Rosemary Groom

An Assessment of the Conservation Status of, and Threats Affecting, the Endangered African Wild Dog in the Zimbabwean Part of the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation Area

Five wild dog pups at one of the dens.

Rosemary tracking for wild dogs - Zimbabwe.

Wild dog subadult killed in snare - Save Valley Conservancy, Zimbabwe.

Snared wild dog immobilised for treatment.

A very pregnant alpha female - the first sign of the 2009 denning season!

Wild dog mother and pups.

Large and small pups playing at the den.

Rosemary & Misheck collaring Raccoon.

Wild dog pups.

Rosemary with immobilised wild dog, after fitting a GPS collar.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Savé Valley Conservancy
South Gonarezhou National Park
ZimbabweAfrica, Hunting, Mammals12 Aug 2008

The African wild dog is southern Africa’s most endangered carnivore and the Zimbabwean part of the GLTFCA is home to wild dog populations of global significance, making it an area of great conservation importance. Whilst several populations are known to occur in the area, the extent of the wild dog distribution, the population size, and the prospects for their future conservation are uncertain. This uncertainty is enhanced by the fact that a major land use transition has occurred recently, in the form of the land reform programme, which has had potentially significant but poorly documented implications for wildlife conservation. Key threats to the regions wild dogs are likely to include:

a) mortality from being captured in snares,

b) reduction in available habitat and prey due to bush clearing and bush-meat poaching,

c) exposure to disease from domestic dogs,

d) locally increasing lion populations in remaining wildlife habitat fragments.

The relative impact of these threats needs urgent investigation, such that mitigation strategies can be developed. In addition, information on the extent of connectivity of Zimbabwean wild dog sub-populations with those in the South African and Mozambican parts of the GLTFCA is crucial to determine the dogs’ vulnerability to stochastic events.

Methods include prey population surveys using belt transects, spatial analysis of land use types using GIS technology, spoor surveys to estimate wild dog populations as well as lions and hyaenas (to assess the level of threat to the dogs from these higher predators) and structured household questionnaire surveys to assess human population density, abundance of domestic dogs (potential for rabies) and attitudes towards wild dogs. We will also be carrying out a photographic census and individual identification of all dogs sighted, in collaboration with Endangered Wildlife Trust (South Africa), to determine population connectivity. Informal education efforts within local communities will be an important part of the project, as will the training of scouts in wild dog tracking and conservation techniques.

For more information contact rosemary@africanwildlifeconservationfund.org or go to http://www.africanwildlifeconservationfund.org

Project Update: September 2008

Due to the date on which the grant money was awarded, as well as the various political issues in Zimbabwe, I have shifted the timescale of the project round a little bit, as explained below.

Prior to receiving the RSG, I was working on the wild dog project which focuses in the Save Valley Conservancy (SVC) in south-east Zimbabwe; a part of the Greater-Limpopo Trans Frontier Conservation Area which comprises the study area for the Rufford funded project. Since I had started off the 2008 denning season working in SVC, I decided to finish the work there, to build up as complete a picture as possible of all the dogs in the conservancy before moving on to other areas of the GLTFCA.

The work in the SVC has been an ongoing project (since 1996) supported by a variety of different individuals and organisations. Below is an informal report (largely aimed at some of the private donors who have invested in the Save Valley Conservancy) and shows you some of the things we have been doing in the SVC.

I have also started to do some work in Gonarezhou National Park, the other main wildlife area within the Zimbabwean part of the GLTFCA, although will have to focus on there again next dry season, as indicated in the RSG proposal. I have not yet started the questionnaire surveys in the communities due to lingering political tensions (and because I have been busy in the SVC), but I will start to do this in the next couple of months.

One of the main aims of the project is to assess the relative impact of the different threats facing the African wild dog in this area. Since I started working on the wild dogs, I have been collecting information on different causes of mortality and levels of bushmeat snaring. Tomorrow I am due to start a large carnivore spoor survey, to estimate the numbers of lions and hyenas which pose a major threat to wild dogs and which are increasing in several of the remaining wildlife areas.

Our proposed photographic identification database, working in collaboration with South African and Mozambican wild dog teams is ongoing. You will see a brief example of this in the report. We have identified over 66 individuals now (adults and pups) in both SVC and Gonarezhou. Feedback (and photos) are starting to come in from other small conservancies in the area so this number will be increasing soon!

Relative abundances of wild prey (at least in the SVC and Gonarezhou) will be conducted not by spoor surveys as indicated in the proposal, but by aerial counts carried out once per year. We have just completed one such survey in SVC. Spoor surveys will be used in the other areas.

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Project Update351.5 KB
Project Update: January 2009

The project had a very successful year in 2008. We have established there are nine wild dog packs in the Savé Valley Conservancy, numbering c.130 dogs. Seventy six of these are individually identified and we have 6 collars on individuals in 4 different packs. We regularly monitor the collared packs to gather important ecological information, including causes of adult mortality. Snaring appears to be the biggest threat, with 4/5 recent deaths due to snares. A spoor survey of large carnivores in SVC (October) indicated a rapid increase in lion and spotted hyaena populations; a possibly significant threat to the dogs. An aerial census of prey populations was also carried out in SVC last year and we also began our questionnaire survey of households surrounding wildlife conservancies. Work in the rest of the GLTFCA has identified at least 3 wild dog packs in Gonarezhou NP and 1 pack in Malilangwe Reserve.

As you will see from the report, despite the challenges of working in Zimbabwe, we have made considerable progress towards the goals mentioned in our proposal. Snaring for bush-meat has unfortunately reached an unsustainable level and the wild dogs are victims to these snares – often being either killed or horribly wounded by them. This has virtually wiped out the wild dog populations in areas where previously private-owned land has been re-settled for small-scale subsistence farming, and is posing a significant threat to those populations still within protected areas. Solutions to this problem (to identify and solve the root cause of the problem) are being worked on and the ZWDP is actively participating where required. On a more positive note, the population in the Save Valley Conservancy (at least in the northern half) remains at one of the highest densities in the world and provides a real stronghold for the species. We have also been thrilled to identify at least 3 packs in Gonarezhou National Park and 1 in Malilangwe Game Reserve and will be investigating further afield in the forthcoming months.

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Project Update: March 2009

We are making good progress collating information on the land use within the Zimbabwean part of the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation Area (GLTFCA), and are starting to build up a good picture of where wild dog populations continue to exist. In addition to the nine packs in the Savé Valley Conservancy, photographs and sightings reports from Gonarezhou National Park indicate at least three packs there and there is one pack in Malilangwe.

Wild dogs appear to have been extirpated from most other areas within the GLTFCA. Snaring remains the biggest threat, highlighted by the deaths in snares of two of last year’s pups, both found within a week of each other. Interviews in community areas are ongoing and we are working on expanding and formalising our education and community awareness efforts.

Project Update: May 2009

Our Zimbabwean wild dog project continues to go well. Interviews (done in collaboration with Marwell Trust Zimbabwe) have been completed in the communal lands surrounding Savé Valley Conservancy and in the resettled areas within the conservancy. We have a school field trip planned for June where we will be hosting a group of children from Harare to teach them about wildlife and conservation and pave the way for local schools to come as well.

On the fieldwork side, I’m excited to be able to report the first sign of the 2009 denning season: at least 2 of the alpha female wild dogs in the conservancy are pregnant! We’ve also just completed a short field trip to Gonarezhou National Park where we picked up plenty of signs of wild dogs (and other carnivores) and made good progress mapping the roads etc. Monitoring of the nine wild dog packs in the conservancy continues.

Project Update: August 2009

Wild dog denning season is a very busy time for our project. To date we have located the den sites of seven different packs of dogs and have been intensively monitoring them. Litter sizes have ranged from four to 12, with one pack about to have a second litter.

Unfortunately we are noticing the impact of lions a lot more this denning season: we’ve lost at least seven pups and two adults to lions so far and suspect more. Snaring remains a huge problem too: in the past week I have removed snares from two wild dogs and rescued a buffalo calf from a snare.

Our Zimbabwean master’s student Moreangels is enjoying her field season with the project: she’s using scat analysis to look at competition for prey between the wild dogs and other large carnivores. Two more school field trips are planned for September.

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Project Update635.05 KB
Final Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

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Final Report859.5 KB
2nd RSG Grant Awarded

Read about the latest developments with Wild Dogs http://www.ruffordsmallgrants.org/rsg/projects/rosemary_groom_0


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