#Ethiopia – The endemic species of the country

ENDEMIC SPECIES OF ETHIOPIABy Tamara Britten, www.exclusiveethiopia.com
All pictures courtesy of Tamara Britten

(Posted 07th May 2020)

With Ethiopia being ATCNews’ feature country for 2019 / 2020, is it a pleasure to introduce to you Tamara Britten of www.ExclusiveEthiopia.com
Tamara will, in an upcoming series of articles, be sharing her destination knowledge, and some of the pictures she has taken while on tour in Ethiopia with ATCNews to give further prominence to Destination Ethiopia, one of Africa’s last tourism frontiers.

Tamara Britten loves travel, books, yoga and music. She has managed a safari camp in Namibia, run a beach bar in Thailand, taught yoga in Ethiopia and supervised an adult education centre in Hong Kong. Tamara is the founder of two companies, Karibu Kenya and Exclusive Ethiopia, offering bespoke holidays including yoga and wellness retreats in Kenya and Ethiopia. She is the author of the Karibu Kenya Accommodation Guide and contributes to numerous regional and international publications.

While Ethiopia is best known for its ancient churches and castles, its remarkable wildlife is also worthy of note. There might not be the huge herds seen in Africa’s more traditional safari destinations, but many species found here exist nowhere else in the world.

Take the wolf. Its sharp features and auburn tinted coat led this charismatic canid to be called either Simien Fox or Red Jackal until DNA tests revealed it to be closer to the grey wolf and the coyote. Ethiopian Wolves like high altitudes of over 3,000m; their northern race is mostly found in the Simien Mountains and the Guassa Plateau while their southern race is in the Bale Mountains and surrounding highlands. They tend to live in packs of between six and 20, but hunt alone. Their food of choice is the Giant Mole Rat which they ambush at the outlets of their burrows, but they have been known to eat other rodents, hyraxes and even the calves of the Mountain Nyala. Sadly, the wolves’ population has decreased dramatically because of expanding human populations, habitat degradation and the transfer of diseases such as rabies and distemper from domesticated dogs, and they are now critically endangered. The wolf population has shrunk to about 350 of which around 70% are in the Bale Mountains.

What’s known as the Gelada baboon, also called the ‘bleeding heart monkey’ because of the distinctive red marking on its chest, is in fact neither a baboon nor a monkey. The only living member of the genus Theropithecus, Greek for ‘beast-ape’, the Gelada is a fluffy, friendly creature that forages for grasses, flowers and roots. Preferring to live at altitudes of between 1,800 and 4,400m, the Gelada is best seen in the Simien Mountains, although they can also be spotted in most highlands around Ethiopia. Geladas are creatures of habit. They sleep tucked into cliffs; at sunrise they move to the plateaus to eat, groom and socialise; in the heat of the day they forage and feed; at dusk they become social again before returning to the cliffs to sleep. They use a complex communication system remarkably similar to human speech that includes sounds, facial expressions and body postures. Geladas usually live for about 15 years.

The skittish Mountain Nyala has attractive white patches on its dusky face; the males have striking spiralled horns while the females have no horns. Despite its name, the Mountain Nyala is a closer relative of the kudu than the South African Nyala. Preferring to live at altitudes of between 3,000 and 3,400m, they’re most frequently found on the Gaysay Plateau near Dinsho, headquarters of the Bale Mountain National Park. Cautious of people, they often spend the night tucked into the edges of forests, sidling onto grasslands during the day to browse. While usually seen in clusters of four to six, they have on occasion congregated in groups of up to 100. The females and their young tend to stay in areas of around 5km2 but the unterritorial males can wander across expanses of up to 20km2. They like to eat bushes, shrubs and foliage, and have sometimes been seen using their horns to reach the higher branches. Their numbers are decreasing because of hunting; around Easter, Oromo men traditionally undertake a horseback nyala hunt. The Mountain Nyala stands proud on the back of Ethiopia’s 10 cents coin.

The Walia Ibex, Ethiopia’s rarest endemic species, is more often seen on the label of the popular local beer named in its honour than in person. Now found only in the Simien Mountains, it’s a rather spectacular goat with dramatic arched horns and incongruous black-and-white striped legs. Walia Ibexes live at altitudes of between 2,500 and 4,500m, and prefer to hang out on rocky cliffs and narrow mountain ledges. They enjoy browsing on bushes, herbs, lichens, shrubs and grasses, and are sometimes spotted standing on their hind legs and stretching up to nibble the tastiest shoots. During mating season, intense fights take place between males who ram their horns into each other. While they aren’t the favourite food of any predators, the young are occasionally taken by foxes and cats. However, their population has been decimated by hunting, expanding human populations and loss of habitat due to farming.

The multi-named Giant Mole Rat is also known as the Big-Headed African Mole Rat, the Ethiopian African Mole Rat and the Giant Root Rat. Only found in the Bale Mountains, these surprisingly large rodents swarm across the grasslands in groups of as many as 2,600. While they live underground in dens and tunnels, they come out to forage for herbs, grasses and roots. Unluckily for them, Giant Mole Rats are the preferred delicacy of the Ethiopian Wolf. These wolves have perfected the technique of chasing them into their tunnels, then waiting for them to resurface and snapping them up.

Despite the gashing of their long sharp teeth which do occasionally cause serious injury, the Giant Mole Rat most often loses the battle with the more voracious Ethiopian Wolf.

2 Responses

  1. Excellent read , such a shame most endemic species are in decline. Are their measures being taken to try reverse the trend ?