The Sound of Hoofs
In a breathtaking spectacle, wildebeest by the millions are on the move this month in the Serengeti
- By Virginia Morell
- Photographs by Anup and Manoj Shah
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
“We don’t know,” said Sinclair. “I couldn’t get a fix on the size of the herds, or what migration route they followed. What was clear was that the herds collapsed in the early 1900s. There was a horrific die-off. It was a seminal event for the Serengeti, with many long-range consequences. Let me show you what I mean.”
He turned the key in the ignition, and the wildebeest that had been loping past us stopped abruptly to stare. For a few moments we held back the tide of animals. But then, having decided that we were not some deep-throated predator, they bent their heads toward the earth and pushed on. Sinclair drove past the herds, turned up another track, and headed straight north toward a low-slung range of hills. As we bumped through the dust and heat, he told me the story of the disease that changed the Serengeti.
It’s common these days to worry about epidemics from SARS, the Ebola virus or the bird flu coming in from the wild to kill off humankind. But “civilized” diseases can also wreak havoc in the natural world. In the late 1800s, Europeans unintentionally introduced rinderpest, a viral cattle disease, into East Africa. Although the virus was found in European and Asian cows, cattle in Africa had never been exposed to it, and, throughout the continent, they died. Rinderpest also swept through ungulates closely related to cattle, such as the wildebeest and buffalo.
“There were so many dead animals and so much food to scavenge that it was said the vultures forgot to fly,” said Sinclair. He pulled to a stop below a tree-covered hill. “And when the animals—domestic and wild—died, the people died. There was dreadful starvation among the Maasai.”
Over time the disease reached a sort of equilibrium. Every decade or so it would rise up and kill off cattle, wildebeest and buffalo. “The populations eventually stabilized,” Sinclair said, “so that there were 15,000 buffalo and 100,000 to 200,000 wildebeest, and over the years everyone came to think that this was the way the Serengeti had always been.”
The disease brought other changes. Without prey to hunt, the number of lions, hyenas and other predators also dropped. And the number of trees increased.
A forest isn’t the first thing that comes to mind when one thinks of the Serengeti. Yet when the colonial administration set up the first game reserve here in 1929, dense woodlands of thorny acacia trees had sprung up across the plains. The trees were even thicker when the park was officially established two decades later. But then they began to disappear.
“The older trees were all dying,” said Sinclair, “and there weren’t any seedlings. Something was killing the forest. And park officials were very worried. They were losing their ‘natural, pristine’ forest. They wanted to know why, and they wanted to know what to do. It was all very confusing. The wildebeest and buffalo were booming, and the trees were dying.”
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