identification, distribution and conservation status of

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Aug 11, 2003 - the tail of C. aurata is not nearly as long as depicted in Dorst & Dandelot (1970). The tail of C. aurata is black-tipped, and, in C. a. aurata, either ...
Journal of East African Natural History 101(1): 3–16 (2012)

IDENTIFICATION, DISTRIBUTION AND CONSERVATION STATUS OF THE AFRICAN GOLDEN CAT CARACAL AURATA IN KENYA Thomas M. Butynski Eastern Africa Primate Diversity and Conservation Program P.O. Box 149, 10400 Nanyuki, Kenya [email protected] Helen Douglas-Dufresne Milgis Trust, P.O. Box 93, 10105 Naro Moru, Kenya [email protected] Yvonne A. de Jong Eastern Africa Primate Diversity and Conservation Program P.O. Box 149, 10400 Nanyuki, Kenya [email protected]

ABSTRACT The African golden cat Caracal aurata is Africa’s least known felid. This paper describes how C. aurata can be most readily identified in the field and reviews what is known about this species’ distribution and conservation status in Kenya. Forty-six records for C. aurata from 38 sites were compiled. The Mau Forest is the only site in Kenya from which specimens of C. aurata have been obtained and remain available. Most of the records are for the four largest highland forests (Mount Elgon, Mau Forest, Aberdares Range, Mount Kenya). Other sites include Olorgesailie, Shompole Swamp, Pelewa Hills, Kaja, Tsavo West National Park, Tsavo East National Park, Maunga Hills, and Arabuko-Sokoke Forest. The distribution of C. aurata in Kenya remains poorly known. There can be little doubt that C. aurata is one of Kenya’s rarest mammals and that its population is now highly fragmented. An open-access database (‘GoldenCatBase’) has been established to help bring more attention to C.aurata in Kenya and to aid in the compilation of information on its distribution and conservation status. Keywords: African golden identification, Kenya.

cat,

Caracal aurata, conservation, distribution,

INTRODUCTION Although the African golden cat Caracal aurata (Temminck, 1827) (figure 1) has a large geographic range in the forest zone of Equatorial Africa, it is Africa’s least studied felid (Brodie, 2009). Indeed, observations of C. aurata in the wild are rare. Previously placed in the genus Felis or genus Profelis (Ray & Butynski, in press), a

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T.M. Butynski, H. Douglas-Dufresne & Y.A. de Jong

recent molecular study indicates that the African golden cat is congeneric with the caracal C. caracal (Schreber, 1776) and serval C. serval (Schreber, 1776). Divergence time from the common ancestor with C. caracal is estimated at 1.9 million years (Johnson et al., 2006).

Figure 1. Reddish-brown or ‘golden’ phase of the eastern subspecies of the African golden cat Caracal aurata aurata. This is the most common colour phase for C. aurata reported for Kenya. Drawing by Stephan Nash.

Caracal aurata is known to occur from Senegal eastwards across equatorial Africa to south-western Kenya. There are no records for Tanzania (Kingdon, 1977; Ray & Butynski, in press). Two subspecies are currently recognized. Caracal a. celidogaster (Temminck, 1827) is the West Africa subspecies, occurring west of the Cross River on the Nigeria-Cameroon border; the spotting is usually all over the body, there is a dark mid-line along the back, and the tail is banded (either distinctly or indistinctly). Caracal a. aurata is the eastern Africa subspecies, occurring east of the Congo River; there is no spotting except on the flanks and belly, the dark mid-dorsal line is absent or faint, and the tail is either not banded or indistinctly banded. East of the Cross River and west of the Congo River there is a large intermediate or clinal zone (Van Mensch & van Bree, 1969). This paper is concerned with the identification, distribution and conservation status of C. aurata in Kenya. The main objectives of this paper are (1) to draw attention to the existence of this species while facilitating more rapid and accurate identification in the field, (2) to put into one place all of the reported records for C. aurata in Kenya, and (3) to provide, based on the reported records, a preliminary map of the distribution of C. aurata in Kenya.

African golden cat in Kenya

5

METHODS The information presented here on C. aurata was obtained primarily through (1) a detailed review of the literature; (2) examination of museum collections, photographs and videos; and (3) correspondence over the past two decades with many of Kenya’s most experienced naturalists and others. In search of reports of encounters with C. aurata, the authors directly contacted more than 50 people. About 550 additional people were contacted by posting the request for information on two popular websites (groups.yahoo.com/group/kenyabirdsnet/ and groups.yahoo.com/group/tanzaniabirds/). Most of the sight records were obtained by experienced naturalists, very few of whom had any doubt that what they observed was C. aurata. No attempt was made to validate or otherwise ‘judge’ any of the sight records. Some observers reported encountering C. aurata at the same site on more than one occasion. IDENTIFICATION

Caracal aurata is a medium-size, strongly built cat with a small, round head, short, rounded, black-backed ears, and a medium length, black-tipped, tail (figure 1). Adult females are, on average, about 65% the weight of adult males (ca. 7 kg vs. 11 kg). The colour of the pelage is very variable; colour morphs include pale sandy, reddish-brown, chestnut-red, chocolatebrown, greyish-brown, silver-grey, bluish-grey, and jet-black (melanistic). Dark grey to dark brown spots are nearly always visible on the belly and inside limbs. Elsewhere the spotting ranges from absent to densely covering the entire body. Spots vary from large and distinct circles or rosettes, to small and obscure freckles (Van Mensch & van Bree, 1969; Ray & Butynski, in press). Most observations of C. aurata in the wild last for but a few seconds and are usually made under less than ideal conditions; light is often poor and vegetation is usually dense. While C. aurata may be active at any time of the day or night, most observations are within a few hours after dawn or within a few hours before dusk. The impression of the senior author, based on several encounters with C. aurata in south-western Uganda, is that this species is particularly active during the grey period soon after mid- and late-afternoon rains. Almost all observations of C. aurata are of animals on the ground, often in forest in the vicinity of water (especially streams and rivers) and along dirt roads that pass through, or next to, forest. People encountering C. aurata in the wild for the first time are often confused as to the identity of the species they are observing. This is mainly because few people know of the existence of C. aurata. In addition, those who are aware of this species do not know what the diagnostic characters are, and, therefore, fail to note these characters during what is usually a brief encounter. As such, we here provide a summary of how to quickly, and unambiguously, distinguish adult C. aurata from adults of the other six species of felid of tropical Africa. Body size readily distinguishes C. aurata (adult body weight = 6–14 kg) from adults of the three largest of Africa’s felids; leopard Panthera pardus (Linnaeus, 1758) (28–60 kg), cheetah Acinonyx jubatus (Schreber, 1775) (35–65 kg), and lion Panthera leo (Linnaeus, 1758) (122–182 kg). In addition, all three of these species have tails that are long relative to the head-body length. Of these three species, it is only with P. pardus that C. aurata is broadly sympatric. A small, melanistic, P. pardus can be distinguished from a melanistic C. aurata by its proportionately much longer tail that trails well behind the body. The tail of P. pardus is >60% the length of the head-body vs. 2400 m in some moist sites [e.g. at 2440 m in the montane forest/bush/glade mix that is common in the vicinity of The Ark on the Salient of the Aberdares (D. Gulden, pers. comm.) and to >2600 m on farmland on the northern slope of Mount Kenya (W. Knocker, pers. comm.)]. Study of the drawings and text presented in Kingdon (1977), in Sunquist & Sunquist (2009), and in this article, should serve as a good primer to identifying C. aurata in the field. Some of the best photographs of wild C. aurata are presented in Boy (2003), in Bahaa-el-din et al. (2011), and at ARKive (www.arkive.org). Excellent camera trap videos of wild C. aurata have been obtained by Laila Bahaa-el-din in Gabon. These can be viewed at: http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/08/29/scientists-capture-rare-video-of-elusive-african-cat/. Be aware that many of the photographs of C. aurata that have been published (e.g. Boy, 2003; Sunquist & Sunquist, 2009), or which appear on the internet, are of obese, captive, individuals that may look considerably different from free-living individuals.

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T.M. Butynski, H. Douglas-Dufresne & Y.A. de Jong

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Habitat Over its extensive geographic range, C. aurata occurs from 0–3600 m in a wide range of habitats: woodland, thicket, savannah/forest mosaic, coastal forest, riverine forest, gallery forest, swamp forest, lowland forest, mid-altitude forest, montane forest, subalpine forest, and moorland (Kingdon, 1977, Ray & Butynski, in press). More than any other African felid, C. aurata is associated with forest and with the edge of forest (e.g. river banks, glades). Mean annual rainfall over the known geographic range is about 1200–2400 mm (Ray & Butynski, in press). Colour phase Where the colour of the C. aurata that was encountered is not reported (table 1), it seems likely that the animal encountered was of the typical (expected) golden/reddish/tawny colour. Of the 33 sightings in Kenya where the colour phase was mentioned, 27 (82%) of the individuals were golden/reddish/tawny, five (15%) were grey, and one (3%) was melanistic. Other colour phases probably also occur in Kenya but have yet to be reported. Group size For Kenya, there are only six reports of more than one animal being observed during an encounter: Dent (Gandar Dower, 1937) observed a group of four on Mount Kenya in 1931; Hardy (1979) observed an adult with two young in the Aberdares in 1979; J. Fanshawe et al. (pers. comm.) observed two to the west of Arabuko-Sokoke in 1983. Virani (1993, pers. comm.), twice, observed an adult female with two kittens in Arabuko-Sokoke in 1992–93. M. Wheeler et al. (pers. comm.) observed two at Tassia in 2009. When the number of animals encountered is not mentioned in a report, it seems fairly safe to assume that only one individual was observed. If this assumption is made, then about 87% of the 46 encounters were with single C. aurata. Distribution in Kenya There are only three reports for C. aurata in Kenya that are based on ‘animals in the hand’ (table 1, figure 4). The only record for C. aurata in Kenya that can be confirmed at this time by a specimen is that of A. Toschi who obtained two skins from Ogiek tribesman in the Mau Forest in early 1946 (Toschi, 1946; Boy, 2003). One of these specimens is, today, in the Mammalogy Section of the Zoology Department at the National Museums of Kenya. The present location of the other specimen is not known. In 1955, Parker (2004) recovered a jacket made of animal skins from a Mau Mau fighter in the Aberdares. One of the skins was identified at the Coryndon Museum (now the National Museums of Kenya) as that of a C. aurata. The whereabouts of this skin at this time is not known. Ken Brown (pers. comm.) reports finding a C. aurata in a snare in 1974 at Kadja, near Mutha, Ukambani Area. This individual was not collected and no photograph was taken. The oldest published ‘sight record’ for C. aurata in Kenya is by R.E. Dent (Gandar Dower, 1937; Boy, 2003) of four animals in 1931 at the headwaters of the Kathita River, above Meru, north-eastern Mount Kenya (table 1, figure 4). The distribution map for C. aurata that is presented in Boy (2003) depicts 16 sites for Kenya, one of which derives from specimens (Toschi, 1946), while the other 15 are based on sight records. Here we report on 46 records for C. aurata in Kenya, all but three (6%) of which are ‘sight only’ records (see above). There is no photograph or video of a live C. aurata in Kenya.

Kassawai R., Mt. Elgon

Kitum Cave, Mt. Elgon N.P..

Endebess Bluff, Mt. Elgon N.P.

1 km SW of Kimothon Gate, Mt. Elgon N.P. Koitoboss Peak Road, Mt. Elgon N.P.

Koitoboss Peak Road, Mt. Elgon N.P. Upper Legoman Valley, Mau F.R. Mau Forest

Shompole Swamp at foot of Mt. Shompole Ewaso Ngiro R. near Shompole Swamp Ol Keju R., Olorgesailie Lokululit, Pelewa Hills, south of Kajiado Kirichwa Kidogo R. off Riverside Drive, Nairobi

2

3

4

5

6

9

13

11 12

10

8

7

6

Oct. 2004

Chelulus Circuit, Mt. Elgon N.P.

1

Late 1980s

Feb. 1986 2001–2003

1997

1989

Pre-1946

1951

19 Feb. 2012

Mid-July 2011

2006

18 Dec. 2001

2005

1943

Date

Site Site number Mixed forest with podo, juniper, and figs

Vegetation type*

ca. 1730

Riverine scrub Streambeds and hillsides in semi-arid areas ?

ca. 1000 ca. 1600

Greyish-red

Warm chestnut ?

?

?

ca. 650

Reddish

?

Golden-brown

Grey

Golden-brown

Golden-brown

?

Warm chestnut

Podo with thick undergrowth Mixed montane forest dominated by olive and juniper Olive forest with open glades ?

Podo and bamboo forest

Juniper and podo open forest and glade

?

Golden-brown

Pelage colour

Between 2000– ? 2500 ca. 700 Riverine scrub

ca. 2500

3000

2400

2400

2200

2225

Between 2000– Forest 2400

2010

Altitude (m)

Table 1. Summary of 46 reports for the African golden cat Caracal aurata in Kenya.

I. McRae cited in Boy (2003) M. W ykstra & C. Wambua cited in Boy (2003) Burchard (2003)

A. Melesi cited in Boy (2003)

I. McRae cited in Boy (2003)

Toschi (1946)

Seth-Smith (1995)

D. Martins, pers. comm.

K. Avery & S. Avery, pers. comm.

S. Turner, pers. comm.

D. Martins cited in Boy (2003)

S.E. Mamlin, pers. comm.

B. Brooksbank cited in Boy (2003)

D. Martins, pers. comm.

Source

African golden cat in Kenya 9

Upper Honi R., 11 Aug. 2003 Aberdares N.P. The Ark, Aberdares N.P. 6 Jan. 1995

16

Probably Aberdares 1951 Forest Western edge of Solio 1980 Conservancy on northeastern foothills of Aberdares Range Moyok R., Tharua 2005

Moyok R., Tharua

Lower Rongai R., Mt. Kenya

21

21

22

20

1944

2009

7 Oct. 1979

?

19

Eastern Aberdares Range Kinaini R., Aberdares F.R.

ca. 1932

1 Dec. 1994 12 July 1995

18

17

Salient, Aberdares N.P. Salient, Aberdares N.P.

15 15

?

ca. 2370

ca. 2200

1830

Near river in yellow fever forest Near river in yellow fever forest. ?

Thick bush

ca. 1900

1830

?

?

Between 2100– ? 2800 2440 Forest

Moorland

? ?

2500

? ?

?

ca. 1991

Salient, Aberdares N.P.

15

Tawny

Pelage colour

?

Golden/orange

Reddish-brown

Tawny

Grey

Reddish-brown

?

Brownish-red

Black

Rich russet Apparently russet

Montane forest and grassy Reddish-brown glades ? ?

Forest

ca. 2400 2133

Salient, Aberdares N.P.

15

Vegetation type*

Altitude (m)

14 July 1979

Kimakia R., Aberdares F.R. 4 Jan. 1981

Date

14

Site Site number

R. Hook cited in Boy (2003)

H. Douglas-Dufresne, pers. obs. J. Macleod, pers. comm.

K. Brown, pers. comm.

M. Seth-Smith, pers. comm. in Seth-Smith (1995) Seth-Smith (1995) S. Belcher, pers. comm. in Anon. (1996) Church (2003), C. Church pers. comm. J. Cullen, pers. comm. in Anon. (1996) R. E. Dent cited in Heuvelmans (1958) Watson (1980); R. Watson, pers. comm. in Anon. (1996) Parker (2004)

J. & C. Rowing cited in Boy (2003) Hardy (1979)

Source

10 T.M. Butynski, H. Douglas-Dufresne & Y.A. de Jong

Mt Kenya Pre-1990 Confluence of Liki R. and 27 Mar. 2003 Liki North R., Mt. Kenya Southern Lolldaiga Hills ca. 1990

Tassia, Laikipia

Near Lekurruki/Ilngwesi boundary, Laikipia Ngare Ndare Forest, SW Lewa, Laikipia Close to headwaters of Kathita R., above Meru, Mt. Kenya Kadja, near Mutha, Ukambani area, Kitui

28

29

32

31

30

28

Soit Narok, Makandora, Nanyuki R., Dol Dol Road Tassia, Laikipia

27

26

1974

1931

May 2009

Oct. 2010

May 2009

Apr. 2009

29 Aug. 2007

? Golden-brown

?

Tawny

Pelage colour

?

Thick bush near river

ca. 650

Acacia woodland on edge of sand lugga Edge of acacia woodland

Thick, mixed-scrub near lugga Thick, mixed-scrub near lugga

Tawny

?

Grey

One was sandyyellow and one was greyishbrown Reddish-tan

Pale sandy-yellow

Acacia-euclea Tawny bushland/woodland near river On a rock near riverine Reddish-gold scrub

? ?

?

On road through dense montane forest

Vegetation type*

3100

1830

1250

1130

1130

1725

1910

? ca. 2100

?

24 25

Pre-1937

ca. 2700

ca. 1984

On road between Meteorological Station and Naro Moru Gate, Mt. Kenya Mt. Kenya

23

24

Altitude (m)

Date

Site Site number

K. Brown, pers. comm.

R. E. Dent cited in Heuvelmans (1958)

C. W heeler, pers. comm.

C. W heeler, pers. comm.

M. W heeler, A. Hall, C. Murray & J. Bastard, pers. comm.

M. W heeler, pers. comm.

M. Kattenhøj, pers. comm.

A. Abdi cited in Gandar Dower (1937) T. Archer, pers. comm. R. & N. Fernandes cited in Boy (2003) R. W ells, pers. comm.

M. Otieno pers. comm. to T. Young

Source

African golden cat in Kenya 11

1992 & 1993

28 Aug. 1983

15 Mar. 1983

14 Mar. 1983

Aug. 1997

?

Riverine scrub Thick commiphora woodland with heavy under-brush Thick commiphora woodland with heavy under-brush On road through dense bush Cynometra forest

ca. 900

ca. 500 ca. 500

ca. 80

ca. 150

ca. 500

Vegetation type*

Altitude (m) Leuschner (2003)

Source

Two seen. Both probably sandybrown Rich fawn-brown

J. Fanshawe, M. Kelsey, J. Bowler & G. Allport, pers. comm. Virani (1993); M. Virani, pers. comm.

A. Rasa, pers. comm. to J. Fawn-brown with Fanshawe greyish shimmer

P. Kahumbu cited in Boy (2003) Tawny-brown grey A. Rasa, pers. comm. to J. Fanshawe

?

?

Pelage colour

*acacia = Acacia spp.; bamboo = Arundinaria alpina K.Schum.; commiphora = Commiphora spp.; cynometra = Cynometra webberi Baker f.; euclea = Euclea divinorum Hiern; juniper = Juniperus procera Hochst. ex Endl.; olive = Olea europaea L.; podo = Podocarpus falcatus (Thunb.) Endl., P. latifolius (Thunb.) R.Br. ex Mirb.; yellow fever = Acacia xanthophloea Benth.

38

37

36

35

34

1999

33

Voyager Ziwani Tented Camp, just south of Tsavo West N.P. Lugard’s Falls, Galana R., Tsavo East N.P. 6 km from Maungu Hills, Taru (4 km south of Maungu Village) 18 km from Maungu Hills, Taru (16 km south of Maungu Village) 70 km from Malindi on road to Sala Gate, Tsavo East N.P. Jilore Forest Station, Arabuko-Sokoke F.R.

Date

Site Site number

12 T.M. Butynski, H. Douglas-Dufresne & Y.A. de Jong

African golden cat in Kenya

13

Figure 4. The 38 sites in Kenya where the African golden cat Caracal aurata has been reported. See table 1 for the details related to each site number.

The majority of records for C. aurata in Kenya are for the four largest highland forests; Mount Elgon and Mau Forest in south-western Kenya, and Aberdares Range and Mount Kenya in central Kenya. Seven sites for Kenya are of particular interest; Olorgesailie, Shompole Swamp, Pelewa Hills, Tsavo West National Park, Tsavo East National Park, Maunga Hills, and Arabuko-Sokoke Forest. If valid, these records greatly extend the range of C. aurata; Shompole Swamp is ca. 190 km south-east of the centre of the Mau Forest, and Arabuko-Sokoke is ca. 200 km south-east of Mutha. Furthermore, all of these sites put C. aurata into drier habitats than previously reported for anywhere over the species’ range (1200-2400 mm mean annual rainfall); mean annual rainfall for Arabuko-Sokoko is ca. 1000 mm and mean annual rainfall for the Olorgesailie-Shompole area is ca. 500 mm. At Tsavo East National Park and in the Olorgesailie-Shompole region, the sightings were in dry ‘riverine scrub’, and at Maunga Hills the sightings were in ‘thick commiphora woodland’, two habitats not previously reported to be used by C. aurata. In West Africa and in west Central Africa, C. aurata occurs in forest at sea level (Ray & Butynski, in press). Thus, it should not be too surprising to find this species in the coastal forests of East Africa, although the coastal forests of East Africa are considerably drier than those of western Africa. In any case, there is no confirmed record (e.g. specimen, photograph, video) for the occurrence of C. aurata where the mean annual rainfall is