CONSERVATION CHAMPIONS OCTOBER 2021
Speed space
The EWT would like to thank Speedspace for the donation of beautiful cabins for our workspace. For over 45 years, Speedspace has specialised in providing long- or short-term affordable, practical, and efficient on-site space management solutions. These cabins have assisted the staff by providing them with safe, clean, and spacious workspaces, enabling them to continue EWT’s critical conservation work in comfort and style.
Forever Forest
Johan Pansegrouw and Stefan Delpoort visited our Conservation Campus in Midrand last week to plant five indigenous trees that they donated. These trees are the newest addition to our Forever Forest. Thank you Johan and Stefan for your generosity.You can be a conservation champion too! Have you linked your MySchool card to the EWT yet?LATEST STORIES
SAVING SPOTS AND STRIPES
Claire Patterson-Abrolat claire@ewt.org.za and Wendy Collinson-Jonker wendyc@ewt.org.za, Endangered Wildlife Trust infrastructure is a common feature wherever humans have settled. South Africa is rated as the 25th largest country in the world and ranked 18th in relation to the total road length (65,600 km paved, 689,000 km unpaved) and 74th in the total number of cars per 1,000 people. Roads are critical in providing access to primary health care, education, markets, and employment, ultimately improving livelihoods.
However, South Africa is the third most biologically diverse country in the world, and it is increasingly clear that roads and road users affect the functioning of ecosystems in which they occur. Direct collisions with wildlife have the most obvious impact, but the indirect disruption of ecological processes is equally important. Habitat loss, degradation, and population fragmentation, and disruption of the processes that maintain regional populations are just some of the ways roads can affect biodiversity.
Development is taking place rapidly, with new roads and housing developments mushrooming and trans-continental rail and road developments being expedited. In the past, such developments were planned without much thought to their impact on biodiversity, but the EWT has been working hard to improve road-user safety – that of both the occupants of vehicles and the wildlife living adjacent to or crossing our roads. We’ve been collecting data in a variety of ways, including the use of citizen scientists (data submissions from the general public), planned surveys and, importantly, using the road patrollers that drive our highways daily to deal with any hazard they come across, including the removal of dead animals from the road.
The EWT analyses roadkill data regularly, and one of the species that has caught our attention is the Serval. This mostly solitary, nocturnal species was considered extinct, or near-extinct, in the latter half of the 20th century, largely due to the mistaken belief that it caused damage to agricultural crops and compounded by competition from other carnivores such as jackal. Reintroductions and range expansions have led this species to recover to an estimated adult population of somewhere between 4,509 and 13,654 individuals, but the population is again considered to be declining due to a loss of its wetland habitat.
Serval (Leptailurus serval)
Servals are predominantly solitary except when mating or before young would leave their mothers at around eight months old. Like Leopards, the young females form territories adjacent to that of their mother, with males having larger territories that overlap that of several females.
The N3 Toll Concession, which manages the 412 km stretch of road from Heidelburg (Gauteng) to Cedara (KwaZulu-Natal), has been extremely supportive of our efforts to mitigate roadkill along the Toll Route and is concerned about the safety of both the road users and the wildlife living alongside the road.
In addition to our usual reports to the N3 Toll Concession, the EWT has been looking into why the Serval is one of the most common species reported (Figure 2) and why their roadkill numbers show an upward trend.We plotted the location of the roadkill along the N3 and noted that although roadkills were spread along the length of the road, there was a cluster along the northern parts of the route. This area is predominantly highveld sourveld and is either farmed for cattle or game or planted with mieliesWe also looked at the proximity of water to the road. Servals are wetland specialists, which are likely to be clustered close to water bodies. Water is spread fairly evenly across the landscape, and where perennial rivers are not available, farmers have created artificial water points for livestock and/or game. The diet of Servals consists mainly of Vlei Rats, so the abundance of water along the N3 does create the ideal habitat for them.
Our work is still in its infancy, and we plan to keep investigating the drivers of roadkill for this species by investigating the following:
- Whether Serval prefer artificial or natural water bodies;
- The abundance of prey species;
- Whether or not Serval use underpasses (tunnels and culverts) to cross the road; and
- If the Serval being killed on the road are young dispersing males or breeding adults, and the impact of this on the local and broader population.
Thank you to the N3 Toll Concession for their ongoing support of our work and Ford Wildlife Foundation for keeping us on the road.
Reptile Awareness Day Shines Spotlight on Western Cape’s Scaled Biodiversity
This Reptile Awareness Day, we celebrate the remarkable diversity found at Lettas Kraal Private Nature Reserve in the Anysberg region. The Western Cape boasts 155 reptile species, with 22 found nowhere else on Earth. Situated in the transitional zone between mountain fynbos and Klein Karoo veld, Lettas Kraal’s 7,000 hectares provide critical habitat for 54 reptile species – 31 of which were recorded during a 2020 survey by EWT’s Drylands Conservation Programme.
Notable Species at Lettas Kraal
The reserve protects both common and threatened reptiles including:
- Endangered Karoo Dwarf Tortoise (Chersobius boulengeri) – IUCN Red Listed
- Karoo Sand Snake (Psammophis notostictus)
- Western Sandveld Lizard (Nucras tessellata)
- Bibron’s Thick-Toed Gecko (Chondrodactylus bibronii)
- Karoo Dwarf Chameleon (Bradypodion gutturale)
Reptile Awareness Day Initiatives
Our educational event for Anysberg landowners and farmworkers covered:
Identification of local reptile families
- Venomous snake awareness and bite first aid
- Myth-busting about snake behaviour
- Dangerous arachnid recognition (spiders/scorpions)
- Hands-on encounters with common species
Why This Matters
As former EWT Field Officer Jean-Pierre Le Roux notes, Lettas Kraal’s size makes it invaluable for reptile conservation. The reserve:
- Protects vulnerable endemic species
- Provides corridors between habitats
- Offers research opportunities
- Educates local communities
This Reptile Awareness Day, we encourage everyone to appreciate these often-misunderstood creatures that play vital roles in our ecosystems.
Learn more:
Lettas Kraal Nature Reserve
EWT Drylands Programme
MRI Whale Unit Research: Drones Revolutionise Whale Conservation
The MRI whale unit research partnership between the Endangered Wildlife Trust and University of Pretoria is transforming how we study Southern Right Whales. Using cutting-edge drone technology, researchers can now assess whale body conditions and behaviour patterns in a cost-effective, non-invasive manner – critical for understanding climate change impacts on marine ecosystems.
Drone Technology Breakthroughs
The EWT’s licensed drone operations (SACAA-approved since 2020) are enabling groundbreaking conservation work:
- Power line safety: Attaching bird flight diverters
- Wildlife monitoring: Thermal imaging for nocturnal animal counts
- Marine research: Photogrammetry of whale populations
Southern Right Whale Research
The unit employs specialised drones to:
- Capture high-resolution aerial images
- Measure body condition indices (BCI)
- Track individual whales over time
- Compare populations across South Africa, Australia and Argentina
“Drone technology has revolutionised our research,” says Dr Els Vermeulen, MRI Whale Unit Research Manager. “We can now track body condition variations annually and observe behaviours invisible from boats.”
Climate Change Connections
The research highlights worrying trends:
- Krill populations (whales’ main food) affected by ocean warming
- Declining body conditions may indicate ecosystem stress
- Long-term data crucial for conservation planning
How to Get Involved
Contact Lourens Leeuwner (lourensl@ewt.org.za) for drone operation enquiries
USING CONSERVATION CANINES TO SAVE OUR SPECIES FROM THE ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE
Andrew Taylor, Wildlife in Trade Programme Manager, Endangered Wildlife Trust, andrewt@ewt.org.zaIllegal Wildlife Trade (IWT) is one of the biggest threats to biodiversity worldwide, and an ongoing poaching surge places particular strain on some of South Africa’s most threatened species. With funding from IUCN Save Our Species African Wildlife Initiative and the European Union, the Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT) aims to reduce IWT by reducing the poaching of five iconic mammals. White and Black Rhinos, listed as Near Threatened and Critically Endangered respectively on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, are both experiencing population declines due to illegal harvesting. Temminck’s Pangolin, listed as Vulnerable, is being mercilessly targeted by poachers for local and international markets and given its rare status and slow rates of reproduction, they are almost certainly experiencing population declines, although we do not have accurate population data. The African Savannah Elephant, now listed as Endangered, is not currently under threat from poaching in South Africa but has been hugely impacted across the continent, making South African populations more important to secure. Finally, the African Lion, listed as Vulnerable, is coming under increased threat from IWT for its claws and teeth and needs protection from poachers before it’s too late.
A combination of approaches is needed to reduce poaching, each focusing on different links in the wildlife trade chain. When implemented in combination with other measures, one effective method is the use of highly trained conservation canines. These dogs are trained to detect specific wildlife products and, when working at reserve gates and other strategic locations, provide a quick and reliable method of screening vehicles entering for concealed firearms and ammunition and vehicles leaving for wildlife contraband. These dogs thus prevent poachers from using vehicles to carry their weapons into reserves or transport animal parts out. Tracking dogs provide a mechanism to locate incursion entry and exit points along reserve boundaries, track poachers inside reserves, and, if they do not catch up with poachers, can identify routes taken, providing critical data for predicting future poacher movements.
Under this grant, the EWT will support seven reserves threatened by poaching by providing them with detection or tracking dogs, training for dog handlers, as well as ongoing support for dog-handler teams. Three reserves will receive detection dogs, two will receive tracking dogs, and two, which already have dogs, will receive support for their current dogs and handlers. All seven reserves have rhinos and some of the other threatened species mentioned above, and all have experienced revenue losses because of tourist travel bans resulting from COVID-19. This has severely limited their ability to generate sufficient income to maintain functioning conservation canine units to support their anti-poaching defence.
So far, we have three dogs and one new handler undergoing initial training which will be certified before deployment. We are grateful to IUCN Save Our Species and the European Union for the generous support in our fight to protect our threatened species against poaching.

This publication was produced with the financial support of the European Union through IUCN Save Our Species. Its contents are the sole responsibility of the Endangered Wildlife Trust and do not necessarily reflect the views of IUCN or the European Union.
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