Blue Duiker

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Lisbeth
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Blue Duiker

Post by Lisbeth »

Blue duiker bucks nature with garden visit

BY ZIZONKE MAY - 06 December 2018

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Nine month old blue duiker found in Zwide - Image: Supplied

Is it a goat? No, it is a juvenile blue duiker.

Jonty Boxongo, 23, arrived at his Zwide home on Tuesday afternoon to find what appeared to be a baby goat in the garden.

He immediately called his sister to tell her about the strange creature that was huddled in a corner.

His sister, Samantha Silwana, also 23, said her brother was frightened when he called her at work, asking that she call a security company for assistance with the animal.

“He tried to describe it to me,” she said.

“I had no idea what animal it was but from his description it sounded like a springbok.

“I then searched online for animal welfare organisations and called various places.

“I eventually got through to the tourism department, which gave me the number for Arnold Slabbert at Wildline.

“We had also set off the alarm for [security company] ADT to respond and assist my brother as he was in a serious panic because the animal was bleeding.”

Silwana said she was amazed that a wild animal could wander so far into an urban area and she was very sad to not have seen it herself.

“My brother was too scared to go close and take a proper picture, but I searched the internet to find out more about what it could be,” she said.

Slabbert, the founder and chair of Wildline, said the buck was in fact a nine-month-old blue duiker, SA’s second-smallest indigenous antelope.

He said he was very surprised to find it unharmed.

“In the middle of Zwide is not the place you would expect to find wildlife,” he said.

“There are so many dogs roaming around and people who like hunting in that area.

“The buck was in perfect condition.

“It had a few bruises from trying to squeeze through somewhere, but no life-threatening injuries or broken bones.

“It shows how wildlife is capable of adapting and living around humans.

“To catch a blue duiker, which is a threatened species, in the middle of a massive township like that – it’s almost unbelievable.”

Slabbert said the buck could have come from anywhere in the Perseverance area along the Swartkops River.

“The important thing about the blue duiker is that it is a species that falls under Tops [the Threatened or Protected Species regulations].

“Nobody may catch or move them without special permits and they may not be kept in captivity.”

He said that over the past few years there had been an increase in illegal trading of blue duiker, Cape grysbok and steenbok.

After the necessary checks with a vet, the buck was released in the Sardinia Bay coastal bush.


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Peter Betts
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Re: Duiker

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Caught on a nearby farm no doubt


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Re: Duiker

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Tiny! :shock:


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Re: Duiker

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Blue Duiker - SANBI Animal of the week

Nov 12, 2019

Derivation of scientific name

The genus name Philantomba has no known origin and the species name monticola refers to the kind habitat they prefer, derived from Latin words montis (mountain) and colo (‘I cultivate’ or ‘I inhabit’).

Common names: blue duiker (Eng.); blouduiker, duiker (Afr.); iphiti (isiZulu); iphuthi (isiXhosa); phuti (seSotho); mhunti (Xitsonga), phonti (seTswana).

The blue duiker is a very small herbivorous mammal, which inhabits the thickest coastal forests in western, southern and eastern Africa. The blue duiker is a very secretive animal, their population counts and estimates are therefore difficult to establish. The species is subject to extensive hunting for bushmeat throughout its range. The genus Philantomba is believed to the oldest lineage and was the first to diverge; it is the strongest linage of the subfamily Cephalophinae.

A fun fact: the blue refers to the coloration of their hair, which appears to be blue under the forest shade and duiker is an Afrikaans word meaning ‘diver’ or ‘diving buck’, describing their behavior, which is to dive into undergrowth and disappearing into the bush when threatened or alarmed.

Description/How to recognize a……..

The blue duiker is the smallest antelope species in South Africa; their body length ranges between 55 and 80 cm, body height: 320–410 mm, and they are 13–16 mm tall at the shoulder. Females are bigger than males; males weigh around 4 kg while females weigh around 4.7 kg. Both sexes possess short, sharp horns measuring at 5 cm long hidden under short hair in females and both males and females have a 10 cm long tail. They have a light eye-brow ridge, which curves up to the base of the horns, and a glandular slit beneath their eyes. They are covered by a blue-grey coat, while underparts; inner legs and the rump of the tail are whitish.

Getting around

The blue duiker is predominantly active at dawn (first appearance of light) and dusk (darker stage of twilight); they start moving around when monkeys and birds awake, and at midday they lie down and ruminate. Blue duikers use jumping and quadrupedal locomotion. They do not roam around large areas due to their relatively small size. The bonded pair patrol and defend their 2.5 to 4.0 ha of territory from other duikers, and intruders will be chased away by the pair.

Communicating

Blue duikers use four senses for communication: 1) auditory (hearing), 2) visual (seeing), 3) olfactory (smell) and 4) tactile (touch). The flicking of the tail is the primary mode to communicate imminent danger. Males are known to emit a whistling or a sneezing sound to raise alarm, the young one and the mother communicate through a soft growling sound. Another mode of communication is by using scent to mark their territories and to indicate readiness for mating. Social acceptance is indicated by individuals licking each other, but mating pairs are also observed carrying out the same behaviour.

Distribution

Blue duikers are widely distributed across central, western and southern Africa. The population in South Africa ranges coastally and inland from Umfolozi River System in KwaZulu-Natal to the Eastern Cape to as far as George in the Western Cape. Historically the blue duiker occurred in Hluhluwe–iMfolozi and Mkhuze areas, but they currently appear to be absent from these areas (Venter et al. 2016). The blue duiker’s distribution is restricted to the coastal provinces in South Africa, but the species has been introduced into captive-breeding systems around the country.

Source: Venter et al. 2016.

Habitat

The blue duiker thrives in a wide range of forested and wooded habitats, including primary and secondary forests, gallery forests, dry forest patches, coastal scrub and farmlands. The South African blue duiker population prefers coastal forest, thick coastal bushes and thicket where they can hide from predators and rest; the species requires permanent concealment.

Food

They are almost exclusively browsers (feed on leaves) but also feed on fresh fruits, berries, flowers and fresh forest litter on the forest floor; they also dig for tubers and roots. The species is known to feed opportunistically on bird eggs and insects, which technically makes them omnivorous, but they are predominantly herbivorous. They tend to coexist with fruit-eating birds; baboons and monkeys, and follows them around to feed on freshly fallen fruits and leaves from the activity of these animals. They are rarely observed drinking water even if it’s available because they get the water needed from the food they consume.

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Pic: Jean – Flickr

SEX and LIFE CYCLES

They are monogamous (they find a partner and pair for life); a pair will remain together throughout the year, spending much of the time together during their mating season. They are non-seasonal breeders, breeding occurs throughout the year. The blue duiker’s gestation period lasts 7.5 months; they produce one young per birth and twins are very rare. The young ones are hidden after birth for the first few weeks. At five months, the youngsters are weaned. Females reach their sexual maturity between 9 and 12 months and the males between 12 and 18 months. The lifespan of the blue duiker in the wild is 10–12 years, but in captivity, the oldest recorded was 16 years old.

Family life:

Blue duikers have a mean of about four individuals per group, consisting of an adult male and female, one sub-adult and a juvenile. The sub-adult and the juvenile will eventually leave the territory when they reach sexual maturity to establish their territory and find mating partners.

THE BIG PICTURE

Friends and Foes

The blue duiker is a herbivore, predominantly feeding on plants. They mutually coexist with fruit-eating animals like Cape Parrots, Samango monkeys and baboons, since they feed on the freshly fallen fruits and leaves resulting from the activities of these animals. The species is prey to a few predators namely leopard, caracal, wild dogs, hyenas, pythons, crowned eagles, baboons, crocodiles, monitors and humans. They may host external parasites and internally they host several species of nematodes. The blue duiker is hunted by humans in many parts of Africa for meat and income.

The over-exploitation of the blue duiker in some parts of Central and West Africa has been studied and documented by many researchers. Mostly this is due to non-selective hunting using snap traps. This is unsustainable and detrimental to the survival of any species. In South Africa, the legal local and international trade of live animals and the export of hunting trophies, pose a moderate to high risk to survival of the species. The recommendations from the organisations involved in the wildlife trade are that there should be intensive monitoring of the blue duiker within the protected areas to prevent illegal hunting and trade.

Smart Strategies

The blue duiker is adapted to forest thickest where they can conceal themselves from danger and predation. Their known smart strategy is to dive into the bushes and disappear whenever they are alarmed.

Poorer world without me

The blue duiker, like other mammalian species, is threatened by human-induced habitat loss, fragmentation and degradation due to urbanisation and agriculture. The extinction of the blue duiker would be detrimental to the forest dwellers across Africa since most of these tribes depend on animals like duiker for income and food. The species is prey to many small predators; their extinction would mean less prey for these predators, which may threaten their existence. This will also disrupt and cause an imbalance in the ecosystem.

People & I

The body parts of this species are used by humans, for example, horns are used for muthi and the skin for traditional outfits. The blue duiker is a very secretive species and will hide away from humans. Females are very aggressive after birth and may attack if you come to close to the new born. They are killed by farmers when invading their crops although they are not known for feeding on any crops.

Conservation status and what the future holds

The blue duiker is listed as Least Concern by the IUCN global assessment; locally it is listed as vulnerable under the C criterion (VU C1, C2a(i)). The species is listed on CITES Appendix II; it is also listed on TOPS and provincially it is listed as protected game. Throughout the African continent, the blue duiker is mainly threatened by bushmeat hunting for protein and trade. Unsustainable hunting of the species using snap traps, however, could be detrimental to the local ecosystem. In South Africa the species is threatened by legal local and international trade, hunting using dogs and illegal trade.

Reintroduction programmes are the final attempts by researchers and conservationists to maintain and restore biodiversity in the wild. The researchers agree that more research still needs to be done to facilitate successful reintroduction programmes. South Africa has established conservation organisations that are actively involved in conservation, captive breeding, utilisation, translocation and resettlement, research, training and education on small antelopes (OWG & SGBSA). These groups have identified captive breeding as one of the solutions to increase the population numbers by facilitating the reintroduction of captive-bred animals into their natural habitats.

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The non-detriment findings made by SANBI’s (South African National Biodiversity Institute) Scientific Authority in 2017 recommended that there should be intensive monitoring of the blue duiker within the protected areas. FreeMe Wildlife is a Non-profitable company that is permitted to provide rehab of sick and injured animals. They recently added the blue duiker reintroduction project amongst other projects they are running, collaborating with landowners and KZNWildlife. They are currently introducing the blue duiker at Dargle Forest, which used to host a healthy population of blue duikers. The organisation has released five blue duikers to the area so far and they are promising more.

RELATIVES

The blue duiker belongs to the family Bovidae, which also includes antelopes, cattle, gazelles, goats and sheep. The genus Philantomba include Maxwell’s duiker (P. maxwelli) and Walter’s duiker (P. walteri). The species is sometimes treated as the subspecies of the red duiker; genus Cephalophus.

Classification

Official common name: Blue duiker
Scientific name: Philantomba monticola
Classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Genus: Philantomba
Species: P. monticola Thunberg, 1789


https://www.sanbi.org/animal-of-the-week/blue-duiker/


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Richprins
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Re: Duiker

Post by Richprins »

Nice Duiker Klipspringer! :ty:


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Re: Duiker

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Thank you, Klippie ^Q^ ^Q^


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Re: Duiker

Post by Peter Betts »

This is the tiny Blue Duiker ..found in the coastal forests of the Eastern Cape where I live


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