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 4 of 5)
As it happens, an effective vaccination against rinderpest had been developed in the early 1960s, and veterinarians inoculated the cattle around the Serengeti. The wild ungulates began to rebound. But the trees continued to dwindle. One day in 1980 Sinclair came to the very spot where we were now sitting to photograph what he thought was one of the last trees in the Serengeti. “Here’s the picture I took of this hillside,” he said, pulling a yellowed photograph from a folder and pointing to the slope immediately across from us. In the photograph, a single acacia spreads its limbs over a barren, rocky slope.
When he returned to the spot five years later, Sinclair found that the tree was surrounded by hundreds of tiny, spindly seedlings. “There was an explosion of trees here, and in fact all over this part of the Serengeti. And ever since, the trees have been increasing and increasing. Just look at this hillside.” Indeed, it was virtually hidden under a cover of dense young trees. “That’s how quickly things can change here,” Sinclair said.
Two things led to the forest’s rebound. First, the wildebeest population grew to its current size, between 1.2 million and 1.5 million animals. And all those wildebeest ate more grass each year, in the process turning the long-grass plains into short-grass plains. As a result, human-set fires that sweep through the Serengeti each dry season don’t burn as hot as they did when the grass stayed long and so do not consume as many acacia seedlings. “The elephants were also ‘culled,’” Sinclair said, bracketing the word with his fingers. “Illegal hunters poached thousands of elephants here in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, leaving very few of them to eat the young trees. So, yes, the lions are increasing,” Sinclair said. “But that’s because of these dense forests that have grown up because the wildebeest keep the grasses short.” More forest means more cover for the lions; they catch more prey, have more babies and form more prides. Their numbers go up.
But what if something happened to the wildebeest? “That is the one change it cannot withstand: the total loss of the wildebeest,” Sinclair said. “They keep the entire ecosystem going. We would not have a Serengeti without them. It would be something else.”
The Serengeti of the early 21st century is different from the Serengeti of 1950 and 1850. Aside from being smaller, its rhinos, elephants, roan antelope and wild dogs are far fewer. The Maasai people, who lived in the national park until the 1950s, have been replaced by tourists, researchers and park employees in cars. One can argue about whether these changes made the park less natural. But in a time of great extinctions, here in the Serengeti we humans have done something rare: we have set aside a corner of the earth for the animals.
Early one evening I joined Sinclair’s four Tanzanian research assistants on a nighttime survey. Ernest Eblate sat behind the wheel of the Land Rover, and I took a seat next to him while the other three crowded into the back. Eblate handed me a clipboard, saying, “You’re our secretary tonight.” The men in the back would be spotting and calling out the animals, and I would record their numbers, species and other details.
Eblate pointed the Land Rover north along a track. Once a month, the team drives a set distance on each track and counts the number and types of mammal species they see. Our track led past a steady stream of wildebeest munching their way across a short-grass plain, then through grasslands, riverine acacia forests and rocky hills. Eblate kept a careful eye on the odometer, and as soon as it registered the requisite 40 kilometers (about 25 miles), he swung the car around.
Night had settled and a chill breeze blew through the car. We pulled on jackets and sweaters, and the men pointed their lights into the hidden Serengeti. Eblate crept along, giving his colleagues time to search the tall grass and the thorny trees for the bright glow of an animal’s eyes.
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