Chipinge Safari Area


Chipinge Safari Area is a protected area in Chipinge District of Zimbabwe, west of the town of Chipinge.

Geography

The safari area covers 261km2. It lies at the southwestern edge of the Eastern Highlands, and slopes generally westwards towards the valley of the Save River. Elevations range from 540 to 1132 meters.
The Nyautsa, Chipunga, and Chipangayi rivers run from east to west through the park, draining off the highlands towards the Save River further west.

Plant communities

predominate on higher ground, and include closed and open woodlands of dry-season deciduous trees, principally Brachystegia spiciformis, B. tamarindoides, and Uapaca kirkiana.
The drier lowlands are mopane woodland, with the trees Colophospermum mopane, Combretum zeyheri, Combretum mossambicense, and Combretum imberbe. Baobab is also common.

Fauna

Large herbivores include black rhino ', bushbuck ', common duiker ', grysbok ', impala ', klipspringer ', greater kudu ', warthog ', waterbuck ', eland ', zebra ', and bushpig '.
Carnivores include leopard ', spotted hyena ', and black-backed jackal '. Lions are occasionally seen in the wildlife area, but are not resident.
Black rhinoceros was reintroduced to the park in the 1990s.
Poaching has been a chronic problem in the safari area. Rampant poaching between 2006 and 2009 extirpated wildebeest
' from the safari area, and reduced populations of eland, waterbuck, and impala to fewer than 20 individuals. Black Rhinos numbered seven at reintroduction and had increased to 31 individuals, but recent poaching reduced the population to 13 individuals.