations as aberrant behavior.
So, what caused this cape cobra to attack and eat the smaller male of its kind? How often does this happen? Do all cobras take part in cannibalism?


Wednesday, 26 September 2018

Mother and toddler critically injured after giraffe attack



American scientist and three-year-old son trampled at wildlife reserve in South Africa
Aamna Mohdin
Thu 6 Sep 2018 18.40 BSTLast modified on Mon 10 Sep 2018 10.58 BST
A scientist and her young son have been left critically injured after they were attacked by a giraffe at a wildlife reserve in South Africa.
Dr Katy Williams, a 35-year-old American, and her three-year-old son, Finn, are in a critical but stable condition. An operation was performed on Finn during the early hours of Tuesday to release pressure on his brain caused by injuries sustained in the incident.
The family were attacked at about 6pm on Monday by a female giraffe 150 metres from their home in Blyde Wildlife Estate, in the country’s north-east.
Williams’ British husband, Sam, 36, was returning from a trail run on the estate when he found his wife and son being trampled by the giraffe. He was able to intervene and chase the giraffe away, according to a statement given by Marina Botha, the family’s lawyer.
Riaan Cilliers, the manager of the estate, said: “We are all in shock about this very sad incident and we ensure the family that they are in our prayers.”

Monday, 3 September 2018

Older than dinosaurs: last South African coelacanths threatened by oil exploration



Just 30 of the prehistoric fish known to exist, raising fears oil wells will push it to extinction
Tony Carnie in Durban
Fri 17 Aug 2018 11.29 BSTLast modified on Mon 20 Aug 2018 09.52 BST

Bright blue, older than dinosaurs and weighing as much as an average-sized man, coelacanths are the most endangered fish in South Africa and among the rarest in the world.
Barely 30 of these critically-endangered fish are known to exist off the east coast of South Africa, raising concern that a new oil exploration venture in the area could jeopardise their future.
Coelacanths, whose shape has remained almost unchanged for 420m years, captured world attention when the first living specimen was caught off the port city of East London in 1938. This discovery was followed by the subsequent capture of several more off the Comoros islands in the early 1950s, confirming that coelacanths were definitely not extinct.
December 2000 brought further excitement when divers found a small coelacanth colony in underwater canyons near South Africa’s Sodwana Bay, adjacent to the iSimangaliso wetland park and world heritage site.
Now the Rome-based energy group Eni plans to drill several deep-water oil wells in a 400km long exploration block known as Block ER236.
Dr Andrew Venter, the chief executive of Wildtrust, one of several conservation groups lobbying for a significant expansion of South Africa’s protected ocean areas, said: “The Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 decimated fish populations – so if we had an oil spill off iSimangaliso it is very likely it could wipe out these coelacanths.”
The Sodwana coelacanths are about 40km from the northern boundary of the Eni exploration area and nearly 200km north of the first drilling sites, but Venter said oil spills spread far and swiftly.
His concerns have been echoed by the coelacanth expert Prof Mike Bruton, who said the fish are specialist creatures, sensitive to environmental disturbance.

Thursday, 16 November 2017

Zebra scat science improves conservation efforts


Date:  November 1, 2017
Source:  University of Manchester

Summary:
How can zebra excrement tell us what an animal's response to climate change and habitat destruction will be? That is what scientists have been investigating in South Africa. Together the team have been using zebra stools to understand how challenges or 'stressors', such as the destruction and breakup of habitats, impact on populations of South Africa's Cape mountain zebra.


Sunday, 24 September 2017

South Africa's long-legged bees adapted to pollinate snapdragon flowers

An extraordinary case of adaptation by a pollinator
Date:  September 13, 2017
Source:  Stellenbosch University
Summary:
New research shows that, in an extraordinary case of adaptation, the disproportionately long front legs of South Africa's oil-collecting Rediviva bee species have evolved in response to the equally long oil-producing spurs of snapdragons.


Monday, 4 September 2017

Rhino horn sales: banking on extinction


Paula Kahumbu: The sale of rhino horn in South Africa won’t help save rhinos, but it will benefit organised crime


Paula Kahumbu is CEO of the NGO Wildlife Direct and a campaigner for elephants and wildlife.

Friday 25 August 2017 06.05 BSTLast modified on Friday 25 August 2017 11.50 BST

South Africa has just launched the first ever legal rhino horn auction. If you are based in South Africa and would like to buy some rhino horn you can place your bid here.

This is not a government auction, although it is sanctioned by the South African government. It has been organised by private rhino rancher, John Hume, who took the government to court and won the right to sell 265 rhino horns weighing about 500 kg. Trade in rhino horn is illegal in most countries, but the black market value of one kilogram is said to be USD 100,000—more than the price of platinum.

The astronomical price of rhino horn is driven by demand in Asia that has fuelled the current epidemic of rhino poaching in South Africa. Rhino deaths from poaching have risen from almost zero ten years ago to more than 1,000 per year since 2013.

Rhinos are listed on Appendix 1 of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), which means that horns cannot be legally taken out of South Africa into any other CITES member state. So this auction is targeting buyers in South Africa … even though there is no market there for rhino horn. What is going on?


Friday, 18 August 2017

Popular sungazer lizards under threat from poaching

Poaching, habitat destruction put this unique and highly vulnerable species under pressure to survive

Date: August 16, 2017
Source: University of the Witwatersrand

Summary:
The sungazer (Smaug giganteus), a dragon-like lizard species endemic to the Highveld regions of South Africa, is facing an assault on two fronts as farming and industrialization encroaches on its natural habitat -- which already consist of only a several hundred square kilometers globally -- while the illegal global pet trade is adding pressure on pushing the species into extinction.

Monday, 10 July 2017

Sea Turtles Getting Smaller (South Africa) - via Herp Digest




Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University News, 7/6/17
Sea turtles in South Africa are getting smaller – and scientists are trying to find out why, and how this will affect future populations.
“What we are finding is that the size at reproduction of individual loggerhead and leatherback turtles is getting smaller over time, and we are gearing our research to find out what could be the cause,” said NMMU’s Head of Zoology, Associate Professor Ronel Nel, one of the world’s leading sea turtle researchers.

“This could also impact on the population in the future … If they are small, the threat from predators [such as sharks, dolphin fish, kingfish and ghost crabs and sea birds] is greater, as they can’t swim as fast, so can’t escape,” said Nel, who has been conducting sea turtle research for the past 14 years. She is the regional vice-chair of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Marine Turtle Specialist Group, an advisory committee member for IOSEA (Indian Ocean and South-East Asia region) Marine Turtles, and a member of the Western Indian Ocean Marine Turtle Task Force.

Nel said the benchmark age for loggerhead turtles to reach sexual maturity is 36 years. This is the age the adult females return to the beaches where they were born, to lay their eggs, after spending several decades living in an oceanic environment.
“Once a sea turtle reaches sexual maturity, it doesn’t grow any more … What this means is that those turtles that show a decline in size, will never catch up [to traditional size norms].”

Nel said scientists were trying to work out why the females were getting smaller. “Some scientists think it’s driven by the state of the oceans. There is not enough food around and so it is advantageous for animals to breed at a younger age … Or because there is not enough food around, they are not growing as big as they used to.”

She said changing sea temperatures could also impact turtle growth, particularly loggerhead turtles (which were much smaller than the 400kg to 500kg leatherback turtles). “If the sea is too cold, their growth will slow down – as turtles are cold-blooded.”

South Africa’s sea turtles spend a lot of their lives in the cold Benguela current on the west coast of the country. “Their metabolism is dependent on their environment – they don’t regulate their own body temperature.  Turtles tend to lose energy during the day, when their body temperature is lower, as they swallow lots of cold water when feeding.”

Scientists are also trying to determine the impact of smaller females on the reproduction output. “Do they lay fewer eggs of the same size, or the same number, but much smaller eggs? Are the hatchlings smaller? Smaller hatchling size could impact on their fitness [as a species].”

Some of these questions are already being answered, thanks to good baseline research in South Africa, spanning the last 40 to 50 years.

“What we are finding is that despite the change in the size of individuals, they are laying the same number of eggs, but the eggs are getting smaller. The hatchlings are smaller – and the adults will likely be smaller.

“Because South Africa has such a good baseline of research, we can build a whole bunch of new research questions … It is a good springboard for future work.”

Over the last breeding season (2014/5), South Africa experienced its largest number of hatchling strandings yet recorded – with sea pollution found to be the cause.

About 200 turtle hatchlings washed up dead on South Africa’s beaches – and necropsies on the dead animals revealed that most of them had ingested plastic.

“Scientists noticed a huge amount of plastics in their gut, such as bottle lids, which punctured their intestines, bladder and other organs,” said Nel.

She said turtles were unable to regurgitate, so once they had ingested something, it had to work its way through their systems.

“Hard plastics with sharp edges are a problem. Smaller turtles are extremely vulnerable to this.”

Despite the deaths of the hatchlings, sea turtle researchers in South Africa were celebrating the rise in population numbers of the country’s loggerhead turtles.

“The loggerhead population has been a conservation success of international proportion. Their numbers are double the conservation target set 50 years ago.”

Their status has changed from “endangered” to “near-threatened”.

However, leatherback turtles remain a conservation concern. “In South Africa, their numbers have not increased over time and they are still listed as critically-endangered, despite other international successes.

“However, our research has concluded that the problem is not on South African beaches or conservation areas under our jurisdiction. Sea turtles on land in South Africa are as well off as they could be.”

NMMU PhD student Linda Harris has completed the world’s leading study of beach biodiversity, recording more than 500 species in the dune and surf zones of South Africa’s beaches, many of which are found nowhere else in the world.

Nel, who supervised the student, said some species – like the sea snail Bullia rhodostoma – was found only on the Cape south coast. “It only occurs in that 30m wide stretch of sand along the coast between Cape Town and Port Elizabeth, and nowhere else on earth.”

The student combined 40 years of research, benchmarking the state of South Africa’s beaches and their biodiversity, along the country’s entire coastline.

“We have managed to work out how unique our beaches are, but also how some aspects are under-protected,” said Nel.

She said the beach was often “left vulnerable” between marine protected areas (which go up to the high water mark) and terrestrial areas (which stop at the beach), leaving an unprotected gap in the middle. “The beach is at the interface between these two systems. They need protection from both sides.”

Sunday, 2 July 2017

Rhino horn auction to go ahead in South Africa after court lifts ban on sales




Breeder John Hume to take advantage of court ruling lift ban on domestic trade to sell horns trimmed from the 1,500 rhinos on his ranch 

Associated Press in Johannesburg
Monday 26 June 2017 17.14 BST First published on Monday 26 June 2017 14.15 BST 

A rhino breeder in South Africa is planning an online auction of rhino horns to capitalise on a court ruling that opened the way to domestic trade despite an international ban imposed to curb poaching.

The sale of rhino horns by breeder John Hume, to be held in August, will be used to “further fund the breeding and protection of rhinos”, according to an auction website.

Hume has more than 1,500 rhinos on his ranch and spends over $170,000 a month on security for the animals, in addition to veterinary costs, salaries and other expenses, the auction website said.

“Each rhino’s horn is safely and regularly trimmed by a veterinarian and capture team to prevent poachers from harming them,” it said, adding that Hume has a stockpile of more than six tonnes of rhino horns.

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