• Tours
    • Extreme Nature Tours
      • Stephanie and Adrian
      • Jason and Adam
      • Fredrik and Michael
    • Amarok Family Weekend
    • Educational Trips
      • Nightwatch Diary
      • Cloud Dog – 2011
  • Snake project
  • Hluhluwe Accommodation
  • Meet the crew!
    • Issie
  • About
  • Home
  • Duke of Edinburgh Award
  • Mid Kent 2012 – Animal Care Course

Tag Archive for facts about hyaena

Did You Know – Spotted Hyaena

Lacey / September 28, 2011 / No comments

See below our fact sheet for the spotted Hyaena (Crocuta crocuta)

Spotted Hyaena (hyena) Scientific name: Crocuta crocuta  Description: Largest of the hyena family, look bearlike. Hyena are carnivores that are related to the mongoose. May have originated in Asia 5 million years ago. Coat is short and thin. Colour reddish brown/tan coat which gets lighter and less spotted with age. Natal coat is black, no spots. Yearling coat grey and heavily spotted.  Habitat: Found in savannah and where ever there are antelope and zebra.  Life expectancy: Males and females can live 20-25 years in the wild. Captive hyaena  have been known to reach 40.  Communication: One of the most vocal African animals. Have 11 different calls. - Groans and squeals - greeting - Whooping - contact call - Fast whooping - Rally call - male calls tend to be ignored. - Lowing - shows impatience, usually when waiting at a kill. 	  Diet: Carnivore, rarely eats insects/fruit/vegetable. Unlike other carnivores eats most of animal (other carnivores can waste up to 40%). Hyaenas have the ability to eat and digest everything, even bones, hooves, teeth and smaller horns which are all digested within 24 hours. Hyaenas eat everything except the stomach content of their prey. Taking the easy way for food they will scavenge or pick young/injured animals. But they are capable of taking down wildebeest three time their size.  Social structure: Live in large groupd to defend territory. But unlike other social carnivores; - compete more and co-operate less. - Females are bigger than the males - Females compete for rank and food - No cross suckling of young - Males play no parental role  - the few that are allowed near the cub dens are bullied by higher ranking offspring.   Male/female: Not as easy as you'd think... Males: height 79-86cm Females: Larger than males height 84-89cm.  Both sexes have 2 teats and boneless penis 14.5-19.5cm. Female penis changes at puberty as urethral opening splits open and teats enlarge.  Behaviour: Movement - rarely trots, moves at about 6mph. Can run 25-31mph but only for a few miles.  Predators: No real predators, but heavy competition. Spotted hyaena practice mobbing attacks against rival clans and lions - usually to claim a kill. Lack of cooperative defense does put hyaena to disadvantage. Use vultures as indicator of carcass.   Did You Know: -Their jaws are capable of exerting pressures of up to 800 kg/square inch!  -Another name for the spotted hyena is the “laughing hyena”.

Category: Albizia camp, Bushwire, Did you know?, Environmental Awareness Course / Tags: Environmental awareness course, facts about hyaena, facts about hyena, factsheet, hluhluwe accomodation, hluhluwe-imfolozi, Hyena, learn about hyena, south africa, south african animals, Spotted hyaena, spotted hyaena fact sheet, spotted hyena fact sheet
 
  • email twitter facebook flickr youtube
  • Blog Posts

    • Accommodation near game reserve (8)
      • Hluhluwe Accommodation (7)
    • Activities (32)
    • African Safari (21)
      • Hluhluwe-Imfolozi (13)
    • Albizia camp (56)
      • Cloud dog (7)
      • Mid Kent 2011 (22)
      • Mid Kent 2012 (6)
    • Amarok Weekend (6)
    • Antons Africa Adventure (3)
    • Bushwire (105)
      • Birding (10)
      • Did you know? (20)
      • Environmental Awareness Course (55)
      • Snake Call out (5)
    • Donald Schultz (14)
    • Duke of Edinburgh Award (13)
      • DofE2012 (10)
      • Gold 2012 (12)
    • Emma's Kitchen (4)
      • Dessert anyone? (2)
      • Whats for dinner? (3)
    • Extreme Nature Tour (41)
      • Devost2012 (12)
      • Fredrik and Mikael (8)
      • Jason and Adam (7)
    • Family holidays (3)
    • Forest Cobra Project (33)
      • FC01 (19)
      • Phase 2 (18)
    • In the News (6)
    • Just a Day (2)
    • Just for fun (2)
    • KwaZulu Natal (16)
    • KZN (13)
    • MidKent2011 (1)
    • New friends (13)
    • Our animals (25)
    • Photography (3)
      • Roger De La Harpe (2)
    • Road cruise (6)
    • Special Offers (3)
    • Wetland Park Group (16)
      • Amangwane Kosi Bay (7)
  • Recent Items

    • Sunday Tribune Competition at Umkhumbi Lodge
    • New student Catalogue
    • February Facebook Gallery
  • Archives

  • Events

    May 2013
    M T W T F S S
    « Apr    
     12345
    6789101112
    13141516171819
    20212223242526
    2728293031  
  • Search for a Story

Theme by ThemeZee.com