Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelopes die of Thirst

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Peter Betts
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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelope die of Thirst

Post by Peter Betts »

Was it the Mooiplaas Ranger ..I am very interested


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelope die of Thirst

Post by Richprins »

Looks like Vlakteplaas...a rather bedevilled section for many years... O**


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelope die of Thirst

Post by Klipspringer »

Vlakteplaas, indeed.


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelopes die of Thirst

Post by Peter Betts »

The last Vlakteplaas Section Ranger I saw at A Letaba Northern Region Rangers meeting about 2012 looked like a Rastafarian with dreadlocks...Harry Wolhuter and Stevenson Hamilton would not have approved but I figured if he could do the job ..go for it -O- -O- -O- :shock: :shock:


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelopes die of Thirst

Post by Richprins »

Was a different chap in 2016, not sure about 2019? -O-


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelopes die of Thirst

Post by Lisbeth »

20 roan antelope die of dehydration in fenced Kruger camp – ranger dismissed

Posted on July 1, 2020 by Team Africa Geographic in the NEWS DESK post series.

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A South African National Parks (SANParks) section ranger was dismissed for “gross negligence” after 20 rare roan antelope died of dehydration in the N’waxitsumbe fenced breeding camp in a northern section of Kruger in 2019. This fenced camp of 2km long by 1,4km wide was set up to breed roan antelope for introduction into the Kruger, and now only has nine remaining roan.

In response to a series of questions put forward by Annerie Weber to parliament, Barbara Creecy, the Minister of the Department of Environmental Affairs, Forestry and Fisheries confirmed that the section ranger of Vlakteplaas (situated in the north-west corner of Kruger) had been convicted after an investigation by the Environmental Crime Investigation Unit of SANParks. No criminal charges were laid against the section ranger due to a lack of evidence of criminal activity.

The N’waxitsumbe breeding camp water is supplied by a large reservoir that feeds water into a trough for the antelope in the enclosure. The reservoir is in turn fed by a borehole powered by a diesel pump. The drinking trough has a ball valve to ensure that it remains at three-quarters full and does not overflow. It is unclear which aspect of this system stopped working and led to a lack of water.

There are at least three such breeding camps in Kruger, where rare or endangered wildlife is fenced off to reduce the risk of predation until numbers reach sufficient levels for the animals to be released back into the reserve.

In response to the death of the 20 roan antelope, Minister Creecy explained that an action plan had been developed to ensure the safety and security of the remaining nine roan in the N’waxitsumbe breeding camp, to be overseen by the regional ranger of the Nxanatseni North Region and the head ranger of the Kruger National Park. This action plan will include weekly visits with mandatory reports on the condition of the fences, water supply and food provision, as well as an assessment of the health of the animals.

While the overall roan antelope (Hippotragus equinus) population in Africa is classified as ‘vulnerable’ on the IUCN Red List, there were believed to be fewer than 350 individuals in formally protected areas in South Africa in 2016. The roan antelope population in the Kruger National Park plummeted from a population of around 450 in 1986 to fewer than 30 individuals in 2003. The population has failed to recover, and it is estimated that the current roan population of the Kruger numbers no more than 50 individuals after this loss. Researchers and conservationists have identified several possible reasons for this decline, including the installation of artificial water points in the drier sections of the Kruger. These water points attracted large numbers of zebra, wildebeest, and buffalo and attendant predators such as lions. The increased lion predation on roan led to increased adult mortality in the already small roan antelope population, resulting in a population crash. Other recent studies point to the susceptibility of roan to diseases such as anthrax as a contributing factor.

Minister Creecy’s written answers regarding the case can be accessed above: Internal Question Paper No. 19 of 2020/1076 and 1077

The numbers quoted for the roan antelope population in South Africa were extracted from the Red List of Mammals of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland.


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelopes die of Thirst

Post by Richprins »

There must be more than 50 roan in Kruger, if one looks at widely dispersed sightings on the relevant thread recently. Once again, a proper aerial census is urgently required. O**


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelopes die of Thirst

Post by Klipspringer »

Roan antelope prefer certain parts of their large home range and spend several days at a time there and then move on.

LS is certainly not a tool to estimate numbers of indivuduals or herds.


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Re: Kruger Park ranger fired after Roan antelopes die of Thirst

Post by Richprins »

LS is a magnificent tool as number of animals is normally registered, along with date, photos sometimes and location! ^Q^ \O


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Kruger roan antelope deaths by neglect – more of the same, says informant

Post by Lisbeth »

(Sorry, but I cannot find the former topic -O- )

Posted on July 30, 2020 by Team Africa Geographic in the OPINION EDITORIAL post series.

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Additional information has been brought to our attention after we reported the recent death of 20 roan antelope in a Kruger National Park breeding camp – due to neglect.

Our informant suggests that the resultant undertaking by the Minister of the Department of Environmental Affairs, Forestry and Fisheries (DEFF) to implement an action plan to protect the roan antelope by, amongst other things, conducting regular inspections, carries little weight. His viewpoint is based on the death in 2012 of 45 roan antelope in a breeding camp – also due to neglect – that resulted in similar assurances by the authorities.

2012: In answer to an internal question posed to the Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs, the Minister stated that the roan breeding camps in the Kruger National Park would be inspected twice a week. This came as a result of an investigation into the death of 45 roan antelope in the Capricorn Breeding Enclosure due to an anthrax outbreak.

The bacterium Bacillus anthracis causes anthrax infections, and outbreaks occur naturally every few years, particularly in northern regions of the Kruger National Park and usually during the dry season. The anthrax spores exist in the soil and surrounding vegetation and can survive for decades before causing an outbreak. These spores are spread by infected animals and scavengers such as vultures, and often contaminate water sources. Roan antelope are particularly susceptible to the disease, as are kudu, waterbuck, and buffalo – and the outbreaks are associated with high mortality rates for these species.

The full extent of the negligence surrounding Kruger’s breeding enclosures was fully explained to Africa Geographic by Gerhard Smit, who personally investigated the 2012 mortalities and who confirms that the carcasses were already desiccated by the time they were discovered. According to Mr Smit, before 2012, some tsessebe had also perished in one of the camps outside Pretoriuskop due to dehydration. AIKONA (Against Interfering with Kruger and Our Other Nature Assets), a group convened by Gerhard Smit, compiled a 187-page complaint against SANParks which was submitted to the Public Protector in September 2013, as well the CEO of SANParks. To date, Mr Smit continues to receive confirmation that investigation “is in progress”.

According to Salomon Joubert, roan were first introduced to the N’waxitsumbe enclosure in 1967 as part of an intensive study of their social and ecological requirements. An outbreak of anthrax in surrounding areas resulted in roan mortalities in the enclosure and, in response, management teams within the park set up an annual inoculation plan, which included inoculating free-roaming roan. After a severe drought and sharp decline in roan numbers in 1992, the inoculation programme was terminated due to concerns over accidental injuries and deaths during the inoculation process (which was conducted by helicopter). The decision was made to transfer some roan into breeding camps to resuscitate the struggling wild population through breeding and restocking badly-affected areas.

Despite a natural anthrax outbreak close to the Capricorn breeding camp in 2009, no attempt was made to inoculate the captive roan and, three years later, somewhat unsurprisingly, an announcement by the KNP’s Head of Department: Public Relations and Communication, Mr William Mabasa, declared that 30 (later amended to 45 upon investigation) roan carcasses had been found in the Capricorn breeding camp, leaving just 13 (?) individuals remaining. The cause of death was confirmed as anthrax, and it was declared that an inoculation programme would be instituted.

The then Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs confirmed that “an investigation has been conducted, which suggests that the deaths of the antelope could have been avoided through better monitoring of the camp and its drinking troughs. In future, the camp will be inspected twice per week, drinking troughs will be covered with branches during the day to prevent vultures from using it, and the troughs will be regularly cleaned and disinfected when anthrax is known to be in the area”.

Mr Smit also drew our attention to a report compiled by Dr Salomon Joubert, a former director of the Kruger National Park and an expert in roan antelope, in response to the 2012 anthrax deaths. The report details how Dr Joubert was invited by the section rangers at the time to visit the breeding camps, a few years before the 2012 deaths. The section rangers appeared to be uncertain as to how many roan each camp housed, and Dr Joubert also noted that it was clear fire management had not been conducted in the breeding camps for many years. Dr Joubert submitted several vital recommendations including:

1. Appointing an officer with the necessary authority to take charge of the roan and responsibility for the overall supervision of the enclosures

2. A picket/ranger camp should be established near the enclosure so that the perimeter fence could be patrolled daily.

3. The Section Ranger should be required to undertake weekly patrols of the enclosure.

4. There should be one aerial census of the enclosure per year.

5. The officer in charge needs to draw up a management plan with regards to water provision, a veld burning programme and a strategy for releases.

6. Due to the rarity of roan, all possible measures should be taken to ensure optimal performance in the enclosures: this should include annual inoculation.

While the section ranger responsible for deaths of the roan in N’waxitsumbe enclosure in 2019 was dismissed, these accounts from Mr Smit and Dr Joubert indicate major systemic weaknesses in the roan breeding programme in the Kruger National Park. While it is unclear at this stage whether the annual inoculation programmes are still in place, or if any veld burning has been conducted, the specific reference in Dr Joubert’s report to water provision proved to be prophetic. The breeding enclosures have been fenced off from all herbivore activity for decades, apart from the selective grazing of the small numbers of roan within the camps themselves. If there is still no fire management strategy in place, the inevitable overgrowth in the camps is a substantial fire risk and the thought of a fire running through a fenced breeding camp housing endangered antelope is horrific.

The decline of roan antelope in the Kruger National Park over the past three decades is at least in part the result of human interference, and the diminishing population means that each individual antelope is now important. With every death, genetic diversity decreases further. Regardless, these animals were taken from their wild existence ostensibly to protect them and the overall population from further harm. The responsibility to care for them fell to those in charge, who were warned about potential risks. To have had a total of 65 endangered roan antelope (more than the current estimated population in the entire Kruger) die in situations that could have been prevented is truly unacceptable. And it makes the promises that these animals will be safeguarded in the future somewhat hollow.


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