On the Expedition
Help improve the odds for brown hyenas in wildlife-rich havens and unprotected lands.
You will explore a mixed landscape of private lands and wildlife reserves, including Pilanesberg National Park, a dramatically scenic park in the remains of an extinct volcano. Along the way you may encounter zebras, impala, white rhinos, elephants, wildebeest, lions, and leopards, as well as brown hyenas. Your team will conduct wildlife surveys from a vehicle, or on foot in areas outside the park, such as "spoor" transects for carnivore footprints and droppings. You will also sample predators at night, playing tape recordings of a prey distress call to attract them and conducting spotlight transects. In your recreational time, you may enjoy photographic game drives, sundown drinks on the kopje (rock outcrop), and local cultural events such as drumming sessions.
Meals and Accommodations
You will be based at an established field camp in the heart of Mankwe Wildlife Reserve, a classic bushveld landscape just east of the Pilanesberg massif. The reserve is home to a range of endangered wildlife, including white rhinos. Sleep in either a small field station or a walk-in safari tent, each with its own shower and flush toilet. The camp has solar-powered lights and wood-heated water. You will enjoy international and local cuisine, including poitjiekos (game stew) and braai (barbeque), prepared by a local chef and shared in a group dining area.
About the Research Area
The project’s three study sites are all located within 50 kilometers (30 miles) of the Pilanesberg massif, northwest of Johannesburg, South Africa. The landscape is part of the Southern African Bushveld, a classic African savanna of mixed grasses spotted with trees. This savannah area covers the southeast corner of Botswana, southern Zimbabwe and northern South Africa.
Pilanesberg National Park was created in 1979 in the remains of an extinct volcano, providing a dramatically scenic park. The area covers approximately 50,000 hectares and is surrounded by an electric fence that prevents large mammals from entering or leaving the park. Here you will find mixed acacia trees and broad-leaved bushveld, ranging from thickets to open grassland patches. There is a large dam in the center of the park and several smaller permanent water areas scattered about..
Since the park’s creation over 6,000 individual animals have been reintroduced into the area. This includes all species that were thought to exist here before white settlers arrived, with the exception of the spotted hyena. Many large herbivores are seen regularly, including zebras, impalas, white rhinos, elephants and wildebeests. The park’s reintroduced predators include about 40 lions, 20 cheetahs, and a pack of wild dogs. Populations of leopards and brown hyenas were already present when the park fence was constructed and both populations are now thriving.