Landscape
Ngorongoro Crater Lodge is situated in the unfenced Ngorongoro
Crater Conservation Area that forms one ecosystem with the Serengeti
National Park. The conservation area is the main wet season (November
to May) grazing area for the majority of the Serengeti's migratory
animal herds.
There can be few places on earth to rival the tremendous diversity
of landscapes existing in a region the size of the Ngorongoro Conservation
Area. The turbulence of fracturing, rifting, volcanic activity and
ongoing erosion has moulded a contrasting complexity of peaks, craters,
valleys, plains and lakes, all co-existing in the same area.
Game
The Ngorongoro Crater is the permanent home of up to 30 000 larger
animals, almost half of them being zebra, and wildebeest. Animals
resident within this vast intact ecosystem include lion, elephant,
black rhino, warthog, hippo, buffalo and many plains herbivores
such as wildebeest, Thomson's gazelle, zebra, eland and reedbuck.
For those who wish to see the fierce cats of Africa, the crater
is a dream come true: an abundance of predators are drawn by the
vast herds of antelope. The golden jackal is frequently seen during
the day, while the black-backed jackal and bat-eared fox are most
active after dark.
The
profusion of grass on the Crater floor feeds the multitudes of grazing
herbivores. Grant's gazelle, Thomson's gazelle and wildebeest favour
short grass; common zebra favour medium length; while buffalo feast
on the rank grass near marshes and on the crater slopes. The leafy
herbs among the grasses are sought out by the black rhino. A diverse
array of wildlife resides in the forests bordering the lodge. Many
creatures are confined to the highland forests, but most mammals
are rare sights. Bushpig and bushbuck seldom stray from the shadows,
while buffalo and elephant are most active after dark. Buffalo,
zebra and serval may be encountered within the lodge surrounds.
A small but growing population of black rhino live on the Crater
floor, being the most viable concentration of this highly endangered
species in Tanzania. Wonderful sightings of black rhino bulls, or
mothers and their calves, are commonplace and provide excellent
photographic opportunities against the backdrop of the Crater rim.
Four powerful lion prides and five cohesive clans of spotted hyena
are the super-predators in this ecosystem, often coming to blows
over prey. The resident elephant population includes many old and
magnificent bulls, sporting huge ivory tusks of record sizes. Breeding
herds of females and young keep to the dense forested slopes and
are rarely seen.
Birds
About 400 bird species occur in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area.
Interestingly, over 100 species of birds not found in the Serengeti
have been spotted in the Crater area.
Birds of the Crater highlands include Eastern Double-collared Sunbird,
Golden-winged Sunbird, Streaky Seed-eater, Olive Thrush, Baglafecht
Weaver and White-eyed Slaty Flycatcher. Some birds of the Crater
floor are Rufous-naped Lark, Rufous-tailed Weaver, Northern Wheatear,
Capped Wheatear, Superb Starling and Northern Anteater Chat. In
the forests that edge the lodge, look out for birds such as Schalow's
Turaco, Tacazze Sunbird, Augur Buzzard and Montane White-eye.
Some aquatic birds of Ngorongoro are Lesser Flamingo, Greater Flamingo,
Kittlitz's Plover, Chestnut-banded Plover, White Pelican, Three-banded
Plover, Black-winged Stilt, Avocet and Red-billed Teal. Thousands
of flamingos wade in the shallows of Lake Magadi - the soda lake
on the Crater floor.
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