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Kruger National Park

Kruger National Park (Tsonga: [ˈkrúːɡà]; Afrikaans: [ˈkry.(j)ər]) is a South African National Park and one of the largest game reserves in Africa. It covers an area of 19,623 km2 (7,576 sq mi) in the provinces of Limpopo and Mpumalanga in northeastern South Africa, and extends 360 km (220 mi) from north to south and 65 km (40 mi) from east to west. The administrative headquarters are in Skukuza. Areas of the park were first protected by the government of the South African Republic in 1898, and it became South Africa's first national park in 1926.

Kruger National Park
Burchell's zebras in a Kruger landscape
Location of the park (red area) in South Africa
LocationLimpopo and Mpumalanga provinces, South Africa
Nearest cityMbombela (southern)
Phalaborwa (central)
Coordinates24°0′41″S 31°29′7″E / 24.01139°S 31.48528°E / -24.01139; 31.48528
Area19,623 km2 (7,576 sq mi)[1][2][3]
Established31 May 1926[4]
Visitors1,659,793 (1,277,397 day visitors, 382,396 overnight)[5] (in 2014-15 financial year)
Governing bodySouth African National Parks
www.sanparks.org/parks/kruger/

To the west and south of the Kruger National Park are the two South African provinces of Limpopo and Mpumalanga, respectively. To the north is Zimbabwe and to the east is Mozambique. It is now part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, a peace park that links Kruger National Park with the Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe, and with the Limpopo National Park in Mozambique.

The park is part of the Kruger to Canyons Biosphere, an area designated by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as an International Man and Biosphere Reserve.[6]

The park has nine main gates allowing entrance to the different camps.

History

Pre-reserve (before 1898)

Over 420 recorded archaeological sites in Kruger Park attest to its occupation before modern times. Most sites however had relatively short occupation periods, as the presence of predators and the tsetse fly limited cattle husbandry. At Masorini hill, the H9 route, iron smelting was practiced up to the Mfecane era. The reconstructed Thulamela on a hilltop south of the Levuvhu River was occupied from the 13th to 16th centuries and had links with traders from the African east coast.

Before the Second Anglo-Boer War, the area now covered by the park was a remote section of the eastern South African Republic's last wild frontier. Paul Kruger, President of the South African Republic at the time, proclaimed the area, which was inhabited by the Tsonga people, a sanctuary for the protection of its wildlife. James Stevenson Hamilton noted many kraals along the Sabi River and also further north beyond the Letaba River[7] although the north was sparsely populated compared to the south. Many of the local natives were employed by railway companies for the construction of rail connections, notably that between Pretoria (now in South Africa) and Lourenço Marques (now Maputo, Mozambique) during the end of the 19th century. Abel Chapman, one of the hunters who noted that the area was overhunted by the end of the 19th century, brought this fact to wider attention.

Sabi Game Reserve (1898–1926)

In 1895, Jakob Louis van Wyk introduced in the Volksraad of the South African Republic a motion to create the game reserve. The area proposed extended from the Crocodile River to the Sabi River in the north. That motion, introduced together with another Volksraad member by the name of R. K. Loveday, and accepted for discussion in September 1895 by a majority of one vote, resulted in the proclamation by Paul Kruger, on 26 March 1898, of a "Government Wildlife Park." This park would later be known as the Sabi Game Reserve.

The park was initially created to control hunting,[8] and to protect the diminishing number of animals in the park.

James Stevenson-Hamilton became the first warden of the reserve in 1902.[8] The reserve was located in the southern one-third of the modern park.[9] Singwitsi Reserve, named after the Shingwedzi River and now in northern Kruger National Park, was proclaimed in 1903.[10] During the following decades all the native tribes were removed from the reserve and during the 1960s the last were removed at Makuleke in the Pafuri triangle. In 1926, Sabi Game Reserve, the adjacent Shingwedzi Game Reserve, and farms were combined to create Kruger National Park.[11]

During 1923, the first large groups of tourists started visiting the Sabi Game Reserve, but only as part of the South African Railways' popular "Round in Nine" tours. The tourist trains travelled the Selati railway line between Komatipoort on the Mozambican border and Tzaneen in the then northern Transvaal. The tour included an overnight stop at Sabie Bridge (now Skukuza) and a short walk, escorted by armed rangers, into the bush. It soon became a highlight of the tour and it gave valuable support for the campaign to proclaim the Sabi Game Reserve as a national park.[12][13]

Kruger National Park (1926–1946)

After the proclamation of the Kruger National Park in 1918, the first three tourist cars entered the park in 1927, jumping to 180 cars in 1928 and 850 cars in 1929.[4]
Warden James Stevenson-Hamilton retired on 30 April 1946, after 44 years as warden of the Kruger Park and its predecessor, the Sabi Sabi Game Reserve.

1946–1994

 
Plaque in the park. Now and then people do get killed; however, this is extremely rare.

Stevenson-Hamilton was replaced as warden by Colonel J. A. B. Sandenbergh of the South African Air Force.[12] In 1959, work commenced to completely fence the park's boundaries. Work started on the southern boundary along the Crocodile River and in 1960 the western and northern boundaries were fenced, followed by the eastern boundary with Mozambique. The purpose of the fence was to curb the spread of diseases, facilitate border patrolling and inhibit the movement of poachers.[12]

The Makuleke area in the northern part of the park was forcibly taken from the Makuleke people by the government in 1969 and about 1500 of them were relocated to land to the south so that their original tribal areas could be integrated into the greater Kruger National Park.[14][15]

1994–present

 
Pride of lions on a tourist road

In 1996 the Makuleke tribe submitted a land claim for 19,842 hectares (198.42 km2), namely the Pafuri or Makuleke region in the northernmost part of the park.[16] The land was given back to the Makuleke people, however, they chose not to resettle on the land but to engage with the private sector to invest in tourism. This resulted in the building of several game lodges from which they earn royalties.[17][18]

In the late 1990s, the fences between the Kruger Park and Klaserie Game Reserve, Olifants Game Reserve, and Balule Game Reserve were dropped and incorporated into the Greater Kruger Park with 400,000 hectares added to the Reserve. In 2002, Kruger National Park, Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe, and Limpopo National Park in Mozambique were incorporated into a peace park, the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park.[11]

In 2009, SANParks envisaged a four-star hotel northeast of Malelane on the bank of the Crocodile River, as part of a survival strategy to make the park less dependent on state subsidies.[19] Eventually Radisson Blu was mandated to operate a 104-room safari resort starting 2019,[20][21] which promises a smaller ecological footprint than that of prior, existing camps. The three-star, 128-room Skukuza Safari Lodge, to be completed by late 2018,[22] was necessitated by the adjacent Nombolo Mdhluli conference center, opened in 2011, which draws guests arriving by charter flights or in tour busses.[22] Former head of the park Salomon Joubert warned that these developments threaten the character, ethos, and original objectives of the park,[19] but the minister of environmental affairs, Edna Molewa, deemed development of 0.3% of the park as acceptable.[22] The park was temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic on 25 March 2020. It was reopened on 8 June 2020.[23]

Location and geography

Geography of the Kruger National Park
 
Luvuvhu and Limpopo rivers at Crookes Corner in Pafuri triangle

The park lies in the northeast of South Africa,[9] in the eastern parts of Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces. Phalaborwa, Limpopo is the only town in South Africa that borders the Kruger National Park. It is one of the largest national parks in the world, with an area of 19,485 km2 (7,523 sq mi). The park is approximately 360 km (220 mi) long,[9] and has an average width of 65 km (40 mi).[11] At its widest point, the park is 90 km (56 mi) wide from east to west.[9] To the north and south of the park two rivers, the Limpopo and the Crocodile respectively, act as their natural boundaries. To the east, the Lebombo Mountains separate it from Mozambique. Its western boundary runs parallel with this range, roughly 65 km (40 mi) distant. The park varies in altitude between 200 m (660 ft) in the east and 840 m (2,760 ft) in the south-west near Berg-en-Dal. The highest point in the park is here, a hill called Khandzalive. Several rivers run through the park from west to east, including the Sabie, Olifants, Crocodile, Letaba, Luvuvhu and Limpopo Rivers.

Climate

The climate of the Kruger National Park and lowveld is subtropical/tropical, specifically a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen BSh). Summer days are humid and hot. The rainy season is from September until May. The Kruger National Park website lists September and October as the driest periods, culminating at the beginning of the rainy season late in October. Because the park spans 360 kilometres or 220 miles from north to south, climate can vary throughout the park. Skukuza in the southern part of the park is about 2 to 3 °C (3.6 to 5.4 °F) cooler throughout the year than Pafuri in the north, with significantly more rainfall.

Climate data for Skukuza, 1961-1990
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 43
(109)
43
(109)
42
(108)
40
(104)
38
(100)
35
(95)
36
(97)
38
(100)
42
(108)
44
(111)
43
(109)
42
(108)
44
(111)
Average high °C (°F) 33
(91)
32
(90)
31
(88)
29
(84)
28
(82)
26
(79)
26
(79)
27
(81)
29
(84)
30
(86)
31
(88)
32
(90)
30
(86)
Average low °C (°F) 21
(70)
20
(68)
19
(66)
15
(59)
10
(50)
6
(43)
6
(43)
9
(48)
13
(55)
16
(61)
18
(64)
20
(68)
14
(57)
Record low °C (°F) 11
(52)
10
(50)
8
(46)
6
(43)
1
(34)
−4
(25)
−4
(25)
−4
(25)
1
(34)
6
(43)
10
(50)
10
(50)
−4
(25)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 94
(3.7)
96
(3.8)
66
(2.6)
38
(1.5)
14
(0.6)
11
(0.4)
11
(0.4)
8
(0.3)
28
(1.1)
40
(1.6)
63
(2.5)
92
(3.6)
561
(22.1)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1 mm) 9 9 9 6 3 2 2 2 3 7 10 10 71
Source: SAWS[24]
Climate data for Phalaborwa
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 34
(93)
33
(91)
32
(90)
30
(86)
29
(84)
27
(81)
26
(79)
28
(82)
31
(88)
32
(90)
32
(90)
33
(91)
33
(91)
Daily mean °C (°F) 26.5
(79.7)
26
(79)
25
(77)
23
(73)
20
(68)
18
(64)
17.5
(63.5)
19
(66)
22
(72)
23
(73)
24
(75)
26
(79)
22
(72)
Average low °C (°F) 21
(70)
21
(70)
20
(68)
17
(63)
12
(54)
10
(50)
9
(48)
11
(52)
14
(57)
17
(63)
19
(66)
21
(70)
16
(61)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 97
(3.8)
81
(3.2)
65
(2.6)
25
(1.0)
12
(0.5)
4
(0.2)
7.5
(0.30)
7
(0.3)
21
(0.8)
46
(1.8)
69
(2.7)
96
(3.8)
529
(20.8)
Source: [25]
Climate data for Pafuri Rest camp, Kruger National Park
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 35
(95)
34
(93)
33.6
(92.5)
32.7
(90.9)
29.9
(85.8)
27.7
(81.9)
28
(82)
29.9
(85.8)
32.1
(89.8)
34.7
(94.5)
34.1
(93.4)
35.1
(95.2)
32.2
(90.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 28.2
(82.8)
28
(82)
26.9
(80.4)
25.4
(77.7)
21.7
(71.1)
18.9
(66.0)
19
(66)
20.9
(69.6)
23.8
(74.8)
26.9
(80.4)
27.2
(81.0)
28.2
(82.8)
24.6
(76.2)
Average low °C (°F) 21.5
(70.7)
22
(72)
20.3
(68.5)
18.1
(64.6)
13.6
(56.5)
10.2
(50.4)
10
(50)
12
(54)
15.6
(60.1)
19.1
(66.4)
20.4
(68.7)
21.4
(70.5)
17.0
(62.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 90
(3.5)
77
(3.0)
36
(1.4)
22
(0.9)
10
(0.4)
5
(0.2)
2
(0.1)
2
(0.1)
10
(0.4)
17
(0.7)
54
(2.1)
86
(3.4)
411
(16.2)
Source: [26]


Biodiversity

Veld types
 
Open savanna grassland with stunted mopane constitutes much of the northern flats
 
Mixed thorn and marula woodlands occur in the southwest on granite
 
Open or dense savanna occur on dry basalt flatlands in the southeast

Vegetation

Plant life consists of four main areas, which correspond roughly to the four quadrants of the park. The main veld types are determined by the rainfall gradient (400 to 750 mm per annum) and geological substrates.

Shrub mopane veld

Shrub mopane covers almost the entire northeastern part of the park.

Red bush-willow and mopane veld

This area lies in the park's western half, north of the Olifants River. The two most prominent species here are the red bush-willow (Combretum apiculatum) and the mopane tree (Colophospermum mopane).

Thorn trees and red bush-willow veld

This area lies between the western boundary and roughly the centre of the park south of the Olifants River. Combretums, such as the red bush-willow (Combretum apiculatum), and Acacia species predominate while there are a great number of marula trees (Sclerocarya caffra). The Acacias are dominant along the rivers and streams, the very dense Nwatimhiri bush along the Sabie River between Skukuza and Lower Sabie being a very good example.

Knob-thorn and marula veld

South of the Olifants River in the park's eastern half, this area provides the most important grazing land. Species such as red grass (Themeda triandra) and buffalo grass (Panicum maximum) predominate while the knob-thorn (Acacia nigrescens), leadwood (Combretum imberbe) and marula (Sclerocarya caffra) are the main tree species.

Local vegetation communities

Several smaller areas in the park carry distinctive vegetation. The Pretoriuskop sourveld and Malelane mountain bushveld receive relatively high rainfall. Here sickle bush and silver cluster-leaf (Terminalia sericea) are prominent. The sandveld communities northeast of Punda Maria are equally distinctive, with a wide variety of unique plant species. The bush-clad hills along the Levuvhu River also shelter an interesting floral diversity and some near-endemic species.

Mammals

Mammals
 
Male lion
 
Elephant crossing a road. A photoshopped version of this photo was used as an April Fool's prank in 2018.[27]

All the big five game animals are found at Kruger National Park, which has more species of large mammals than any other African game reserve (at 147 species). There are webcams set up to observe the wildlife.[28]

The park stopped culling elephants in 1994 and tried translocating them, but by 2004 the population had increased to 11,670 elephants, by 2006 to approximately 13,500, by 2009 to 11,672, and by 2012 to 16,900. The park's habitats may only be able to sustain about 8,000 elephants, though this is not entirely clear. Elephants change plant growth and density in the park, and some species, such as wildebeests, clearly benefit from increased grasslands. The park started an attempt at using contraception in 1995 but has stopped that due to problems with delivering the contraceptives and upsetting the herd. The park has taken a firm stance against poaching of all animals, especially the rhinoceros.

Kruger supports packs of the endangered African wild dog, of which there are thought to be only about 400 in the whole of South Africa.[29]

Wildlife population as of 2011
Species Count (2009) Count (2010)[30] Count (2011)[31]
Black rhinoceros 350 590–660
Blue wildebeest 9,612 11,500 6,400–13,100
Plains zebra 17,797 26,500 23,700–35,300
Bushbuck 500 500
African buffalo 27,000 37,500 37,130
Common eland 300 460 460
African bush elephant 11,672 13,700 13,750
Giraffe 5,114 9,000 6,800–10,300
Greater kudu 5,798 9,500 11,200–17,300
Hippopotamus 3,000 3,100 3,100
Impala 150,000 120,000 132,300–176,400
Hartebeest 50
Mountain reedbuck 150 150
Nyala 300 300
Roan antelope 90 90
Sable antelope 290 290
Common warthog 3,500 3,100–5,700
Waterbuck 5,000 5,500 3,100–7,800
White rhinoceros 7,000 to 12,000[32] 10,500
African wild dog 240 120
Cheetah 120 120 120
Nile crocodile 4,420 4,420
Leopard 2,000 1,000 1,000
Lion 2,800 1,600 1,620–1,720
Spotted hyena 2,000 3,500 5,340

Birds

Birds
 
Harlequin quails (C. delegorguei) are irruptive migrants and late summer breeders in the grassy plains. They are plentiful nomads after good rains, but almost absent during dry years.[33]
 
Yellow-billed oxpeckers (B. africanus) are obligatory symbionts of large mammal herbivores. After an absence of over 80 years, they made an unaided comeback starting in 1979.[34]

A fairly uniform aggregate of bird species is present from the southern to central areas of the park, but a decline in diversity is noticeable in the mopane-dominated flats northwards of the Olifants.[33] Most species breed in summer when rains sustain most vegetable and animal food, but the larger birds of prey conversely breed during the dry winter, when their prey is most exposed.[33] Out of the 517 species of birds found at Kruger, 253 are residents, 117 non-breeding migrants, and 147 are nomads.

Constituting the southern lowveld, the park's avifaunal affinities are mainly with the tropical north. Some representatives of this group are the African openbill, hooded vulture, Dickinson's kestrel, white-crowned lapwing, brown-necked parrot, Senegal coucal, broad-billed roller, trumpeter hornbill, Böhm's spinetail, tropical boubou, Meves's starling and scarlet-chested sunbird.[33] Some 30 waterbird and wader species are dependent on the rivers or associated dams,[35] including the African finfoot, white-backed night heron, white-crowned lapwing and water thick-knee. Other species are limited to riparian thicket or forest, including African goshawk, crested guineafowl, Natal spurfowl, Narina trogon, Pel's fishing owl, bearded scrub robin, terrestrial brownbul and black-throated wattle-eye. This habitat is often reduced by drought[36] or floods or the understorey is opened up by elephant.[33]

Some of the larger birds require large territories or are sensitive to habitat degradation. Six of these birds, which are by and large restricted to Kruger and other extensive conservation areas, have been assigned to a fanciful grouping called the "Big Six Birds".[37] They are the lappet-faced vulture, martial eagle, saddle-billed stork, kori bustard, ground hornbill and the reclusive Pel's fishing owl, which is localized and seldom seen. The 2011 aerial survey found 22 martial eagle nest sites, the 2015 survey an additional 17, while the 2020 survey found 70 nest locations in all,[38] though the activity of these has yet to be determined. There are 25 to 30 breeding pairs of saddle-billed storks in the park, besides a handful of non-breeding individuals.[37] In 2012 178 family groups of ground hornbills roamed the park and 78 nests were known, of which 50% were active.[39] A 2013 study estimated that 904 pairs of white-backed vulture, 78 pairs of lappet-faced vulture and 60 pairs of white-headed vulture breed in the park.[40]

Other vertebrates

Kruger is inhabited by 126 species[41] of reptile, including black mambas, African rock pythons, and 3,000 Nile crocodiles. As yet, knowledge of the densities and distributions of the reptiles, especially on smaller spatial scales, is limited by sampling bias and a strong dependence on the park's public infrastructure is evident.[41] Thirty-three species of amphibians are found in the park,[42] as well as 50 fish species. A Zambesi shark, Carcharhinus leucas, also known as the bull shark, was caught at the confluence of the Limpopo and Luvuvhu Rivers in July 1950. Zambezi sharks tolerate fresh water and can travel far up rivers like the Limpopo.[43]

Invertebrates

 
A seasonally fluctuating biomass of arthropods is observed in response to the summer rainfall regime and the mostly deciduous vegetation, as shown by sampling during 11 months in grassland near Satara Camp.[44]

219 species of butterfly and skipper are native to the park.[45] The fastest and most robust of these belong to the genus Charaxes,[46] of which 12 species have been recorded.[47] Genera Papilio and Acraea are also well-represented, with about 10 and 15 species respectively.[47] The total number of Lepidoptera species in the park is unknown but could be in the order of 7,000, many of which range widely in African savanna. The mopane moth in the northern half of the park is one of the best known, and communities outside the park have at times been given permits to harvest their caterpillars.[48][49][50] The park has a high diversity of termites and 22 genera are known to occur, including the mound-building genera Macrotermes, Cubitermes, Amitermes, Odontotermes and Trinervitermes.[51] A new species of woodlouse, Ctenorillo meyeri, has been discovered inside termite nests, east of Phalaborwa and near Mopani Rest Camp.[52] It is the first instance of a termitophilous species from the family Armadillidae. Many species of mosquito occur in the park, including the Culex, Aedes and Anopheles genera which target mammals. A. arabiensis is the most prevalent of the 9 or more Anopheles species in the park, and their females transmit malaria.[53] As of 2018, 350 species of arachnids, excluding ticks and mites, are known from Kruger.[54] These are mostly true spiders, including 7 species of baboon spider, but also 9 scorpion and 7 pseudoscorpion species, 18 solifugid species (sun and roman spiders), 2 species of harvestmen and 1 species of tailless whip scorpion.[55]

Threats

The park's ecosystem is subject to several threats, including intensive poaching, urban development at its borders,[56] global warming and droughts,[57] animal overpopulation,[58] and mining projects.[59]

Light pollution produced by rest camps and nearby towns affects the biodiversity of Kruger National Park. In particular, it alters the composition of nocturnal wildlife and the hunting behaviour of predators.[60] In 2022 it was announced that Nkosi City, an R8 billion development is planned near the western border of the park.[61]

Floods or raising of the walls of the Massingir and Corumana dams in Mozambique could potentially damage, by silting, the pristine gorges of the Olifants and Sabie rivers respectively.[62][63] The Olifants River Gorge has a deep, single thread, pool-rapid structure which is home to many crocodiles, besides hippos and fish. The fish population of the Olifants has already been diminished by hundreds of dams in its upper reaches.[63]

Anti-poaching measures

Kruger is not exempt from the threat of poaching that many other African countries have faced. Many poachers are in search of ivory from elephant tusks or rhino horns, which are similar in composition to human fingernails.[64] The park's anti-poaching unit consists of 650[65] SANParks game rangers, assisted by the SAPS and the SANDF (including the SAAF). As of 2013, the park is equipped with two drones borrowed from Denel and two Aérospatiale Gazelle helicopters, donated by the RAF to augment its air space presence.[66][67] Automated movement sensors relay intrusions along the Mozambique border to a control center,[68] and a specialist dog unit has been introduced.[69] Buffer zones have been established along the border with Mozambique,[70] from where many poachers have infiltrated the park, as an alternative to costly new fences.[71] The original 150 km long fences were dropped in 2002 to establish the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park.[65][72] The national anti-poaching committee oversees all activities and coordinates interested parties.[73][74]

Poachers

Kruger's big game poachers operate with night vision instruments and large caliber rifles, fitted with suppressors and sophisticated telescopic sights.[75][76] They are mostly Mozambique citizens that initiate their carefully planned incursions from the border region of South Africa and Mozambique.[75][77][78] In 2012 some 200 poachers were apprehended,[79] while about 30 were killed in skirmishes.[80][81]

In July 2012, a Kruger game ranger and policeman were the first to die in an anti-poaching operation,[82] while other employees reported intimidation by poachers.[83][84][85][86] A Kruger personnel strike affected some anti-poaching operations,[87] and some employees have been directly implicated.[83][88][89][90][91][92] Rangers in and around the park have been pressured or blackmailed by poaching syndicates to provide intelligence on the whereabouts of rhinos and anti-poaching operations.[93]

In December 2012, Kruger started using a Seeker II drone against rhino poachers. The drone was loaned to the South African National Parks authority by its manufacturer Denel Dynamics, South Africa.[94][95]

In June 2019, a Helix surveillance aircraft system was deployed on night missions in the park, and apprehended half a dozen suspected poachers.[96]

Other threats to poachers include the dangerous nature of the park itself. In February 2018, a poacher was believed to have been trampled by elephants and then eaten by lions, leaving rangers to later find only a human skull and a pair of trousers, alongside a loaded hunting rifle.[97][98]

In December 2021, two accused poachers were arrested in the Kruger National Park's Skukuza after they were discovered in possession of unauthorized rifles and ammunition.[99]

Rhino

Poachers make no distinction between white and black rhinos,[84][100] but losses of black rhinos are low due to their reclusive and aggressive nature.[101] Rhino horn fetches between $66,000 and $82,000 per kilogram,[78][85][101][102][103] and the CITES ban has proved largely ineffectual against the trade in rhino horn.[104][105] The second horn is sometimes also hacked from the skull to obtain about 100 ml of moisture that is sold locally as traditional medicine.[101]

Poaching rhino horn escalated in the 21st century, with 949 rhinos killed in Kruger in the first 12 years,[66] and more than 520 in 2013 alone.[106][107] A memorandum of agreement is seen as a necessary milestone in stemming the tide between South Africa and Vietnam, in addition to the one with China,[71][108][109] while negotiations have not yet started with Thailand.[110] The amount of rhino horn held in storage is not publicly known.[111] Since 2009, some Kruger rhinos have been fitted with invisible tracing devices in their bodies and horns which enable officials to locate their carcasses and to track the smuggled horns by satellite.[112] South Africa's 22,000 white and black rhinos represent some 93% of these species' world population, 12,000 of which are found in Kruger.[84][105]

Elephant

Kruger experienced significant elephant poaching in the 1980s.[112] Due to international and national efforts, including a worldwide ban on ivory sales beginning in 1989, the poaching was abated for many years, but a sharp rise in 2014 has continued and the numbers of elephants poached per year in the park is growing at an alarming rate.[113][114]

Following approval by CITES, 47 metric tons of stockpiled ivory from Kruger were auctioned on 6 November 2008. The sale fetched approximately US$6.7 million which was allocated to increased anti-poaching measures. The intention was to flood the market, crash prices and make poaching less profitable. But instead, the legal sale was followed by "an abrupt, significant, permanent, robust and geographically widespread increase" in elephant poaching, as subsequent research showed.[115][116]

The latest Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES), summit voted down proposals for further one-off ivory sales from stockpiles for having led to increases in poaching across the continent.[117][118] Across the continent the African elephant population decreased 30% in the period between 2007 and 2014. [119][120]

Other

It is foreseen that the placement of wire traps to procure meat would eventually become the most challenging form of poaching.[121] A scheme has been proposed to reward adjacent communities with the proceeds of game sales in return for their cooperation in game preservation.[121] The larger communities include Bosbokrand, Acornhoek, Hazyview, Hoedspruit, Komatipoort, Malelane, Marloth Park, Nelspruit and Phalaborwa.[105] Communities along the northern boundary have complained about a number of issues that affect them, including livestock killed by escaped predators.[122] In 2021 and 2022 there were cases of poisoning of carcasses near Punda Maria, evidently to obtain the body parts of scavengers.[123]

Rest camps

Kruger Park contains twelve main rest camps, as well as several smaller camps scattered throughout the park.[124] There are also several concessions licensed to private companies with their own camps.[125]

The main camps in the park are larger camps containing shops, restaurants or cafeterias, petrol stations, and first aid stations. The largest camp, which also serves as the headquarters for Kruger, is Skukuza.

Skukuza

 
"Our Founders" bust at reception in Skukuza

Skukuza is the biggest camp in Kruger, as it also contains the administrative headquarters for the park. It is located on the southern bank of the Sabie River 12 km from Paul Kruger Gate and 39 km from Phabeni gate.[126] In addition to accommodation, Skukuza contains a conference centre and a library, and is a short drive from Skukuza Airport, the only commercial airport in the park.

Berg-en-Dal

Berg-en-Dal is one of the most accessible camps in Kruger. It is 12 km from Malelane Gate, which is an hour's drive from Mbombela via the N4.[127] The camp contains 69 bungalows which sleep 2–3, 23 family cottages with multiple bedrooms that sleep 4–6, 2 guest houses, and 72 camping or caravan sites.[128] Running along much of the boundary of the camp is the Rhino Trail, a walking trail that takes about an hour to complete. The camp also contains several overlooks and a swimming pool.[129]

Malelane

 
A signpost in the park

Near Berg-en-Dal and the Malelane gate is the small Malelane satellite camp. Featuring 15 tent sites, 4 four-bed rondavels, and 1 three-bed rondavel, Malelane only provides one activity of game drives.[130] Check-in is handled through Malelane Gate.[131]

Crocodile Bridge

Crocodile Bridge is directly along the southern border of the park near the town of Komatipoort. It is smaller than the other main camps, and as such doesn't have a separate restaurant. The camp also has easy access to the Mozambican border just on the other side of Komatipoort.

Letaba

 
Elephant statue outside the Letaba Elephant Hall

Letaba rest camp overlooks a bend in the Letaba River, very close to the geographic centre of the park. Its accommodations include 86 rondavels, 20 furnished tents, 10 six-bed cottages, 5 three-bed huts with communal ablutions, 60 tent or caravan sites, and two large guest houses, the Melville and the Fish Eagle. The Fish Eagle guest house also contains a private bird hide. Letaba also hosts the Elephant Hall, a small museum dedicated to elephants, especially the "Magnificent Seven", elephants of Kruger National Park with unusually large tusks.

Lower Sabie

Lower Sabie lies about 45 km downstream of Skukuza on the south bank of the Sabie River. It is situated near one of the three bridges to cross the Sabie river in the park (both of the others are near Skukuza). Because of its location, it has large amounts of water, flat plains, and hills easily accessible from the camp.[132]

Mopani

Mopani sits on the north bank of Pioneer Dam, just south of the Tropic of Capricorn and 50 km north of Letaba. Mopani is also the administrative location of the Shipandani sleep-over bird hides, a hide that can be booked for overnight stays for 2-6 people.

Other camps

 
Mopani Camp Gate

The other main camps are:[124]

  • Olifants and its satellite camp Balule
  • Orpen and its satellite camps Maroela and Tamboti
  • Pretoriuskop
  • Punda Maria
  • Satara
  • Shingwedzi

South African National Parks also manages several bushveld camps: Bataleur, Biyamiti, Shimuwini, Sirheni, and Talamati. Additionally, two overnight hides, Sable Hide, and Shipandani Sleepover Hide can be booked. Several private lodges, including some luxury lodges, are also scattered throughout the park.

Gates to the Kruger Park

North & South Gates
Kruger National Park
 
Pafuri Gate
(northernmost entrance to the park)
 
Punda Maria Gate
(another northern entrance)
 
Crocodile Bridge
(a southeastern entrance to the park)
 
Phabeni Gate
(a southwestern entrance to the park)

The Kruger Park has the following gates:

Name Road From Town Coordinates
Crocodile Bridge Gate on the extension of Rissik Street from Komatipoort 25°21′30″S 31°53′37″E / 25.35833°S 31.89361°E / -25.35833; 31.89361 (Crocodile Bridge Gate)
Malelane Gate on the R570 off the N4 near Malelane 25°27′43″S 31°31′59″E / 25.46194°S 31.53306°E / -25.46194; 31.53306 (Malelane Gate)
Numbi Gate on the R569 road from Hazyview 25°9′19″S 31°11′51″E / 25.15528°S 31.19750°E / -25.15528; 31.19750 (Numbi Gate)
Phabeni Gate on the road off the R536 from Hazyview 25°01′30″S 31°14′29″E / 25.02500°S 31.24139°E / -25.02500; 31.24139 (Phabeni Gate)
Paul Kruger Gate on the R536 road from Hazyview 24°58′53″S 31°29′7″E / 24.98139°S 31.48528°E / -24.98139; 31.48528 (Paul Kruger Gate)
Orpen Gate on the R531 road from Klaserie 24°28′33″S 31°23′27″E / 24.47583°S 31.39083°E / -24.47583; 31.39083 (Orpen Gate)
Phalaborwa Gate on the R71 road from Phalaborwa 23°56′44″S 31°9′54″E / 23.94556°S 31.16500°E / -23.94556; 31.16500 (Phalaborwa Gate)
Punda Maria Gate on the R524 road from Thohoyandou 22°44′18″S 31°0′33″E / 22.73833°S 31.00917°E / -22.73833; 31.00917 (Punda Maria Gate)
Pafuri Gate on the R525 road from Musina 22°24′1″S 31°2′29″E / 22.40028°S 31.04139°E / -22.40028; 31.04139 (Pafuri Gate)

Wilderness trails

Nine different trails are on offer in the Kruger National Park.[133] Some are overnight and they last several days in areas of wilderness virtually untouched by humans. There are no set trails in the wilderness areas; a visitor walks along paths made by animals or seeks out new routes through the bush.

Gallery

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Carruthers, Jane (1995). The Kruger National Park: A Social and Political History. Natal: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press. ISBN 9780869809150.

External links

  • Kruger National Park official website
  • Webcams in the Kruger

kruger, national, park, tsonga, ˈkrúːɡà, afrikaans, ˈkry, south, african, national, park, largest, game, reserves, africa, covers, area, provinces, limpopo, mpumalanga, northeastern, south, africa, extends, from, north, south, from, east, west, administrative,. Kruger National Park Tsonga ˈkruːɡa Afrikaans ˈkry j er is a South African National Park and one of the largest game reserves in Africa It covers an area of 19 623 km2 7 576 sq mi in the provinces of Limpopo and Mpumalanga in northeastern South Africa and extends 360 km 220 mi from north to south and 65 km 40 mi from east to west The administrative headquarters are in Skukuza Areas of the park were first protected by the government of the South African Republic in 1898 and it became South Africa s first national park in 1926 Kruger National ParkBurchell s zebras in a Kruger landscapeLocation of the park red area in South AfricaLocationLimpopo and Mpumalanga provinces South AfricaNearest cityMbombela southern Phalaborwa central Coordinates24 0 41 S 31 29 7 E 24 01139 S 31 48528 E 24 01139 31 48528Area19 623 km2 7 576 sq mi 1 2 3 Established31 May 1926 4 Visitors1 659 793 1 277 397 day visitors 382 396 overnight 5 in 2014 15 financial year Governing bodySouth African National Parkswww wbr sanparks wbr org wbr parks wbr kruger wbr To the west and south of the Kruger National Park are the two South African provinces of Limpopo and Mpumalanga respectively To the north is Zimbabwe and to the east is Mozambique It is now part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park a peace park that links Kruger National Park with the Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe and with the Limpopo National Park in Mozambique The park is part of the Kruger to Canyons Biosphere an area designated by the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO as an International Man and Biosphere Reserve 6 The park has nine main gates allowing entrance to the different camps Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre reserve before 1898 1 2 Sabi Game Reserve 1898 1926 1 3 Kruger National Park 1926 1946 1 4 1946 1994 1 5 1994 present 2 Location and geography 3 Climate 4 Biodiversity 4 1 Vegetation 4 1 1 Shrub mopane veld 4 1 2 Red bush willow and mopane veld 4 1 3 Thorn trees and red bush willow veld 4 1 4 Knob thorn and marula veld 4 1 5 Local vegetation communities 4 2 Mammals 4 3 Birds 4 4 Other vertebrates 4 5 Invertebrates 5 Threats 6 Anti poaching measures 6 1 Poachers 6 1 1 Rhino 6 1 2 Elephant 6 2 Other 7 Rest camps 7 1 Skukuza 7 2 Berg en Dal 7 3 Malelane 7 4 Crocodile Bridge 7 5 Letaba 7 6 Lower Sabie 7 7 Mopani 7 8 Other camps 8 Gates to the Kruger Park 9 Wilderness trails 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditMain article History of the Kruger National Park Pre reserve before 1898 Edit Over 420 recorded archaeological sites in Kruger Park attest to its occupation before modern times Most sites however had relatively short occupation periods as the presence of predators and the tsetse fly limited cattle husbandry At Masorini hill the H9 route iron smelting was practiced up to the Mfecane era The reconstructed Thulamela on a hilltop south of the Levuvhu River was occupied from the 13th to 16th centuries and had links with traders from the African east coast Before the Second Anglo Boer War the area now covered by the park was a remote section of the eastern South African Republic s last wild frontier Paul Kruger President of the South African Republic at the time proclaimed the area which was inhabited by the Tsonga people a sanctuary for the protection of its wildlife James Stevenson Hamilton noted many kraals along the Sabi River and also further north beyond the Letaba River 7 although the north was sparsely populated compared to the south Many of the local natives were employed by railway companies for the construction of rail connections notably that between Pretoria now in South Africa and Lourenco Marques now Maputo Mozambique during the end of the 19th century Abel Chapman one of the hunters who noted that the area was overhunted by the end of the 19th century brought this fact to wider attention Sabi Game Reserve 1898 1926 Edit In 1895 Jakob Louis van Wyk introduced in the Volksraad of the South African Republic a motion to create the game reserve The area proposed extended from the Crocodile River to the Sabi River in the north That motion introduced together with another Volksraad member by the name of R K Loveday and accepted for discussion in September 1895 by a majority of one vote resulted in the proclamation by Paul Kruger on 26 March 1898 of a Government Wildlife Park This park would later be known as the Sabi Game Reserve The park was initially created to control hunting 8 and to protect the diminishing number of animals in the park James Stevenson Hamilton became the first warden of the reserve in 1902 8 The reserve was located in the southern one third of the modern park 9 Singwitsi Reserve named after the Shingwedzi River and now in northern Kruger National Park was proclaimed in 1903 10 During the following decades all the native tribes were removed from the reserve and during the 1960s the last were removed at Makuleke in the Pafuri triangle In 1926 Sabi Game Reserve the adjacent Shingwedzi Game Reserve and farms were combined to create Kruger National Park 11 During 1923 the first large groups of tourists started visiting the Sabi Game Reserve but only as part of the South African Railways popular Round in Nine tours The tourist trains travelled the Selati railway line between Komatipoort on the Mozambican border and Tzaneen in the then northern Transvaal The tour included an overnight stop at Sabie Bridge now Skukuza and a short walk escorted by armed rangers into the bush It soon became a highlight of the tour and it gave valuable support for the campaign to proclaim the Sabi Game Reserve as a national park 12 13 Kruger National Park 1926 1946 Edit After the proclamation of the Kruger National Park in 1918 the first three tourist cars entered the park in 1927 jumping to 180 cars in 1928 and 850 cars in 1929 4 Warden James Stevenson Hamilton retired on 30 April 1946 after 44 years as warden of the Kruger Park and its predecessor the Sabi Sabi Game Reserve 1946 1994 Edit Plaque in the park Now and then people do get killed however this is extremely rare Stevenson Hamilton was replaced as warden by Colonel J A B Sandenbergh of the South African Air Force 12 In 1959 work commenced to completely fence the park s boundaries Work started on the southern boundary along the Crocodile River and in 1960 the western and northern boundaries were fenced followed by the eastern boundary with Mozambique The purpose of the fence was to curb the spread of diseases facilitate border patrolling and inhibit the movement of poachers 12 The Makuleke area in the northern part of the park was forcibly taken from the Makuleke people by the government in 1969 and about 1500 of them were relocated to land to the south so that their original tribal areas could be integrated into the greater Kruger National Park 14 15 1994 present Edit Pride of lions on a tourist roadIn 1996 the Makuleke tribe submitted a land claim for 19 842 hectares 198 42 km2 namely the Pafuri or Makuleke region in the northernmost part of the park 16 The land was given back to the Makuleke people however they chose not to resettle on the land but to engage with the private sector to invest in tourism This resulted in the building of several game lodges from which they earn royalties 17 18 In the late 1990s the fences between the Kruger Park and Klaserie Game Reserve Olifants Game Reserve and Balule Game Reserve were dropped and incorporated into the Greater Kruger Park with 400 000 hectares added to the Reserve In 2002 Kruger National Park Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe and Limpopo National Park in Mozambique were incorporated into a peace park the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park 11 In 2009 SANParks envisaged a four star hotel northeast of Malelane on the bank of the Crocodile River as part of a survival strategy to make the park less dependent on state subsidies 19 Eventually Radisson Blu was mandated to operate a 104 room safari resort starting 2019 20 21 which promises a smaller ecological footprint than that of prior existing camps The three star 128 room Skukuza Safari Lodge to be completed by late 2018 22 was necessitated by the adjacent Nombolo Mdhluli conference center opened in 2011 which draws guests arriving by charter flights or in tour busses 22 Former head of the park Salomon Joubert warned that these developments threaten the character ethos and original objectives of the park 19 but the minister of environmental affairs Edna Molewa deemed development of 0 3 of the park as acceptable 22 The park was temporarily closed due to the COVID 19 pandemic on 25 March 2020 It was reopened on 8 June 2020 23 Location and geography EditGeography of the Kruger National Park Olifants River Luvuvhu and Limpopo rivers at Crookes Corner in Pafuri triangle The park lies in the northeast of South Africa 9 in the eastern parts of Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces Phalaborwa Limpopo is the only town in South Africa that borders the Kruger National Park It is one of the largest national parks in the world with an area of 19 485 km2 7 523 sq mi The park is approximately 360 km 220 mi long 9 and has an average width of 65 km 40 mi 11 At its widest point the park is 90 km 56 mi wide from east to west 9 To the north and south of the park two rivers the Limpopo and the Crocodile respectively act as their natural boundaries To the east the Lebombo Mountains separate it from Mozambique Its western boundary runs parallel with this range roughly 65 km 40 mi distant The park varies in altitude between 200 m 660 ft in the east and 840 m 2 760 ft in the south west near Berg en Dal The highest point in the park is here a hill called Khandzalive Several rivers run through the park from west to east including the Sabie Olifants Crocodile Letaba Luvuvhu and Limpopo Rivers See also Makuleke and Lanner GorgeClimate EditThe climate of the Kruger National Park and lowveld is subtropical tropical specifically a hot semi arid climate Koppen BSh Summer days are humid and hot The rainy season is from September until May The Kruger National Park website lists September and October as the driest periods culminating at the beginning of the rainy season late in October Because the park spans 360 kilometres or 220 miles from north to south climate can vary throughout the park Skukuza in the southern part of the park is about 2 to 3 C 3 6 to 5 4 F cooler throughout the year than Pafuri in the north with significantly more rainfall Climate data for Skukuza 1961 1990Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 43 109 43 109 42 108 40 104 38 100 35 95 36 97 38 100 42 108 44 111 43 109 42 108 44 111 Average high C F 33 91 32 90 31 88 29 84 28 82 26 79 26 79 27 81 29 84 30 86 31 88 32 90 30 86 Average low C F 21 70 20 68 19 66 15 59 10 50 6 43 6 43 9 48 13 55 16 61 18 64 20 68 14 57 Record low C F 11 52 10 50 8 46 6 43 1 34 4 25 4 25 4 25 1 34 6 43 10 50 10 50 4 25 Average precipitation mm inches 94 3 7 96 3 8 66 2 6 38 1 5 14 0 6 11 0 4 11 0 4 8 0 3 28 1 1 40 1 6 63 2 5 92 3 6 561 22 1 Average precipitation days 1 mm 9 9 9 6 3 2 2 2 3 7 10 10 71Source SAWS 24 Climate data for PhalaborwaMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 34 93 33 91 32 90 30 86 29 84 27 81 26 79 28 82 31 88 32 90 32 90 33 91 33 91 Daily mean C F 26 5 79 7 26 79 25 77 23 73 20 68 18 64 17 5 63 5 19 66 22 72 23 73 24 75 26 79 22 72 Average low C F 21 70 21 70 20 68 17 63 12 54 10 50 9 48 11 52 14 57 17 63 19 66 21 70 16 61 Average precipitation mm inches 97 3 8 81 3 2 65 2 6 25 1 0 12 0 5 4 0 2 7 5 0 30 7 0 3 21 0 8 46 1 8 69 2 7 96 3 8 529 20 8 Source 25 Climate data for Pafuri Rest camp Kruger National ParkMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 35 95 34 93 33 6 92 5 32 7 90 9 29 9 85 8 27 7 81 9 28 82 29 9 85 8 32 1 89 8 34 7 94 5 34 1 93 4 35 1 95 2 32 2 90 0 Daily mean C F 28 2 82 8 28 82 26 9 80 4 25 4 77 7 21 7 71 1 18 9 66 0 19 66 20 9 69 6 23 8 74 8 26 9 80 4 27 2 81 0 28 2 82 8 24 6 76 2 Average low C F 21 5 70 7 22 72 20 3 68 5 18 1 64 6 13 6 56 5 10 2 50 4 10 50 12 54 15 6 60 1 19 1 66 4 20 4 68 7 21 4 70 5 17 0 62 7 Average precipitation mm inches 90 3 5 77 3 0 36 1 4 22 0 9 10 0 4 5 0 2 2 0 1 2 0 1 10 0 4 17 0 7 54 2 1 86 3 4 411 16 2 Source 26 Biodiversity EditVeld types Open savanna grassland with stunted mopane constitutes much of the northern flats Mixed thorn and marula woodlands occur in the southwest on granite Open or dense savanna occur on dry basalt flatlands in the southeast Vegetation Edit Plant life consists of four main areas which correspond roughly to the four quadrants of the park The main veld types are determined by the rainfall gradient 400 to 750 mm per annum and geological substrates Shrub mopane veld Edit Shrub mopane covers almost the entire northeastern part of the park Red bush willow and mopane veld Edit This area lies in the park s western half north of the Olifants River The two most prominent species here are the red bush willow Combretum apiculatum and the mopane tree Colophospermum mopane Thorn trees and red bush willow veld Edit This area lies between the western boundary and roughly the centre of the park south of the Olifants River Combretums such as the red bush willow Combretum apiculatum and Acacia species predominate while there are a great number of marula trees Sclerocarya caffra The Acacias are dominant along the rivers and streams the very dense Nwatimhiri bush along the Sabie River between Skukuza and Lower Sabie being a very good example Knob thorn and marula veld Edit South of the Olifants River in the park s eastern half this area provides the most important grazing land Species such as red grass Themeda triandra and buffalo grass Panicum maximum predominate while the knob thorn Acacia nigrescens leadwood Combretum imberbe and marula Sclerocarya caffra are the main tree species Local vegetation communities Edit Several smaller areas in the park carry distinctive vegetation The Pretoriuskop sourveld and Malelane mountain bushveld receive relatively high rainfall Here sickle bush and silver cluster leaf Terminalia sericea are prominent The sandveld communities northeast of Punda Maria are equally distinctive with a wide variety of unique plant species The bush clad hills along the Levuvhu River also shelter an interesting floral diversity and some near endemic species Mammals Edit Mammals Male lion Leopard Cheetah Elephant crossing a road A photoshopped version of this photo was used as an April Fool s prank in 2018 27 A pair of Southern white rhinoceros All the big five game animals are found at Kruger National Park which has more species of large mammals than any other African game reserve at 147 species There are webcams set up to observe the wildlife 28 The park stopped culling elephants in 1994 and tried translocating them but by 2004 the population had increased to 11 670 elephants by 2006 to approximately 13 500 by 2009 to 11 672 and by 2012 to 16 900 The park s habitats may only be able to sustain about 8 000 elephants though this is not entirely clear Elephants change plant growth and density in the park and some species such as wildebeests clearly benefit from increased grasslands The park started an attempt at using contraception in 1995 but has stopped that due to problems with delivering the contraceptives and upsetting the herd The park has taken a firm stance against poaching of all animals especially the rhinoceros Kruger supports packs of the endangered African wild dog of which there are thought to be only about 400 in the whole of South Africa 29 Wildlife population as of 2011 update Species Count 2009 Count 2010 30 Count 2011 31 Black rhinoceros 350 590 660 Blue wildebeest 9 612 11 500 6 400 13 100Plains zebra 17 797 26 500 23 700 35 300Bushbuck 500 500 African buffalo 27 000 37 500 37 130Common eland 300 460 460African bush elephant 11 672 13 700 13 750Giraffe 5 114 9 000 6 800 10 300Greater kudu 5 798 9 500 11 200 17 300Hippopotamus 3 000 3 100 3 100Impala 150 000 120 000 132 300 176 400Hartebeest 50 Mountain reedbuck 150 150Nyala 300 300Roan antelope 90 90Sable antelope 290 290Common warthog 3 500 3 100 5 700Waterbuck 5 000 5 500 3 100 7 800White rhinoceros 7 000 to 12 000 32 10 500 African wild dog 240 120Cheetah 120 120 120Nile crocodile 4 420 4 420Leopard 2 000 1 000 1 000Lion 2 800 1 600 1 620 1 720Spotted hyena 2 000 3 500 5 340Birds Edit Birds Harlequin quails C delegorguei are irruptive migrants and late summer breeders in the grassy plains They are plentiful nomads after good rains but almost absent during dry years 33 Yellow billed oxpeckers B africanus are obligatory symbionts of large mammal herbivores After an absence of over 80 years they made an unaided comeback starting in 1979 34 A fairly uniform aggregate of bird species is present from the southern to central areas of the park but a decline in diversity is noticeable in the mopane dominated flats northwards of the Olifants 33 Most species breed in summer when rains sustain most vegetable and animal food but the larger birds of prey conversely breed during the dry winter when their prey is most exposed 33 Out of the 517 species of birds found at Kruger 253 are residents 117 non breeding migrants and 147 are nomads Constituting the southern lowveld the park s avifaunal affinities are mainly with the tropical north Some representatives of this group are the African openbill hooded vulture Dickinson s kestrel white crowned lapwing brown necked parrot Senegal coucal broad billed roller trumpeter hornbill Bohm s spinetail tropical boubou Meves s starling and scarlet chested sunbird 33 Some 30 waterbird and wader species are dependent on the rivers or associated dams 35 including the African finfoot white backed night heron white crowned lapwing and water thick knee Other species are limited to riparian thicket or forest including African goshawk crested guineafowl Natal spurfowl Narina trogon Pel s fishing owl bearded scrub robin terrestrial brownbul and black throated wattle eye This habitat is often reduced by drought 36 or floods or the understorey is opened up by elephant 33 Some of the larger birds require large territories or are sensitive to habitat degradation Six of these birds which are by and large restricted to Kruger and other extensive conservation areas have been assigned to a fanciful grouping called the Big Six Birds 37 They are the lappet faced vulture martial eagle saddle billed stork kori bustard ground hornbill and the reclusive Pel s fishing owl which is localized and seldom seen The 2011 aerial survey found 22 martial eagle nest sites the 2015 survey an additional 17 while the 2020 survey found 70 nest locations in all 38 though the activity of these has yet to be determined There are 25 to 30 breeding pairs of saddle billed storks in the park besides a handful of non breeding individuals 37 In 2012 178 family groups of ground hornbills roamed the park and 78 nests were known of which 50 were active 39 A 2013 study estimated that 904 pairs of white backed vulture 78 pairs of lappet faced vulture and 60 pairs of white headed vulture breed in the park 40 Other vertebrates Edit Kruger is inhabited by 126 species 41 of reptile including black mambas African rock pythons and 3 000 Nile crocodiles As yet knowledge of the densities and distributions of the reptiles especially on smaller spatial scales is limited by sampling bias and a strong dependence on the park s public infrastructure is evident 41 Thirty three species of amphibians are found in the park 42 as well as 50 fish species A Zambesi shark Carcharhinus leucas also known as the bull shark was caught at the confluence of the Limpopo and Luvuvhu Rivers in July 1950 Zambezi sharks tolerate fresh water and can travel far up rivers like the Limpopo 43 Invertebrates Edit A seasonally fluctuating biomass of arthropods is observed in response to the summer rainfall regime and the mostly deciduous vegetation as shown by sampling during 11 months in grassland near Satara Camp 44 219 species of butterfly and skipper are native to the park 45 The fastest and most robust of these belong to the genus Charaxes 46 of which 12 species have been recorded 47 Genera Papilio and Acraea are also well represented with about 10 and 15 species respectively 47 The total number of Lepidoptera species in the park is unknown but could be in the order of 7 000 many of which range widely in African savanna The mopane moth in the northern half of the park is one of the best known and communities outside the park have at times been given permits to harvest their caterpillars 48 49 50 The park has a high diversity of termites and 22 genera are known to occur including the mound building genera Macrotermes Cubitermes Amitermes Odontotermes and Trinervitermes 51 A new species of woodlouse Ctenorillo meyeri has been discovered inside termite nests east of Phalaborwa and near Mopani Rest Camp 52 It is the first instance of a termitophilous species from the family Armadillidae Many species of mosquito occur in the park including the Culex Aedes and Anopheles genera which target mammals A arabiensis is the most prevalent of the 9 or more Anopheles species in the park and their females transmit malaria 53 As of 2018 350 species of arachnids excluding ticks and mites are known from Kruger 54 These are mostly true spiders including 7 species of baboon spider but also 9 scorpion and 7 pseudoscorpion species 18 solifugid species sun and roman spiders 2 species of harvestmen and 1 species of tailless whip scorpion 55 Threats EditThe park s ecosystem is subject to several threats including intensive poaching urban development at its borders 56 global warming and droughts 57 animal overpopulation 58 and mining projects 59 Light pollution produced by rest camps and nearby towns affects the biodiversity of Kruger National Park In particular it alters the composition of nocturnal wildlife and the hunting behaviour of predators 60 In 2022 it was announced that Nkosi City an R8 billion development is planned near the western border of the park 61 Floods or raising of the walls of the Massingir and Corumana dams in Mozambique could potentially damage by silting the pristine gorges of the Olifants and Sabie rivers respectively 62 63 The Olifants River Gorge has a deep single thread pool rapid structure which is home to many crocodiles besides hippos and fish The fish population of the Olifants has already been diminished by hundreds of dams in its upper reaches 63 Anti poaching measures EditSee also Rhinoceros poaching in Southern Africa Kruger is not exempt from the threat of poaching that many other African countries have faced Many poachers are in search of ivory from elephant tusks or rhino horns which are similar in composition to human fingernails 64 The park s anti poaching unit consists of 650 65 SANParks game rangers assisted by the SAPS and the SANDF including the SAAF As of 2013 the park is equipped with two drones borrowed from Denel and two Aerospatiale Gazelle helicopters donated by the RAF to augment its air space presence 66 67 Automated movement sensors relay intrusions along the Mozambique border to a control center 68 and a specialist dog unit has been introduced 69 Buffer zones have been established along the border with Mozambique 70 from where many poachers have infiltrated the park as an alternative to costly new fences 71 The original 150 km long fences were dropped in 2002 to establish the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park 65 72 The national anti poaching committee oversees all activities and coordinates interested parties 73 74 Poachers Edit Kruger s big game poachers operate with night vision instruments and large caliber rifles fitted with suppressors and sophisticated telescopic sights 75 76 They are mostly Mozambique citizens that initiate their carefully planned incursions from the border region of South Africa and Mozambique 75 77 78 In 2012 some 200 poachers were apprehended 79 while about 30 were killed in skirmishes 80 81 In July 2012 a Kruger game ranger and policeman were the first to die in an anti poaching operation 82 while other employees reported intimidation by poachers 83 84 85 86 A Kruger personnel strike affected some anti poaching operations 87 and some employees have been directly implicated 83 88 89 90 91 92 Rangers in and around the park have been pressured or blackmailed by poaching syndicates to provide intelligence on the whereabouts of rhinos and anti poaching operations 93 In December 2012 Kruger started using a Seeker II drone against rhino poachers The drone was loaned to the South African National Parks authority by its manufacturer Denel Dynamics South Africa 94 95 In June 2019 a Helix surveillance aircraft system was deployed on night missions in the park and apprehended half a dozen suspected poachers 96 Other threats to poachers include the dangerous nature of the park itself In February 2018 a poacher was believed to have been trampled by elephants and then eaten by lions leaving rangers to later find only a human skull and a pair of trousers alongside a loaded hunting rifle 97 98 In December 2021 two accused poachers were arrested in the Kruger National Park s Skukuza after they were discovered in possession of unauthorized rifles and ammunition 99 Rhino Edit Poachers make no distinction between white and black rhinos 84 100 but losses of black rhinos are low due to their reclusive and aggressive nature 101 Rhino horn fetches between 66 000 and 82 000 per kilogram 78 85 101 102 103 and the CITES ban has proved largely ineffectual against the trade in rhino horn 104 105 The second horn is sometimes also hacked from the skull to obtain about 100 ml of moisture that is sold locally as traditional medicine 101 Poaching rhino horn escalated in the 21st century with 949 rhinos killed in Kruger in the first 12 years 66 and more than 520 in 2013 alone 106 107 A memorandum of agreement is seen as a necessary milestone in stemming the tide between South Africa and Vietnam in addition to the one with China 71 108 109 while negotiations have not yet started with Thailand 110 The amount of rhino horn held in storage is not publicly known 111 Since 2009 some Kruger rhinos have been fitted with invisible tracing devices in their bodies and horns which enable officials to locate their carcasses and to track the smuggled horns by satellite 112 South Africa s 22 000 white and black rhinos represent some 93 of these species world population 12 000 of which are found in Kruger 84 105 Elephant Edit Kruger experienced significant elephant poaching in the 1980s 112 Due to international and national efforts including a worldwide ban on ivory sales beginning in 1989 the poaching was abated for many years but a sharp rise in 2014 has continued and the numbers of elephants poached per year in the park is growing at an alarming rate 113 114 Following approval by CITES 47 metric tons of stockpiled ivory from Kruger were auctioned on 6 November 2008 The sale fetched approximately US 6 7 million which was allocated to increased anti poaching measures The intention was to flood the market crash prices and make poaching less profitable But instead the legal sale was followed by an abrupt significant permanent robust and geographically widespread increase in elephant poaching as subsequent research showed 115 116 The latest Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna CITES summit voted down proposals for further one off ivory sales from stockpiles for having led to increases in poaching across the continent 117 118 Across the continent the African elephant population decreased 30 in the period between 2007 and 2014 119 120 Other Edit It is foreseen that the placement of wire traps to procure meat would eventually become the most challenging form of poaching 121 A scheme has been proposed to reward adjacent communities with the proceeds of game sales in return for their cooperation in game preservation 121 The larger communities include Bosbokrand Acornhoek Hazyview Hoedspruit Komatipoort Malelane Marloth Park Nelspruit and Phalaborwa 105 Communities along the northern boundary have complained about a number of issues that affect them including livestock killed by escaped predators 122 In 2021 and 2022 there were cases of poisoning of carcasses near Punda Maria evidently to obtain the body parts of scavengers 123 Rest camps EditThis section is missing information about several camps Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page January 2020 Kruger Park contains twelve main rest camps as well as several smaller camps scattered throughout the park 124 There are also several concessions licensed to private companies with their own camps 125 The main camps in the park are larger camps containing shops restaurants or cafeterias petrol stations and first aid stations The largest camp which also serves as the headquarters for Kruger is Skukuza Skukuza Edit Main article Skukuza Our Founders bust at reception in SkukuzaSkukuza is the biggest camp in Kruger as it also contains the administrative headquarters for the park It is located on the southern bank of the Sabie River 12 km from Paul Kruger Gate and 39 km from Phabeni gate 126 In addition to accommodation Skukuza contains a conference centre and a library and is a short drive from Skukuza Airport the only commercial airport in the park Berg en Dal Edit Berg en Dal is one of the most accessible camps in Kruger It is 12 km from Malelane Gate which is an hour s drive from Mbombela via the N4 127 The camp contains 69 bungalows which sleep 2 3 23 family cottages with multiple bedrooms that sleep 4 6 2 guest houses and 72 camping or caravan sites 128 Running along much of the boundary of the camp is the Rhino Trail a walking trail that takes about an hour to complete The camp also contains several overlooks and a swimming pool 129 Malelane Edit A signpost in the parkNear Berg en Dal and the Malelane gate is the small Malelane satellite camp Featuring 15 tent sites 4 four bed rondavels and 1 three bed rondavel Malelane only provides one activity of game drives 130 Check in is handled through Malelane Gate 131 Crocodile Bridge Edit Main article Crocodile Bridge Crocodile Bridge is directly along the southern border of the park near the town of Komatipoort It is smaller than the other main camps and as such doesn t have a separate restaurant The camp also has easy access to the Mozambican border just on the other side of Komatipoort Letaba Edit Main article Letaba Rest Camp Elephant statue outside the Letaba Elephant HallLetaba rest camp overlooks a bend in the Letaba River very close to the geographic centre of the park Its accommodations include 86 rondavels 20 furnished tents 10 six bed cottages 5 three bed huts with communal ablutions 60 tent or caravan sites and two large guest houses the Melville and the Fish Eagle The Fish Eagle guest house also contains a private bird hide Letaba also hosts the Elephant Hall a small museum dedicated to elephants especially the Magnificent Seven elephants of Kruger National Park with unusually large tusks Lower Sabie Edit Main article Lower Sabie Lower Sabie lies about 45 km downstream of Skukuza on the south bank of the Sabie River It is situated near one of the three bridges to cross the Sabie river in the park both of the others are near Skukuza Because of its location it has large amounts of water flat plains and hills easily accessible from the camp 132 Mopani Edit Main article Mopani Rest Camp Mopani sits on the north bank of Pioneer Dam just south of the Tropic of Capricorn and 50 km north of Letaba Mopani is also the administrative location of the Shipandani sleep over bird hides a hide that can be booked for overnight stays for 2 6 people Other camps Edit Mopani Camp GateThe other main camps are 124 Olifants and its satellite camp Balule Orpen and its satellite camps Maroela and Tamboti Pretoriuskop Punda Maria Satara ShingwedziSouth African National Parks also manages several bushveld camps Bataleur Biyamiti Shimuwini Sirheni and Talamati Additionally two overnight hides Sable Hide and Shipandani Sleepover Hide can be booked Several private lodges including some luxury lodges are also scattered throughout the park Gates to the Kruger Park EditNorth amp South GatesKruger National Park Pafuri Gate northernmost entrance to the park Punda Maria Gate another northern entrance Crocodile Bridge a southeastern entrance to the park Phabeni Gate a southwestern entrance to the park The Kruger Park has the following gates Name Road From Town CoordinatesCrocodile Bridge Gate on the extension of Rissik Street from Komatipoort 25 21 30 S 31 53 37 E 25 35833 S 31 89361 E 25 35833 31 89361 Crocodile Bridge Gate Malelane Gate on the R570 off the N4 near Malelane 25 27 43 S 31 31 59 E 25 46194 S 31 53306 E 25 46194 31 53306 Malelane Gate Numbi Gate on the R569 road from Hazyview 25 9 19 S 31 11 51 E 25 15528 S 31 19750 E 25 15528 31 19750 Numbi Gate Phabeni Gate on the road off the R536 from Hazyview 25 01 30 S 31 14 29 E 25 02500 S 31 24139 E 25 02500 31 24139 Phabeni Gate Paul Kruger Gate on the R536 road from Hazyview 24 58 53 S 31 29 7 E 24 98139 S 31 48528 E 24 98139 31 48528 Paul Kruger Gate Orpen Gate on the R531 road from Klaserie 24 28 33 S 31 23 27 E 24 47583 S 31 39083 E 24 47583 31 39083 Orpen Gate Phalaborwa Gate on the R71 road from Phalaborwa 23 56 44 S 31 9 54 E 23 94556 S 31 16500 E 23 94556 31 16500 Phalaborwa Gate Punda Maria Gate on the R524 road from Thohoyandou 22 44 18 S 31 0 33 E 22 73833 S 31 00917 E 22 73833 31 00917 Punda Maria Gate Pafuri Gate on the R525 road from Musina 22 24 1 S 31 2 29 E 22 40028 S 31 04139 E 22 40028 31 04139 Pafuri Gate Wilderness trails EditNine different trails are on offer in the Kruger National Park 133 Some are overnight and they last several days in areas of wilderness virtually untouched by humans There are no set trails in the wilderness areas a visitor walks along paths made by animals or seeks out new routes through the bush Gallery Edit Elephant family at an artificial water hole Male giraffes necking Two lionesses having a break after an unsuccessful hunt A greater kudu bullSee also Edit South Africa portalKruger to Canyons Biosphere Abel Chapman Battle at Kruger Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park Makuleke Protected areas of South Africa Skukuza Kruger National Park in the 1960s a timeline of events Sabi Sand Game Reserve SanWild Wildlife SanctuaryReferences Edit East R ed 1989 Chapter 10 South Africa Antelopes Southern and South Central Africa Pt 2 Global Survey and Regional Action Plans International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources Antelope Specialist Group p 60 ISBN 978 2 88032 970 9 Merriam Webster s Collegiate Encyclopedia Merriam Webster January 2001 p 902 ISBN 978 0 87779 017 4 The Official SADC Trade Industry and Investment Review 2006 PDF Southern African Development Community 2006 p 217 Retrieved 23 July 2011 a b Stevenson Hamilton J 1937 South African Eden The Kruger National Park 1902 1946 Struik Publishers Modise A 2015 Foreign visitor numbers to Kruger National Park on the rise in 2014 2015 financial year South African Department of Environmental Affairs Retrieved 6 January 2020 UNESCO MAB Biosphere Reserves Directory unesco org Stevenson Hamilton James 1939 South African Eden London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Kruger National Park Archived 31 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Lonely Planet page 467 a b c d Foxcroft Llewellyn C Richardson DM Wilson JR 2008 Ornamental Plants as Invasive Aliens Problems and Solutions in Kruger National Park South Africa 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Press Release Great Elephant Census Final Results TheGreatElephantCensus 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2019 a b Swart Magda 13 November 2012 Radikale reddingsplan Beeld Archived from the original on 16 May 2013 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Ntlemo Benson 25 November 2020 Rural community threatens to shut down Kruger Park s Punda Maria gate Daily Maverick South Africa Mukurukuru Media Retrieved 7 December 2020 Majiet Laila 11 August 2022 Over 100 animals killed in suspected poisoning in Kruger National Park news24 com City Press Retrieved 11 August 2022 a b South African National Parks SANParks Official Website Accommodation Activities Prices Reservations sanparks org Retrieved 3 January 2020 Campbell Paul Private Safari Lodges Located Inside The Kruger National Park Travel Butlers Ltd Retrieved 3 January 2020 South African National Parks SANParks Official Website Accommodation Activities Prices Reservations sanparks org Retrieved 4 January 2020 South African National Parks SANParks Official Website Accommodation Activities Prices Reservations sanparks org Retrieved 4 January 2020 Berg en Dal Rest Camp Kruger National Park Accommodation krugerpark co za Retrieved 4 January 2020 Kruger accommodation review Berg en Dal Rest Camp Getaway Magazine 1 May 2013 Retrieved 4 January 2020 South African National Parks Malelane Camp Activities sanparks org Retrieved 4 January 2020 South African National Parks Malelane Camp Accommodation sanparks org Retrieved 4 January 2020 Kruger accommodation review Lower Sabie Rest Camp Getaway Magazine 17 May 2013 Retrieved 4 January 2020 Kruger National Park South Africa Wild Safari Guide Retrieved 4 February 2021 Further reading EditCarruthers Jane 1995 The Kruger National Park A Social and Political History Natal University of KwaZulu Natal Press ISBN 9780869809150 External links EditKruger National Park at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Travel information from Wikivoyage Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Kruger National Park official website Webcams in the Kruger Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kruger National Park amp oldid 1169842035, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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