Introduction
The common hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibius formerly occurred across most of sub-Saharan Africa but the species has declined, and has been eradicated from some areas, as a result of habitat conversion and hunting for bushmeat and, increasingly, for ivory (Klingel, Reference Klingel, Kingdon and Hoffmann2013). Its status in North-Central Africa, spanning southern Chad, north Cameroon and the northern Central African Republic, has been poorly documented in continent-wide reviews (Eltringham, Reference Eltringham1999; Klingel, Reference Klingel, Kingdon and Hoffmann2013). According to the IUCN Red List (Lewison & Oliver, Reference Lewison and Oliver2008) the hippopotamus is widespread in Cameroon, with an estimated population of 500–1,500 individuals, but at the time of the review the population trend was unknown and there was concern for the conservation status of the species in the country. Information on the population status of the hippopotamus is particularly relevant in light of the escalating poaching crisis (e.g. Maisels et al., Reference Maisels, Strindberg, Blake, Wittemyer and Hart2013), with trade in hippopotamus canine tusks (up to 70 cm long and weighing up to 16 kg) becoming increasingly lucrative (Eltringham, Reference Eltringham1999). Given the uncertainty about the possible decline in hippopotamus populations in Cameroon, the CITES Standing Committee suspended trade in hippopotamus trophies (CITES, 2013).
A survey in Faro National Park in North Cameroon (Tsi et al., Reference Tsi, Tomedi, Talla and Nguimkeng2011) revealed a hippopotamus population of 600 individuals, and an analysis of surveys carried out in Bénoué National Park revealed there were 400 individuals there in 1987 (Ngog Nje, Reference Ngog Nje1988). The survival of the hippopotamus in North-Central Africa is intrinsically linked to these protected areas, which are part of the northern savannah zone complex that includes, from west to east, Faro National Park, Bénoué National Park and Bouba Ndjida National Park, and 27 safari hunting zones (Njoya, Reference Njoya2008). This 3.35 million ha complex is the last remaining large wildlife conservation refuge in North-Central Africa (Scholte, Reference Scholte2011). The large herbivore fauna of the region (> 2 kg; Scholte, Reference Scholte2011) comprises 17 species, including the most significant population of the largest antelope species, Derby's eland Taurotragus derbianus, on which Cameroon's sport hunting industry depends (Njoya, Reference Njoya2008). So-called hippo lawns, grasslands grazed intensively by hippopotamus, are vital for herbivores as a source of quality forage (Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Verrelst, Loth, Heitköenig and Brunsting2006). Surveys undertaken in the savannah zone complex of Chad, the Central African Republic and Cameroon suggest widespread declines of large mammal populations (Scholte, Reference Scholte2011; Bouché et al., Reference Bouché, Nzapa Mbeti Mange, Tankalet, Zowoya, Lejeune and Vermeulen2012) but there is limited quantitative information available for analysis of population trends.
We conducted hippopotamus counts along the entire Bénoué River within Bénoué National Park in the wet season of 2011 and dry season of 2013. Combined with the biannual partial counts conducted by the Garoua Wildlife College, Cameroon, these data facilitated an assessment of trends in the hippopotamus population over 37 years; this is one of the longest periods of observation of the species (cf. Klingel, Reference Klingel, Kingdon and Hoffmann2013). This assessment also provides insight into the state of the Park, which has limited effective personnel and is under pressure from gold diggers and poachers. We also aim to contribute to the understanding of the continent-wide decline in large mammals, and how long-term environmental changes interact with human pressure and conservation measures (Caro & Scholte, Reference Caro and Scholte2007; Scholte, Reference Scholte2011).
Study area
Bénoué National Park (180,000 ha; Fig. 1) in North Cameroon has a Guinea–Sudanian climate characterized by a single rainy season during April–September, with mean rainfall of c. 1,200 mm in the north and c. 1,500 mm in the south. Towards the end of the dry season temperatures exceed 40°C. The mostly undulating area, with a few isolated mountains, is covered by wooded savannah dominated by trees of the genera Isoberlinia and Terminalia and a diversified grass layer with Andropogon and Hyparrhenia species (Stark & Hudson, Reference Stark and Hudson1985).
The Park's main geographical feature, the Bénoué River, forms its eastern border over 100 km between the tributary of Mayo Alim in the south and the Grand Capitaine tourist camp in the north. The river flows south–north, although the flow is underground along long distances during the dry season. During the wet season various intermittent rivers, called mayos, contain water and attract the hippopotamus and other large mammals.
Bénoué National Park is bordered to the east by three sport hunting zones (Fig. 1): Zone 9 (50,072 ha), Zone 3 (55,328 ha) and Zone 2 (75,648 ha). Zone 9 has been abandoned by professional hunters since 2012, and Zones 2 and 3 are marginally operational. Four camps, situated along the Bénoué River, cater for hunting tourists and are also used as a base for anti-poaching operations. Grand Capitaine camp is situated close to the main road in Zone 9. Buffle Noir, the main tourist camp and Park headquarters, is in the south, and there is one camp in Zone 2 and one in Zone 3 (Fig. 1, Plate 1). The Lagdo Reservoir, c. 20 km north (downstream) of the Park, provides northern Cameroon with hydroelectric energy.
Methods
We followed the methodology applied by Ngog Nje (Reference Ngog Nje1988). All counts except one were conducted in the latter part of the dry season, when the Bénoué River is the Park's only remaining source of water and the area is easily accessible. The only exception was the July 2011 count, which was carried out during the rainy season. Observers walked through the riverbed or along its edges, splitting up when the riverbed was too wide to be overseen. Walking speed was 1–4 km hr−1. When hippopotamuses were observed, in the water or on sandbanks (Plates 1 & 2), the surveyors halted for 15–30 minutes and counted the number of individuals several times until they reached a consensus.
Total counts in 2011 and 2013
A team of observers, with two permanent members, walked during 07.30–17.30, taking a 2 hour break at midday, from Mayo Alim in the south to the Grand Capitaine tourist camp in the north. The surveys were conducted over 9 days in the 2011 rainy season and 6 days in the 2013 dry season. Geographical coordinates of hippopotamus sightings and major landmarks were recorded using a global positioning system. Observations of other wildlife (antelopes and primates) and signs of human presence were also recorded.
Partial counts during 1976–2010
Supervised by the same staff for several consecutive years, teams of 2–3 students from the Garoua Wildlife College conducted surveys every 2 years during 1976–2010. Counts were concentrated on a 15–32 km stretch of the Bénoué River, centred on the Buffle Noir Park headquarters and not extending beyond the two hunting zone camps (Fig. 1). The surveys were carried out in the dry season, in a single day, generally during 09.00–12.00 (Ngog Nje, Reference Ngog Nje1988). From our dry season count in 2013 we determined the number of hippopotamuses along the same stretch of river.
Group size
Group size was reported for each observation during 1976–1987 (Ngog Nje, Reference Ngog Nje1988), and in 1989, 2006 and 2013. For comparison the 1989 count was merged with the data for 1976–1987, yielding a total of 173 observations; there were only a total of 46 observations in 2006 and 2013. Group sizes for 2011 were only available aggregated by waterhole, corresponding to c. 0.5 km stretches of river, and these data were therefore not included in the analysis of group size.
Management efforts
We used the number of Park guards, employed by the government and authorized to bear arms, as an indicator of the level of effort by the National Park management (Bruner et al., Reference Bruner, Gullison, Rice and da Fonseca2001). We obtained this information from unpublished annual reports of the regional Ministry of Forests and Wildlife.
Modelling
To characterize patterns of temporal variation in total counts and linear densities we used a flexible multivariate semi-parametric generalized linear model with a negative binomial error distribution and a log link function. The model fits a smoothed population trend curve and provides 95% point-wise confidence limits. For more detailed information on the methodology see Ogutu et al. (Reference Ogutu, Owen-Smith, Piepho and Said2011).
Results
Group size
The observations of hippopotamus group size (1976–1989 vs 2006–2013), expressed as a frequency percentage, did not differ significantly (P > 0.05, Wilcoxon signed rank test). During the 2006–2013 counts, however, no groups of > 25 individuals were observed (Fig. 2). The 1976 and 1987 total counts indicated groups of 100 and 110 hippopotamuses, respectively, in the northern part of the Park, at a time when the Mare des 1,000 Hippopotamii was a tourist attraction and was visited regularly by the former president of Cameroon.
Total counts and linear densities
The total counts along the 100 km stretch of the Bénoué River during 2011 and 2013 (Fig. 3) revealed a population decline from 400 individuals in 1987 to 188 in 2013 (Fig. 4). Linear density along the 15–32 km stretch centred on Buffle Noir remained relatively constant during 1976–2013, with a mean of 3.7 individuals km−1 and a trend line not significantly different from 0 (P = 0.98; Fig. 5).
Observations of other large mammals
The distribution of antelope sightings was comparable to that of the hippopotamus, concentrated in the area around the tourist camps. In contrast, primate sightings were distributed evenly along the 100 km of the Bénoué River within the Park (Table 1).
1 Includes the 5 km stretch of river close to Grand Capitaine tourist camp, and from Mayo Oldiri, c. 10 km north of the tourist camp in hunting zone 3, to Mayo Alim, 5 km south of the tourist camp in hunting zone 2 (Fig. 1)
2 Kob Kobus kob (57%), waterbuck Kobus ellipsiprymnus (18%), bushbuck Tragelaphus scriptus (14%), red-flanked duiker Cephalophus rufilatus (9%), hartebeest Alcelaphus buselaphus (1%) and grey duiker Sylvicapra grimmia (1%)
3 Guereza colobus Colobus guereza (45%), olive baboon Papio anubis (38%) and tantalus monkey Chlorocebus tantalus (17%)
4 *, P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001
Human pressures
We observed three cases of poaching, with fresh traces of carcasses, including one close to the Mare des 1,000 Hippopotamii, opposite a gold diggers’ camp. Meat drying installations indicated the hippopotamuses had been slaughtered for their meat, but the tusk-like canines and incisors had been removed from the skull (Plate 3). We observed 16 sites and camps of gold diggers on the east bank of the Bénoué River, 13 of which were in the north of the Park. (Table 1). Settlements were also found on the west bank of the River, within the Park boundaries, although they were fewer in number. There was a negative association between the presence of gold diggers and hippopotamuses during the 2013 dry season (Table 1, also cf. Figs 1 & 2b). A number of fishermen were also present, seemingly to provide the gold diggers with fresh fish. Some of the pools that contained hippopotamuses in 2011 were occupied by fishermen using standing nets in 2013 (Table 1). Fulbé pastoralists were also encountered regularly, particularly in the south of the Park and in hunting zones, using the river to water their cattle (Fig. 1, Table 1).
Management efforts
The number of Park guards increased from six in 1962 to almost 50 in the mid 1980s, after which their number declined steadily to 10 in 2011 (Fig. 6). The recruitment of 20 additional guards in 2012 (Fig. 6) does not seem to have led to a reinforced presence in the field. Apart from in the immediate proximity (< 2 km) of the tourist camps, we did not encounter any conservation personnel during 6 days and nights traversing the Park along the Bénoué River in 2013. In early 2013 roads were repaired for the first time in 5 years, but only in the vicinity (< 15 km) of the Buffle Noir camp.
Discussion
Reliability of counts
Few attempts have been made to count hippopotamuses in Bénoué National Park using methods other than total counts (cf. Ngog Nje, Reference Ngog Nje1988), which have been used since 1976. We feel confident of the inter-annual comparability given the constant count period, at the height of the dry season when the only water available was in the Bénoué River, and the use of the same observers (in 2011 and 2013) and supervisors (in earlier years). Stark (Reference Stark1986), not focusing solely on the Bénoué River, used terrestrial transect counts throughout the Park and estimated a population of 235 individuals (95% CI ± 212). The only aerial survey, which targeted elephants Loxodonta africana and did not focus solely on the Bénoué River (Omondi et al., Reference Omondi, Bitok, Tchamba, Mayienda and Lambert2008), suggested unrealistically low numbers of hippopotamus (17 in Bénoué National Park, two in Faro National Park and 31 in all hunting zones).
We can only speculate about the reasons for the increase in year-to-year fluctuations in linear hippopotamus density since 1992 (Fig. 5). Cross references with descriptions in count reports of the high (outlying) value in 2004 suggest the counts were reliable. Our impression is that the increase in disturbance had already begun by the early 1990s, and this is supported by a 1996 internal report of the Garoua Wildlife College.
The statistical models smoothed the trend in population size (total counts; Fig. 4) and the linear density (Fig. 5), indicating that, in the south of the Park, the observed decline in population size was significant and that there was no sigificant trend in linear densities.
Human pressure
We attribute the apparent disappearance of the hippopotamus from the northern part of the Park between 2011 and 2013, with exception of a waterhole close to the Grand Capitaine tourist camp and one close to a public road (Figs 1 & 2), to the presence of gold diggers' camps in Zone 9 and the northern part of Zone 3 (Table 1). The gold diggers' camps have an estimated total population of c. 12,000 people, with associated infrastructure including motor tracks, market places and bars (Salamatou, Reference Salamatou2013), and poaching of hippopotamus has occurred in the vicinity of these camps. Additional pressure may have come from cattle herders, who until recently would not enter the Park because of the threat of tsetse flies (which can now be deterred using new chemical products). Various studies (e.g. Weladji & Tchamba, Reference Weladji and Tchamba2003) have reported an increase in human–wildlife conflict in villages west of Bénoué National Park as a result of an influx of immigrants from the Far North region of Cameroon, who have resettled for cotton production. The settlement of gold diggers along the Bénoué River exerts new pressures from the north-east, which remain poorly understood.
Park and hunting zone management
The settlement of gold diggers, which started in the late 2000s, coincided with a period of virtual absence of Park personnel (Fig. 6), particularly in the north and east of the Park. Park guards were deployed only along the main road in the west and at the Park headquarters, and there appears to have been a lack of motivation and supervision. Prior to the 2013 count the road along the Bénoué River was open but no guards were seen on the 15 km stretch leading to Buffle Noir. During 2012–2013 all guard operations in Zone 9 were abandoned and gold diggers moved into the area.
Of an accumulated (1983–2003) quota of 509 (set by the Ministry of Forestry and Wildlife) only 75 (15%) hippopotamuses were hunted legally (Njoya, Reference Njoya2008); during 2010–2012 44 of a quota of 114 (39%) were hunted legally. In 2013 CITES introduced a ban on the trade in hippopotamus trophies, which was contested by sport hunters (P. Gerard, pers. comm., 2013). How to avoid reducing the viability of sport hunting businesses while continuing to control illegal hunting of hippopotamus and the export of ivory remains a dilemma; see Lindsey et al. (Reference Lindsey, Balme, Booth and Midlane2012) for an analogous discussion on lion hunting.
Changes between 1976–1987 and 2011–2013
The reduction in the number of hippopotamus from 2011 to 2013 did not come as a surprise as we had received information on poaching and the presence of gold diggers. We had expected to record more hippopotamuses during the dry-season count in 2013 than during the rainy season of 2011, when we would expect the hippopotamuses to disperse throughout the Park because of the availability of water in tributary mayos. Our findings could be interpreted as an accelerated decline. The number of indicators of human disturbance also increased from 2011 to 2013 but this may be biased by the greater accessibility of the area during the dry season.
Linear densities and abundance
The observed linear density of 3.7 km−1 was stable not only temporally (1976–2013) but also, prior to the decline, along the entire 100 km stretch of river. Ngog Nje (Reference Ngog Nje1988) attributed this to the homogeneity of the surrounding forage lands, with little variation in carrying capacity, and to limited variation in river characteristics.
The long-term density of 3.7 individuals km−1 can be compared to incidentally recorded linear densities of 6.5 km−1 (along a 94 km of river) in Faro National Park to the west (Tsi et al., Reference Tsi, Tomedi, Talla and Nguimkeng2011) and 1.3 km−1 (along a 60 km of river ) in the Mbam and Djerem National Park, 300 km to the south (Nchanji & Fotso, Reference Nchanji and Fotso2007). These densities are low compared with observations from eastern and southern Africa, albeit from the 1980s: 23 km−1 (124 km of the Mara River) in Kenya, 17 km−1 (115 km of the Rufigi River) in Tanzania, 25 and 38 km−1 (589 and 165 km, respectively, of the Luangwa River) in Zambia and 40 km−1 (50 km of the Zambezi River) in Zimbabwe (Eltringham, Reference Eltringham1999). This difference may be attributable to the generally nutrient-poor environments of West–Central Africa, which also account for significantly lower ungulate densities (Fritz & Duncan, Reference Fritz and Duncan1994).
In 2008 there were an estimated 125,680–149,230 hippopotamuses in Africa, of which 6,540–10,740 were in West and Central Africa (Lewison & Oliver, Reference Lewison and Oliver2008). Whereas areas further west mostly hold smaller and more dispersed populations (Lewison & Oliver, Reference Lewison and Oliver2008), the savannah area of Cameroon may have held, until recently, a population larger than the estimated 500–1,500 (Lewison & Oliver, Reference Lewison and Oliver2008). Continent-wide declines in hippopotamus populations during the 1990s were estimated to be 7–20% (Lewison, Reference Lewison2004, cited in Klingel, Reference Klingel, Kingdon and Hoffmann2013). Our results show an accelerated decline of c. 50% in Bénoué National Park since 1999, with populations outside protected areas probably declining even faster. Elsewhere in North–Central Africa hippopotamus populations, like those of other large mammals, are declining rapidly (Scholte, Reference Scholte2011), and the hippopotamus has reportedly been extirpated from the north of the Central African Republic (Bouché et al., Reference Bouché, Nzapa Mbeti Mange, Tankalet, Zowoya, Lejeune and Vermeulen2012).
Ecological impacts
The ecological role of the hippopotamus is not well understood, and predicting the consequences of its disappearance remains speculative. The species’ grazing lawns, previously studied in Bénoué National Park, are crucial for mesoherbivores such as kob Kobus kob, providing them with quality forage during the wet season (Verweij et al., Reference Verweij, Verrelst, Loth, Heitköenig and Brunsting2006). Hippopotamuses may also exercise geomorphological impacts by deepening gullies or streams, as observed in the Okavango swamps, Botswana (McCarthy et al., Reference McCarthy, Ellery and Bloem1998). Evidence of this effect can also be seen around the larger waterholes in Bénoué National Park.
Conclusions
Our results highlight the importance of year-round conservation efforts for the survival of the hippopotamus and other large mammals. Increasing the number of Park guards, and deploying them effectively in the field (which is linked to the state of the road infrastructure) should therefore be a priority. To reinforce patrolling it will be essential to keep hunting Zones 2 and 3 operational and to re-establish sport hunting in Zone 9. The importance of sport hunting is declining (UICN, 2009), however, and therefore it will be necessary to develop new perspectives for sustainable use of the hunting zones.
Gold digging has become a major conservation challenge for Bénoué National Park and may be the main reason for the local extirpation of the hippopotamus. Artisanal gold digging has caused land degradation and water pollution in other African protected areas (Gandiwa & Gandiwa, Reference Gandiwa and Gandiwa2012) and should therefore be a cause for concern not only for the Park but also for the downstream Lagdo Reservoir. The Park authorities could use these arguments to mobilize wider support to move the gold diggers out of the Park and hunting zones.
Acknowledgements
We thank the Bénoué National Park staff for authorization to conduct our surveys, and for their assistance in the field. Without the persistence of students and staff of the Garoua Wildlife College, we would not have had the possibility to draw on 3 decades of surveys. Maha Ngalié coordinated the 2011 survey. Fabrice Hibert and Joseph Ogotu prepared models. Stephany Kersten, Hans Bauer and Joseph Ogutu provided constructive comments on the manuscript.
Biographical sketches
Paul Scholte is an ecologist leading organizations in conservation and natural resource management in a development context. For 27 years he has worked for governmental (Rwandan, Dutch, German), non-governmental, UN and private organizations. Throughout the 1990s he worked in Waza National Park and other protected areas in North Cameroon. After a decade working in Yemen and Rwanda he returned to Central Africa, where he is trying to build a coalition to respond to the accelerating poaching crisis that is compromising the region's protected areas. Emmanuel Iyah is a lecturer in zoology and animal ecology at Garoua Wildlife College in North Cameroon. His current research interests are hippopotamus ecology and behaviour.