Who's Laughing Now?
Long maligned as nasty scavengers, hyenas turn out to be protective parents and accomplished hunters. And new research is revealing that their social status may even be determined in the womb
- By Steve Kemper
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
The Land Cruiser's transmitter beeps, indicating a radio-collared hyena nearby. It's Murphy, alpha female of a clan that Holekamp calls Talek West. (Murphy's half-sister, Whoopie, rules Talek East.) Each clan comprises about 50 animals. They had once been united under their mother, Bracket Shoulder, who had been in power for a decade when Holekamp first came to Masai Mara. Thus Bracket Shoulder and her daughters have ruled the Talek group for 30 years.
The clan split into east and west factions in the late 1990s when herders from the Masai tribe began illegally grazing their cows in the middle of the clan's territory. Grazing has worsened as growing numbers of people and livestock press against the reserve, home to 400 to 450 adult spotted hyenas. The Masai, like herders and ranchers throughout Africa, consider hyenas livestock-killing vermin. They often stab, snare or poison them. Nevertheless, spotted hyenas are the most numerous large predator in Africa.
The Masai have largely escaped the violence that has racked Kenya since disputed elections in December. Before a power-sharing agreement was reached in March, more than 1,000 people were killed and 500,000 or more were displaced. In Masai Mara, the upheavals have led to more poaching, fewer tourists and less money for conservation, but the hyenas that Holekamp's group studies haven't been harmed.
"Most hyenas die violently, from lions or people," says Holekamp, "but Bracket Shoulder died at 17 of kidney failure. And she was still in power." She still had perfect teeth, too, since her rank assured her the best cuts of meat, whereas the teeth of lower-ranking animals get chipped and worn from crunching bones.
As sunrise suffuses the sky, we pass through a section of tall grass, the boundary with the neighboring Fig Tree clan. Three hyenas appear in the fresh light, their bellies distended, heads and chests bloody. One carries what's left of the kill, a topi's skullcap, recognizable by its tall ridged horns. Hyenas peel the horns' keratin coating and eat the bones beneath.
Spotted hyenas in Masai Mara subsist mostly on topis and Thomson's gazelles until the great herds of wildebeest migrate through from the Serengeti. Holekamp thinks hyenas' favorite food is fresh zebra—she's seen them bypass easier prey in hopes of a striped entree—but they will eat anything with fur, feathers, wings or scales. Holekamp was once puzzled by a group of hyenas that seemed to be grazing; they were licking a bloom of caterpillars off the grass. After a rain, when termites shoot out of their mounds like fountains, hyenas stand over the holes and guzzle.
To a hyena, almost anything organic is edible. Aimee Cokayne, a research assistant who's been living at Fisi Camp for much of the past 20 months, remembers a hippo that died in a mudhole. Hyenas tore chunks from the rotting carcass for months, unfazed by the increasing putrefaction. Holekamp says that if Masai boys flip a large tortoise onto its back as a prank and it decays into a tureen of carrion soup, hyenas lap it up. (They also roll in it.) They even snack on the dung of wild dogs and wildebeests. Is anything putrid enough to gag a hyena? Holekamp thinks hard. "No," she finally says. "I haven't seen that yet."
She is collaborating with a microbiologist at Michigan State to study hyenas' hardy immune systems. Other species suffer pandemics (rabies in wild dogs, distemper in lions, anthrax in ungulates), but hyenas appear to be unscathed by disease, not to mention rotten meat. "How do they tolerate foods that most creatures find deadly?" Holekamp is still trying to figure that one out.
The center of a spotted hyena clan's social life is the communal den. A pregnant hyena goes off alone to give birth, then moves her cubs to the den when they're a month old. The den is usually adapted from a hole dug by aardvarks or other small animals, and has multiple entrances connected by tunnels dug by the cubs. The earth around the den is quickly worn bare by frolicking cubs and lounging adults. The cubs spend eight months there with the clan's other youngsters—a dozen at a time isn't unusual, and Holekamp once saw a den with 22.
One early evening at the den of the Fig Tree clan, half a dozen hyenas are lying in the grass around the entrance. Holekamp, Cokayne and a graduate student named Sarah Benson-Amram, who's been living at the camp for a year, can recognize more than 100 hyenas from the Talek and Mara River clans, identifying them by their shoulders, ears, faces or sides. But they are just getting to know the Fig Tree group. A cub named Figaro, young enough to still have black fur, emerges from the den and gets licked all over by its mother, Carmencita. Bigger cubs with new spots—they start to lose their black baby fur at six weeks of age—boil out of the den and romp around, pawing and nipping each other. One of them grabs Figaro by the ear and pulls the small cub over. The other three play tug of war with a stick, rehearsal for future battles over a topi's haunch or a gazelle's torso. An older cub nudges a sleeping female named Fluffy, who jerks her head, a warning. The cub jumps back but tries again, shoving its head into Fluffy's belly. "She's managing to introduce herself," says Holekamp.
Hyenas have a complex behavioral language. Casual hellos include nuzzles, muzzle licks and body rubs. More formally, and nervously, a subordinate animal will lift its hind leg to expose its erect penis or pseudopenis for the dominant animal to sniff or lick. Other deferential gestures include giggling, head-bobbing and groveling. Males are the principal appeasers, says Holekamp, "because they stand to lose a lot"—status, access to food and mating—"if their relationship with the girls gets messed up."
As the sun lowers, more hyenas return to the den. An adult named ET puts her head into the entrance. "She's groaning, calling her cubs," says Holekamp. ET backs partway into the den so her cubs can nurse without coming out. "She must have really little ones hiding in there," says Holekamp. Moments later a tiny black head pops up behind ET, then quickly ducks back inside. "Too scary," says Holekamp. "Too many hyenas out here."
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Comments (24)
This is a nice research for people that love to study vet.
Posted by Yusf ezekiel on December 30,2011 | 01:57 AM
I loved the video where the hyenas chased the lion up the tree, it was interesting to see their social complexity in action. While I do like lions, I am aware that lions tend to steal kills of hyenas more than the other way around, and there is a certain satisfaction to seeing two of these "thugs" get chased off by a pack of smaller, smarter creatures.
Posted by Karl on March 1,2010 | 09:45 AM
The woman's comments in the video are most obnoxious. It was as though she took pride in the fact that 1 lion had been forced by a group of hyenas (thugs) into the tree. The caption to the video should reflect the accuracy of its content. Perhaps, "Lion outnumbered 10 to 1" or something more realistic. The hyenas ability to eat carcass or even anthrax infested animals is a fascinating topic of research. Not watching a group of hyenas chase-one, lion up a tree.
Posted by George on February 18,2010 | 08:59 AM
Thank you so much for doing this
It's sad how most people never bother to do any thing on research of hyenas.. and I have read before the a large population of "anti-Hyenas-are because of disney Lion King movies
Posted by on October 25,2009 | 02:23 PM
@FACTSRFACTS: This entire article is about the spotted hyena so why wouldn't they focus in on the hunting behaviour of the spotted hyena?
There is not "many" other kinds of hyena, there are three - which would mean that technically there is a "few" other species.
Now I will mention "all the other kinds of hyenas who are overwhelmingly scavengers" - the brown hyena and the stipped. Aardwolves mainly eat insects. I know that these three other species of hyena are important and all, but by sheer numbers the spotted hyena are the most abundant. Meaning that by and large, hyenas are predators.
Have you spent the last 20 years studying hyenas? Because if you have then you can comment on whether it is 95% or not.
On a different note: I fell in love with hyenas on a safari (the photography kind), and this article warmed my heart. It is nice to know that people are trying to change the public opinion on these beauties.
Posted by GaiaReyalslayer on October 18,2009 | 10:41 PM
"Spotted hyenas sometimes scavenge, but, contrary to popular belief, they kill 95 percent of their food."
That statement is disingenuous. The SPOTTED HYENA subspecies may hunt and kill most of its food, but not 95% - also, why no mention of all the other kinds of hyenas who are overwhelmingly scavengers? There are many other kinds of hyenas besides 'spotted' ones...
Posted by FACTSRFACTS on August 28,2009 | 09:59 PM
Just today on the radio I heard conservative commentator Dennis Prager talking about what terrible animals hyenas were that they were particularly cruel.
Posted by Thomas on August 17,2009 | 04:03 PM
I recently saw some pics of some Nigerian guys who have trained spotted hyenas,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,I was absolutely bowled over to see them being stroked by the family members,,,,,, I think the hyena has got a bad name from many years ago,,,,,,,,,,,,,thank you so much for your pics and the very interesting article
Posted by robin yates on August 3,2009 | 02:55 AM
Believe it or not, when I was a child we had hyenas on our property along the river in Rays Mill Valley, Arkansas.
Posted by Cindy Adams on February 14,2009 | 07:45 PM
Great article...I recently returned from a hunting sfari in Zimbabwe and was able to get great video of two young hyena's approximately 6-8 month old. They were very curious about me and actualy came up to the landrover. I think they would make a great pet under the proper circumstances. What a wounderfully noble looking animal that has been given a bad rap.
Posted by dave parker on November 7,2008 | 10:11 AM
Duh, practically all of Nature is Matriarchal. Monogamy and Patriarchy are radical departures from the Naturally-occuring Matriarchal order. They are departures which have been very fruitful for the human race, but alas they are decaying and we must now join the hyenas in the Matriarchal cesspit.
Posted by Mike on October 15,2008 | 04:45 AM
This article was great and probably changed a lot of people's opinions on hyenas. Not many people are aware of how complex and social spotted hyenas really are, and that's why I am so glad Kay Holecamp is doing this research. The information that comes out of this will most definitely benefit our understanding of spotted hyenas.
Posted by Krista on September 17,2008 | 11:13 PM
I read and rearead the article about the hyenas. The article was great. Hyenas seem to be really fascinating animals. I really learned a lot about them. I'm a teacher and I will certainly pass some of this on to my students. I loaned the issue to my mom but will get it back in time for school.
Posted by Cindy Curry on August 3,2008 | 05:21 AM
Kay Holekamp and her students are blogging while they are in Kenya this summer, so if you want to follow along and see what it is like to be in the field, check out the blog at http://msuhyenas.blogspot.com/.
Posted by Mike Steger on July 14,2008 | 09:29 AM
It suprising that the females are superior than males. That is usually expected from bugs, but not animals.
Posted by Victor Taylor II on July 6,2008 | 05:50 PM
what a fascinating article. thanks!!
Posted by Joy on June 18,2008 | 01:27 PM
It is very inspiring that someone would find, what once was thought of as such a simple animal (ugly and laughs) to be complex and actually interesting. I wish that more people would take the time to look into more animals and even cultures to discover all that is overlooked. I love this article it was funny especially because I am a female and if I could be a animal in the after life, I would have to consider being a hyena....lol...
Posted by Rachel Jones on May 26,2008 | 11:32 PM
I always did like hyenas...
Posted by Kenzie Forbis on May 26,2008 | 08:01 PM
I have always had an intense dislike for hyenas, but this article was truly awe inspiring. I wish I had known what I read in this article before I saw the Lion King for the first time.
Posted by Juliette Thom on May 23,2008 | 12:35 PM
These photographs are incredible - your work is truly inspiring.
Posted by DAVID HUGHES on May 14,2008 | 01:05 PM
I guess you could say, when it comes to whose food for who, I'm on everybody's side but I was annoyed by the woman in the video saying "how great" it was to see the lioness running for her life and taking refuge in a tree. Just sayin'.
Posted by Anna Sadhorse on May 8,2008 | 04:22 PM
I always suspected hyenas got a bad rap and that lions were too good to be true. When you look at lion behaviour it's actually a lot less noble. I hope this article goes a long way to rehabilitating the lowly hyena.
Posted by Inken Purvis on May 6,2008 | 04:41 PM
I was on safari in Masai Mara in October. This was an incredible piece. On our way to the gravel air strip our last wildlife sighting was of a pack of hyenas emerging from under a small grove of trees! I wish I had known what I learned in this article then. I would not have disdained them so!
Posted by Shirley C. Foster on May 1,2008 | 06:01 PM
This article was fascinating. I never knew hyenas were so complex.
Posted by Janet Blackwell on April 29,2008 | 02:01 PM