Fltterby, nan, Mel, mposthumus
The best known research project carried out in the Kalahari Gemsbok has been the University of Pretoria's study of the Kalahari lion- not a different species from the lion of Kruger Park and elsewhere, but certainly adapted to very different conditions.
The researchers found that the Kalahari lion may be expected to kill 47 animals a year- more than three times as many as its counterpart in the Kruger Park- even though the prey is scarcer in the Kalahari, and the terrain makes it more difficult to catch.
As the researchers discovered, the disparity is a matter of scale. As much as 50% of the Kalahari lion's kill is made up of small mammals, whereas in the Kruger Park the proportion is only 1%. Given the opportunity, a Kalahari lion prefers to dine on ambitious fare such as gemsbok, blue wildebeest or red hartebeest. Sometimes, however, it is reduced to eating springhares, bat-eared foxes and porcupines merely to stay alive (porcupines represent one-quarter of their prey.)
Reference: Reader's Digest Illustrated Guide to Game Parks & Nature Reserves of Southern Africa.
At Dankbaar we found this male
and this guy waiting patiently licking his lips
