Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.
10 Kenya Oribi
10 Suni
10 Klipspringer
10 Ward’s Reedbuck
10 Chanler’s Reedbuck
10 Thompson Gazelle
10 Peters Gazelle
10 Soemmerring Gazelle
10 Bushbuck
10 Haywood Bushbuck

The grand total is a possible 300 large hoofed and horned animals representing 44 species!  Add to this all the lions, leopards, cheetahs, cape hunting dogs and hyaenas that the hunter can kill, and it will be enough to stock a zoological garden!

Quite a number of these species, like the sable antelope, kudu, Hunter’s antelope, bongo and sitatunga are already rare, and therefore they are all the more eagerly sought.

Into the fine grass-lands of British East Africa, suitable for crops and stock grazing, settlers are steadily going.  Each one is armed, and at once becomes a killer of big game.  And all the time the visiting sportsmen are increasing in number, going farther from the Uganda Railway, and persistently seeking out the rarest and finest of the game.  The buffalo has recovered from the slaughter by rinderpest only in time to meet the onset of oversea sportsmen.

Mr. Arthur Jordan has seen much of the big game of British East Africa, and its killing.  Him I asked to tell me how long, in his opinion, the big game of that territory will last outside of the game preserves, as it is now being killed.  He said, “Oh, it will last a long time.  I think it will last fifteen years!”

Fifteen years! And this for the richest big-game fauna of any one spot in the whole world, which Nature has been several million years in developing and placing there!

At present the marvelous herds of big game of British East Africa and Uganda constitute the grandest zoological spectacle that the world ever has seen in historic times.  For such an area, the number of species is incredible, and until they are seen, the thronging masses of individuals are beyond conception.  It is easy to say “a herd of 3,000 zebras;” but no mere words can give an adequate impression of the actual army of stripes and bars, and hoofs thundering in review over a grassy plain.

But the settlers say, “The zebras must go!  They break through our best wire fences, ruin our crops, despoil us of the fruits of long and toilsome efforts, and much expenditure.  We simply can not live in a country inhabited by herds of wild zebras.”  And really, their contention is well founded.  When it is necessary to choose between wild animals and peaceful agriculture for millions of men, the animals must give way.

In those portions of the great East African plateau region that are suited to modern agriculture, stretching from Buluwayo to northern Uganda, the wild herds are doomed to be crowded out by the farmer and the fruit-grower.  This is the inevitable result of civilization and progress in wild lands.  Marauding battalions of zebras, bellicose rhinoceroses and murderous buffaloes do not fit in with ranches and crops, and children going to school.  Except in the great game preserves, the swamps and the dense jungles it is certain that the big game of the whole of eastern Africa is foredoomed to disappear,—­the largest and most valuable species first.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.