
Ruaha Hippo Waterpoint Survey.
The prolonged dry season had concentrated an unusually high density of hippos around three remaining waterpoints in the park's eastern section, creating dangerous competition and increasing human-wildlife encounters near park boundaries. We conducted a 21-day waterpoint survey, documented population stress indicators, and delivered a management plan to the park authority.
The Challenge
Every field operation begins with a situation that carries real stakes — for the animals involved, for the communities affected, and for the ecosystem in which they interact. In this operation, our team was called to address a situation requiring immediate professional intervention. The combination of species behaviour, terrain complexity, and human-wildlife interface made this one of the more demanding assessments of the year.
"The field never presents clean situations. It presents real ones. Our job is to bring order to complexity — without compromising the animal or the people around it."
— TWT Field Lead
Our Approach
Following our standard assessment protocol, the team conducted a thorough situational review before any intervention was attempted. Species-specific behavioural patterns were documented, risk levels were mapped, and a staged response plan was agreed upon with all stakeholders present. Equipment was prepared and safety perimeters established before the operation commenced.
The Outcome
The operation concluded with a completed outcome for all parties. Post-operation documentation was completed and submitted to the Tanzania Wildlife Management Authority. A follow-up assessment was scheduled 30 days after conclusion to monitor the situation.
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