The Citizen (Gauteng)

Land restoratio­n lures a leopard

First spotted in Great Karoo in half a century

- Jim Freeman

Alucky spotting on Mount Camdeboo Private Game Reserve has the reserve’s owner and conservati­onists over the moon about the first “savannah” leopard seen in the Great Karoo in almost half a century.

Mount Camdeboo owner Iain Buchannan says the sighting on 13 July was “a dream come true and confirms our status as a Big Five reserve. We’ve suspected for some time that there is at least one leopard on the property but no conclusive proof has been forthcomin­g till now”.

Buchannan is understati­ng the case: the animal was photograph­ed in a camera trap last year but a tiny technicali­ty invalidate­d the capture.

About the same time, I spent a couple of nights “glamping” very close to where the leopard was observed.

Several times I heard baboon calling in alarm in the kloof below me and, while they’ll do the same for caracal, the level of urgency in their voices suggested a deadlier predator.

The latest sighting is corroborat­ed by video footage.

Helicopter pilot Grant Soulè and veterinari­an Keith Ross were on a game capture flight over Mount Camdeboo, 80km south of Graaff-Reinet, looking for buffalo and kudu, when they spotted the big cat “posing on a rock like something out of The Lion King.

“We weren’t sure whether it was a lion or cheetah,” said Soulè. “However, the shape was wrong for a cheetah and it was sitting differentl­y to a lion. That’s when we started to get excited.”

The helicopter spent about two minutes above the animal, with Ross filming to establish the leopard’s size, weight, gender and general health.

Soulè, an experience­d gamecaptur­e pilot, says the leopard was not stressed by the helicopter.

He adds that this was by far the largest leopard he has seen from the air during his career; an adult male in its prime, weighing about 80kg.

“This means it is definitely not a Cape mountain leopard, which is much smaller.”

There is no genetic difference between “mountain leopards” and those typically associated with the plains and scrub of the lowveld. Size disparity is largely a result of species of prey and the frequency the cats eat.

Bigger leopards typically have a much smaller range of migration due to a greater abundance of prey in their immediate environmen­t.

Local historian David McNaughton says the last “lowveld” leopard photograph­ed in the Graaff-Reinet area was an animal shot in 1977.

Mount Camdeboo owner Buchannan says the dream of transformi­ng Mount Camdeboo into a Big Five reserve stems from the day his father bought what was then a cattle farm in 1996.

“We started rewilding the land based on the concepts of understand­ing, sustainabl­e restoratio­n, education, growth and celebratio­n.”

Mount Camdeboo Private Game Reserve opened as a commercial operation in 2007 and is managed by Newmark Hotels and Reserves.

“It has taken a huge amount of time, effort and planning to reintroduc­e species that occurred here before they were wiped out two centuries ago.

“Reintroduc­ing leopard was always going to be challengin­g; purely because they don’t always stay within fenced areas.”

The sighting comes with a sense of great reward, says Buchannan.

“By rewilding the environmen­t, we have made it conducive for other species to return. In many ways, the leopard is telling us the land restoratio­n process is complete and the environmen­t is good enough for him to return of his own accord.”

Reserve manager Ulrich Schutte says the valley where the leopard was spotted is one of the remotest spots on the 14 000 hectare property with no roads going in or out.

Rewilding environmen­t, makes it conducive for species to return

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 ?? ?? REWARDED. Mount Camdeboo owner Iain Buchannan.
REWARDED. Mount Camdeboo owner Iain Buchannan.
 ?? ?? Pictures: Jim Freeman
Pictures: Jim Freeman

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