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Mosquitoes
are prevalent throughout the reserve and it is strongly recommended
that visitors should take an anti-malarial prophylactic before,
during and for four weeks after their visit, especially during
the rainy season. Water for drinking should be boiled or chemically
treated.
The
reserve enjoys a wide diversity of habitat and is well known
for the height of the trees in the mopane tongue, which covers
the central area. However, the mainland part forms only about
thirty percent of the reserve and is, in many ways untypical;
the remaining area being part of the Okavango Delta. Birdlife
is prolific and varied, ranging from water birds to shy forest
dwellers. Elephants are numerous, particularly during the
dry season, as well as a range of other wildlife species from
buffalo, giraffe, lion, leopard, cheetah, wild dog, hyaena,
jackal and the full range of antelope, large and small, including
the red lechwe. Rhino, both black and white, were here in
the past, but most of the few remaining have been sought out
for translocation to the protection of a sanctuary, away from
the attentions of illegal hunters. Wild dog, whose numbers
are so rapidly dwindling elsewhere, are regularly sighted
in the Moremi and have been subject to a project being run
in the area since 1989 so these animals are often seen wearing
collars placed on them by the researchers. It is claimed that
the Moremi area contains about thirty percent of all living
wild dog.
Visitors
should note that there are no fuel supplies available in Moremi,
the nearest fuel and garage facilities being in Maun. Similarly,
apart from the limited range of goods on offer in Khwai Village,
no food supplies are available in the Reserve.
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