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Warthogs reverse down their burrows so that any pursuer has to deal with their sharp tusks.
One of the most endearing characters of the bushveld is the warthog – portrayed by Hollywood as the smelly Pumba in The Lion King.
Like Pumba, warthogs are a comical treat to watch and are present in most game reserves, where they can be seen grazing short pastures on their callused front knees, rumps in the air.
When startled, they run off with tails in the air like antennae.
Their name comes from the large ‘warts’ underneath their eyes, made of thickened skin and gristle. The males have 2 sets of warts – 1 set under the eyes and one further down the snout. When competing for females, they battle head to head, striking 1 another with their formidable tusks. Because of this, many zoologists speculate that the warts are for protection when fighting.
Males (boars) will indicate that they’re interested in females (sows) by making clacking noises with their tusks and tongue, drooling copiously and following them with an unmistakable hip-rolling swagger.
The other distinguishing characteristic of warthogs is their relative hairlessness. They only have bristles, whiskers and a mane. Maybe because of this, they are besotted with wallowing in mud.
Once the mud-pack has dried, they’ll rub themselves against a stump or tree and get rid of irritating parasites like ticks.
Their diet mostly consists of grass, but when that isn’t fresh and green, they’ll focus, as pigs do, on uprooting tubers with their snouts.
And although they show great skill in digging for roots, they don’t seem to show nearly the same enthusiasm for digging burrows. They usually just look for a likely aardvark excavation and move in. They’ll only stay a few days anyway – warthogs are delicious to eat and lions have been known to follow them to their burrows and wait for them to emerge in the morning.