Spotted hyena makes a comeback for the first time in Gabon after 20 years extinct in the area

  • Spotted hyenas were once common in Gabon's Bateke Plateau National Park
  • But, after decades of poaching, many large predators went locally extinct
  • Now, conservationists say a spotted hyena has been spotted in the park 

A spotted hyena has been sighted in a Gabon national park for the first time in 20 years, conservationists said Friday, the latest large predator to have returned to a region where many had gone locally extinct.

The Bateke Plateau National Park lies close to Gabon's border with the Republic of Congo.

Its forests and grasslands once teemed with wildlife, including many large mammal predators, but the ecosystem was decimated by decades of poaching.

A spotted hyena has been sighted in a Gabon national park for the first time in 20 years, conservationists said Friday, the latest large predator to have returned to a region where many had gone locally extinct

A spotted hyena has been sighted in a Gabon national park for the first time in 20 years, conservationists said Friday, the latest large predator to have returned to a region where many had gone locally extinct

Officials said a spotted hyena had been caught on camera traps in the park for the first time in two decades giving hope that more large mammals might return after years of conservation efforts.

The sighting comes two years after a lone male lion was photographed by camera traps after returning.

'The return of these large carnivores is a great demonstration that the efforts of our rangers and partners are having a positive effect on Bateke wildlife,' professor Lee White, director of Gabon's National Parks Agency said in a press release.

The spotted hyena was so unknown in recent memories that when researchers showed local park rangers the photographs from the camera traps they did not know the species.

But village elders in communities north of the park instantly recognised the hyena, researchers said.

The sightings are a far cry from when researchers first set up their camera traps in 2001.

AS THE SPOTTED HYENA RETURNS TO GABON: WHAT IS IT, AND IS IT IN DANGER?

Spotted hyenas are native to Sub-Saharan Africa. File photo

Spotted hyenas are native to Sub-Saharan Africa. File photo

The spotted hyena can be found throughout sub-Sahararn Africa.

The species, also known as the laughing hyena, is listed as being of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature – but, poaching and habitat loss have begun to bring on dramatic population decline.

Spotted hyenas are said to be the most common large carnivore in Africa, though it's thought they may have originated in Asia and even ranged through Europe until the Late Pleistocene.

In Gabon's Bateke Plateau National Park, where spotted hyenas and other wildlife were once common, decades of poaching have since rendered them locally extinct.

Now, one of the creatures has been spotted for the first time in 20 years.

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That year all they photographed in Bateke was a lone antelope and multiple poachers crossing into the park from the Republic of Congo.

The lion first spotted in 2015 has since made the park his home. But he has yet to be joined by any others.

'This lion... has been continuously photographed during his three-year reign of the park, but remains alone, calling for a mate,' the researchers said.