Cape Argus

Baboons burnt but only one death

11 troops monitored – they have resources; do not feed them

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THE CITY of Cape Town’s environmen­tal management department is making every effort to ensure that globally important fauna and flora is monitored and managed during and after fires, the city said yesterday.

This included ensuring the safety and well-being of baboon troops. With the assistance of 63 rangers from service provider Human Wildlife Solutions, the department managed 11 baboon troops around the city, the City said.

Three troops had home ranges in the vicinity of Ocean View, Glencairn, and Simon’s Town affected by fires on January 11. During post-fire assessment­s two juvenile baboons from the Da Gama troop were spotted with burns.

Over the past few days, the city’s urban wildlife veterinari­an, together with animal welfare profession­als, monitored the injured baboons on a daily basis. The city, on advice of its animal experts, took the decision to leave a juvenile female baboon with a burnt hand with her mother in the hope that she would recover in her natural environmen­t.

The juvenile baboon was monitored. Sadly, her condition worsened and she died on Saturday night.

“At the time we decided that the kindest action would be to leave the juvenile with her mother and not to traumatise her any further by separating her from the troop. It is very unfortunat­e that she did not survive,” mayoral committee member for transport and urban developmen­t authority Brett Herron said.

“We are monitoring the other juvenile baboon who is feeding well. The juvenile, with a limp, was seen climbing rocks and appears to be recovering.”

While 65% of the Da Gama troop’s home range burnt, there was water on the mountain and a large stretch of unburnt vegetation south of the Kleinplaas Dam in their home range. The Da Gama troop was choosing at present to feed in the burnt zone where they had found food such as insects, seeds, and bulbs exposed in the post-fire moonscape-like landscape.

“Officials have assessed the situation and confirmed that there is sufficient food and water for all 11 baboon troops around the city. Residents are asked not to feed the baboons – this is prohibited by law. Feeding baboons will encourage them to raid homes.

“Residents caught feeding baboons can receive fines ranging from a minimum R2 500 spot fine for a first offence to R40 000 or one year in prison (or both) for a second,” Herron said.

City officials were working with welfare authoritie­s to tend to animals injured during the fires. Regrettabl­e deaths reported included a grysbok, a number of snakes and tortoises. MONDAY JANUARY 23 2017

Ecologists confirmed that fire can be a positive occurrence – fynbos requires fire to regenerate plants, undergroun­d storage organs, and seeds. Many smaller insects and animals took cover from a fynbos fire by hiding in rocks or below ground and the eggs of tortoises were adapted to survive a fynbos fire, he said.

“For fynbos on the Cape Peninsula and adjacent mountain ranges an average fire interval of 15 years is ideal, but eight to 30 years is acceptable. In Somerset West, the youngest vegetation was eight years old, having previously burnt in February 2009.

“On the Peninsula, the vegetation was 17 years old, having generated following the 2000 fires.

“Therefore, in all areas, good seed banks are in place for germinatio­n this winter and spectacula­r bulb displays may be anticipate­d in spring,” Herron said.

However, invasive alien trees remained a fire risk in all areas. Stands of pines, gums, wattles, and hakea, or felled slash, provided unnaturall­y high fuel loads which were estimated to burn 10 times hotter than fynbos. The excessive heat from fire in a stand of invasive trees incinerate­d seeds and bulbs. It also contribute­d to higher fauna deaths as animals and insects did not survive. – ANA

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