Warthog Photo Album Page 3
HABITAT
Warthog avoid tall grass and thickets. Savanna or woodland areas covered with short grass and with plenty of termite mounds, are the ideal Warthog habitat.
HABITS
Warthog are normally seen in small family groups of one or more sows and their most recent piglets. The adult boars normally leave isolated from the family groups, in small "bachelor groups". When the matting season arrives, fights between boars can accur, but normally end with the weaker animal running away from his contender. Adult boars have 2 pairs of outgrowths of thickened skin, just below the eyes. Sows have only one small pair of these "warts". They feed during the day, in a characteristic way, walking on their knees. At night they retire to the safety of their burrow, entering always backwards, with the exception of the piglets. Leopard and Lion are the major predators of Warthog, and young piglets are sometimes taken away by big eagles, like the Martial Eagle. The males can attain a mass of around 100kg. and the females 70kg. Their life-span is about 15 years.
DIET
They are mostly grazers, but can occasionally feed on wild fruits. During the dry season Warthogs spend a lot of time digging for tubers and rhizomes with heir powerful snorts.
BREEDING
After a gestation period of 167 to 175 days, the sow gives birth to as many as 8 piglets, in the protection of a burrow, where they stay for about 2 weeks suckled by their mother. After this period they will emerge from the burrow, for very short periods. They will start follow their mother after about 5 weeks. Sows normally have their first litter at the age of 2 years.
Louis Saide of Arizona with a Warthog.
Driver Gerson, Michael Rush of New Hampshire and tracker Conrad with a Warthog.
Copyright 2008 - Errol Lambrechts Safaris

