Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park gets new wild dog pack

Posted by Anita Froneman on 8 April 2022

Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park (HiP) in KwaZulu-Natal released its newest pack of African wild dogs on 2 April. The pack consists of four males originally brought into the reserve from Tswalu Kalahari Reserve, and two younger females born in the park.

wild dog

Picture: Megan Whittington

The backstory 

The male group lost their pack’s only female last year during the denning season and, remarkably, attempted to raise the two pups on their own. Unfortunately, when the pups were around five months old, the males started to travel long distances in the search for mates for the next breeding season, ultimately resulting in the death of the two pups.

With growing fears of the males leaving the confines of the park as they broadened their search for females, HiP’s Management, alongside Wildlife ACT and the Endangered Wildlife Trust, worked quickly to capture the males in order to bond them with the two females which were already being housed in the Hluhluwe Boma.

The females lost both their parents to lions when they were less than a year old. Against all odds, they survived and made their way south into the iMfolozi section of the park, covering large distances in their natural drive to find males and form their own pack. After repeatedly breaking out, there was an urgent need to intervene to mitigate potential conflict.

Bonding the pack

Initially, the males and females lived in two adjacent compartments of a boma in the Hluhluwe section of the park. This passive bonding method allowed the dogs to get to know each other through the separating fence. Over time they began to sleep near this central fence and were soon excitedly following one another up and down the fence line.

Wild dog

Picture: Tegan Goldschmidt

Once the monitoring team were comfortable with the interactions, a decision was made to dart all the individuals and use the rub bonding method in which every individual is rubbed on one another to get as much scent of the non-familiar dogs as possible. This method uses the dog’s sense of smell to minimise aggression between each other, as the individuals can smell themselves on the unfamiliar dogs and are then more accepting of them in their space.

Once the dogs were woken up, they were monitored closely to ensure success. The dogs then spent another few weeks in the boma being monitored daily by the Wildlife ACT Hluhluwe team to ensure the individuals had formed a cohesive and tightly bonded pack before they were released into the park.

Monitoring with Wildlife ACT

Before their release, all six pack members were fitted with tracking collars to enable daily monitoring of their movements, behavioural dynamics, ecological influences, diseases, snaring incidents, and to mitigate any human-wildlife conflict issues. The information gathered allows for informed decision making – both at the reserve and on the species level.

‘Now that they have been released from the boma, we are hopeful that this pack will thrive and that the new genetic line created will continue to contribute to the HiP wild dog population and the metapopulation around Southern Africa in years to come,’ says Dave Druce, Hluhluwe iMfolozi Park Ecologist, Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife.

Wild dog

Picture: Tegan Goldschmidt

African wild dogs are southern Africa’s most endangered carnivore with an estimated 5000-6000 individuals left in the wild, of which 650 individuals are found in South Africa.

‘Due to the highly fragmented conservation landscape across South Africa, the instinctive behaviour of young wild dogs to disperse in search of mates can cause individuals to come into direct conflict with adjacent land users as they try to leave in search of new mates’, explains Wildlife ACT’s Wild Dog Programme Manager Mike Staegemann.

For more information, visit wildlifeact.com

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