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The largest mass movement
of land mammals on the planet and one of the most breathtaking events in
the animal kingdom, The Great Migration involves millions of ungulates, most
notably wildebeest, as they follow an annual circular route around the Serengeti
Ecosystem in an endless quest for fresh pastures and water. The rumbling hooves
of wildebeest and the clouds of red dust they leave behind have become a symbol
of the Serengeti, as well as a strong migratory instinct that defies
crocodile-infested rivers, wild currents, and flocks of predators lying in wait.
A 500km round trip from
the Southern Serengeti to the northern edge of the Masai Mara National Reserve,
the Great Migration is probably Africa's greatest wildlife spectacle and one of
the World's most exceptional natural phenomena.
The vertiginous immensity of the event is
overwhelming, numbers so large that they are hard to visualize. Migrants include
1,300,000 Wildebeest, 360,000 Thomson's Gazelle, 191,000 Zebra, and 12,000
Eland.
They join the anyway-large resident
populations of herbivores, that feature 95,000 Topi, 76,000 Impala, 46,000
African Buffalo, 26,000 Grant's Gazelle, 14,000 Kongoni, 9,000 Giraffe, 6,000
Warthog, 2,000 Waterbuck, and 2,000 Elephant.
And then, adding pathos and drama to the
already extraordinary spectacle, a hungry constellation of predators -most
notably lions and hyenas- follow the herbivores all along their clockwise
migratory route.
Lions and hyenas are not the only
meat-eaters, though, as cheetahs, leopards, wild dogs, and jackals, as well as
every scavenger of the area, wait impatiently for their share of the banquet.
The Great Migration is a relatively recent
phenomenon, dating back to the early 1960s. In the late 19th century a
rinderpest epidemic eliminated over 90% of the wildebeest and cattle in the
region. To prevent a further spreading of the disease, cattle was inoculated by
veterinarians, and the disease soon disappeared from the area. As a result, the
wildebeest population boomed in the 60´s and 70´s, from 260,000 to the 1.4
million individuals that currently inhabit the Serengeti ecosystem.
The growing herds were thus forced to
migrate in their search for water and grazing grassland, starting the circular
migratory route. The first seasonal treks were probably observed -and
documented- in the 60s by Dr. Grzimek, who first described a definite pattern in
the migratory moves.
In spite of the exceptionality and sheer
beauty of the event, not everybody sees it with sympathy. The Maasai, for
example, must rear their livestock in competition with the migrant herbivores,
which they regard as transmitters of diseases and guilty of poisoning the rivers
with their foetal sacs.
If you're planning a photographic safari to anywhere in the
Serengeti ecosystem, make sure you coincide with the wildebeest migration. If
your schedule imposes travelling during the late July - September period,
consider the Masai Mara
National Reserve, where most of the wildlife is to be found. In any case,
make the impossible to be in the
right place at the right time for meeting the wildebeest and their
co-migrant companions and foes.
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