Maneaters of Tsavo: Follow Up and Questions

The tiger looks very much like a domestic cat and so does his behavior. I am never afraid of lions in Africa, but with tigers it was different. In the short time that I hunted in Malaysia, I was always careful what tigers concern. They attack from ambush and that is why it is difficult to protect yourself from them in the dense jungle. The chance in the area was that there was a lot of prey for the tiger so it did not pose too much problems for the human people.
 
The tiger looks very much like a domestic cat and so does his behavior. I am never afraid of lions in Africa, but with tigers it was different. In the short time that I hunted in Malaysia, I was always careful what tigers concern. They attack from ambush and that is why it is difficult to protect yourself from them in the dense jungle. The chance in the area was that there was a lot of prey for the tiger so it did not pose too much problems for the human people.
Did you ever bag a Malaysian tiger ? What game animals did you bag in Malaysia ?

When I was a young man studying Environmental Management in the University of London, I had the good fortune to meet Colonel Arthur Locke once. He used to be the District Commissioner in a rural part of Malaysia between 1949-1951 and he had shot 19 Malayan tigers in rural Kemaman.

I only shot four wild boars and one Sambar stag in Malaysia in 1977.
 
Did you ever bag a Malaysian tiger ? What game animals did you bag in Malaysia ?

When I was a young man studying Environmental Management in the University of London, I had the good fortune to meet Colonel Arthur Locke once. He used to be the District Commissioner in a rural part of Malaysia between 1949-1951 and he had shot 19 Malayan tigers in rural Kemaman.

I only shot four wild boars and one Sambar stag in Malaysia in 1977.

Tigers were in this time strictly protected in Malaysia. We hunted above all buffaloes, problem animals that caused unrest especially in the palm oil plantations, less or hardly at all in the Hevea plantations. I had the chance to shot a very big wild boar. I tried to shot a sambar deer and for this reason I often sat on a Machan and wait for it, but unfortunately I never saw one.
 
I never read the book but did a podcast on the Ghost and the Darkness movie.

Crazy how some of the ridiculousness of the movie actually happened (even though the movie took huge liberties).

I didn't know it was on Spotify. I'll have to check it out.
 
When you can find bits and pieces on the man eaters of Chirundu. Think it compares or even more interesting. I believe there is a reprint from the African hunter.

If Africa could only give up all of her stories.

Lon
 
The issue of man-eating animals is a lot more common that most people in the Western World realize.

During the whole Cecil fiasco, a Zimbabwean man wrote a piece in the New York Times and he mentions that one of the reasons why people don't like lions in rural Africa is because of how often they attack people.

 
I think the life of Colonel JH Patterson is just amazing . That ghastly movie “The Ghost and the Darkness” did him a great disservice . He was literally on his own - no Irritating Michael Douglas as back up . A professional engineer not a professional hunter trying to solve a terrible problem - on his own . He got the job done . He is also indirectly immortalised by Hemingway in “The Short Happy Life of Francis McComber”. Patterson became a professional hunter in Africa and a shooting similar to that reported by Hemingway happened when he was the PH . It was a major scandal in the UK. The other really significant thing is that Patterson formed , trained and led the Jewish Brigade against the Turks in WW1 . His contemporary leading the Arab Brigade was Lawrence of Arabia ! Patterson personally trained many of the men who would lead Israel after independence . An amazing man .
 
The pages below are from Chapter VI of my autobiography. Hopefully, it will provide some insight into human-wildlife conflict involving Royal Bengal tigers in our part of the world.

It also details the reasons why Royal Bengal tigers become man eaters. The same reasons also apply to lions & leopards in Asia & Africa.

Habib, my apologies as I didn't have a chance to actually come back and read this until now. You are essentially a modern day Corbett. The reasons for them becoming maneaters that you cited are interesting. The porcupine quill instance and more specifically, the brain parasite. That is very interesting.

It seems as though the Bengal tiger typically becomes a maneater more often than others more so due to the amount of humans in its domain. With the population in India being so high there are just a ton of humans around.

In any event, seems like a not great way to go out. Having those body parts you mentioned being eaten first doesn't seem fun.
 
I just can't seem to understand how these issues don't present themselves currently? Maybe it was just the influx of Europeans back then was so new and created crowding? Maybe we know enough now? Are we just smarter to not get eaten?
They do. Just they dont attract so much attention.
Few hundred people are killed by tigers in India every year. Many of them in Sundarban forest.

But not only tigers attack, see this:
 
I have read the book. Watched the movie several times. I would like to visit the Chicago Field Museum and see Patterson’s Lions.

My first thoughts went straight to the movie.

@HookMeUpII if you enjoyed the book you might enjoy the movie.

Oh I saw the movie many many years ago as a kid. It's good. The book is so much better though. I like how the book went into his other adventures as well. Including the Patterson eland he discovered.
 
https://www.wsj.com/science/biology/tsavo-man-eating-lions-0cdb3ebe?mod=series_scienceshorts

Did These Notorious Lions Really Eat People?​

Scientists used DNA sequencing to analyze the hair fragments found in the canine teeth of the infamous ‘Tsavo man-eaters’​

Dominique MosbergenOct. 11, 2024 at 11:00 am ET


Wildebeest, zebra and humans? That’s the diet scientists say filled the bellies of two infamously bloodthirsty lions who once terrorized railroad workers.

The “Tsavo man-eaters,” as the male African lions are known, have been mythologized in books and Hollywood movies. Historical accounts have described how they ate dozens of people who worked on the Kenya-Uganda railroad in the 1890s. Their remains are displayed in a Chicago museum. Now DNA sequencing of hair fragments found lodged in their canine teeth confirms the lions’ penchant for eating humans.

When researchers analyzed the hairs, they found the remains of at least one person, as well as giraffe, oryx, waterbuck, zebra and wildebeest, according to a study published Friday in the journal Current Biology. The researchers also studied some hairs under a microscope, and confirmed the presence of human, zebra and waterbuck remains, among other animals.

The hairs were deeply embedded in the teeth and were so compacted, their consistency resembled that of wood. Researchers said the hairs’ location in the teeth plus the patterns of DNA damage that were detected in them confirmed their age and provenance.

It is the first time that DNA sequencing has been used to study hairs found in the teeth of animals who lived long ago, the researchers said. The same technique could be used to understand the diets and behaviors of other historic carnivores including extinct ones, said study co-author Ripan Malhi.

“It opens up a whole new area of inquiry into the past,” said Malhi, a professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

im-09630619
Researchers analyzed hair fragments found deeply embedded in the lions’ teeth. Photo: Field Museum
The Tsavo man-eaters were killed in 1898 by John Henry Patterson, a British Army officer who oversaw the building of a railroad bridge over Kenya’s Tsavo River. The lions—who were maneless and massive, each measuring almost 10 feet long—had killed many railroad workers over a nine-month period. Patterson estimated that at least 28 railroad workers and an untold number of locals were eaten. Researchers say they don’t know the exact number of people killed but evidence points to a few dozen.

Lions don’t usually eat people. But necessity or injury may have driven the Tsavo man-eaters to do so. A viral disease had wiped out many prey species, said Thomas Gnoske, a study co-author and chief preparer of specimens at Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History, which houses the Tsavo lions’ remains.

Others think a broken tooth may have driven one of the lions to start hunting people because humans are easier to kill than the large animals they usually eat.

In a memoir detailing the lions’ reign of terror, Patterson described hearing the animals devour a worker right outside his camp: “I could plainly hear them crunching the bones, and the sound of their dreadful purring filled the air and rang in my ears for days afterwards.”

His book inspired several films, including “The Ghost and the Darkness,” a 1996 movie starring Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas.

Patterson used the lions’ skins and skulls as rugs before selling them for $5,000 to the Field Museum, which used the skins to create taxidermy specimens. The lions remain a popular attraction at the museum.

Bruce Patterson, a former curator of mammals at the museum with no relation to the British officer, said it was incredible that a pair of rugs has been such a rich source of information.

“Because of their interesting history, we’ve thrown all kinds of scientific techniques at them,” he said.

Write to Dominique Mosbergen at dominique.mosbergen@wsj.com

Science Shorts​

The WSJ's Science Shorts, collated by editors

Steve Berke
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Grz63 wrote on roklok's profile.
Hi Roklok
I read your post on Caprivi. Congratulations.
I plan to hunt there for buff in 2026 oct.
How was the land, very dry ? But à lot of buffs ?
Thank you / merci
Philippe
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Chopped up the whole thing as I kept hitting the 240 character limit...
Found out the trigger word in the end... It was muzzle or velocity. dropped them and it posted.:)
 
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