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Keith &
Colleen Begg
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Short CV's: Keith Begg & Colleen
Begg 
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For the past ten years Keith and Colleen
Begg have been working together and assisting each other on a variety of
research projects in national parks throughout southern Africa. In 1996
they joined forces to conduct the first intensive long term study of the
elusive Honey badger in the Kgalagadi Transfrontier park (formerly known
as the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park). For four years they lived in the
central dunes area of the park studying, filming and photographing the
behaviour and ecology of badgers. In 2001 Colleen
completed her
PhD on the Kalahari work while Keith conducted
a survey of the conflict between commercial beekeepers and honey
badgers for the Endangered Wildlife Trust's Carnivore Conservation Group.
This lead to the ongoing Badger -Beekeeper Extension Programme and
the Badger-Friendly
Initiative . At present Keith & Colleen are working in
northern Mozambique in Niassa Game Reserve on honey badgers and their
interactions with local honey gatherers and traditional beekeepers. They continue to work closely with Joan
Isham, the coordinator of the badger-beekeeper extension programme in
South Africa and to collaborate with
Dr C. Matthee on genetics
research on the honey badger (see at the bottom of the page for more
details).
Joan Isham

Joan
working with a badger-friendly beekeeper in the
Western
Cape, South Africa
Joan
was born in 1955, and grew up in an Afrikaans farming community in
Calitzdorp, South Africa. In 1978 she obtained a degree in Occupational
therapy and initially worked as an occupational therapist before switching
to Nature Conservation. In 1999 she completed her National Diploma in
Nature Conservation (Cum Laude) and was awarded the Principal's Silver
Medal in the division of Applied Natural Science and Engineering, the
National Parks Board Achievement Award and the Juta Award for her work.
Since 1999 she has been a self employed private consultant in nature
conservation with a variety of clients including the Paarl Mountain Nature
Reserve and, the Boland Environment Forum . She has also been very
involved in various Environmental Education Projects including development
of Environmental Education projects for the schools in the Paarl and
Wellington area and the training of volunteers and facilitators for
Khulu Adventures (a black empowerment company involved in the development
of the individual through outdoor-based training) and the Boland
Environment Forum.
Joan
is currently working as a fulltime extension officer and coordinator
for the
badger-beekeeper initiative in the Western Cape, South Africa, and also is
coordinating the national beekeeper-badger extension programme for the next three years
and assisting with the accreditation of badger-friendly beekeepers.
Joan is in her third year working on the project and has been very
successful at working with beekeepers to find solutions to the
conflict.
lThis
project is a joint initiative between the Carnivore Conservation Group of
the Endangered Wildlife Trust and The Green Trust an associated trust of
WWF-SA supported by Nedbank Green, and its project leaders are Keith & Colleen
Begg and Gerhard Verdoorn (Endangered Wildlife Trust).
Joan
can be contacted at rateldotcom@hotmail.com
Keith Begg
Born in 1970 in Zimbabwe,
Keith was educated at Michaelhouse in the Natal
midlands, South Africa. As a school boy he saw his first honey badger in
1988 while working during his holidays on Ground hornbill (Dr A
Kemp, Kruger National Park). From that brief encounter he became
fascinated with this little known carnivore and has collected information
about them ever since.
Having completed a National Diploma in
Nature Conservation at the Cape Technikon, Keith worked for three and a
half years in the Kruger park for the Percy Fitzpatrick Institute of
African Ornithology (Prof. R Siegfried, University of Cape Town) and the
Transvaal Museum (Dr. A Kemp). He was employed as a field researcher to
determine the distribution, density and population dynamics of the
"big six" bird species (Martial eagle, Pels fishing owl,
Saddlebilled stork, Ground hornbill, Lappetfaced vulture and Kori
bustard). This work involved habitat assessment and mapping of the
Kruger park; raptor trapping, marking and radio tracking, photographic and
road censuses and monitoring the breeding success and habitat choice
of these and other large birds.
In October 1994, having raised funds from
various corporate and individual sponsors and with the backing of the
Endangered Wildlife Trust, Keith completed a six month feasibility study
of Honey badgers in the Mana Pools National Park, Zimbabwe. By
catching and for the first time implanting a honey badger, individuals
were followed on foot at night in the Zambezi valley. After concluding
that a long-term study was indeed viable and having raised the necessary
funding Keith returned to Zimbabwe to radio mark more individuals.
Unfortunately this coincided with political upheaval in Zimbabwe's
Department of National Parks and Wild Life Management and resulted in
permits for all foreign researchers being suspended.
For ten years Keith has been photographing
wildlife in South Africa and Zimbabwe. His images are sold worldwide
and represented by the following agencies: ABPL Photo Bank / Gallo
Images www.gallo-images.co.za
; Struik Image Library and Corbis Corporation.
In 1996 Keith was trained as a wildlife
cameraman by renowned film-makers David and Carol Hughes, and spent three
years filming badgers in the Kalahari for the Hughes' documentary 'Snake
Killers; Honey badgers of the Kalahari", which was released in
November 2001 on the National geographic Channel. In 2000 he
investigated the status of honey badgers in South Africa and the conflict
between honey badgers and commercial beekeepers and his efforts lead to
the initiation of the Badger-Beekeeper Extension programme and the
"Badger-Friendly Initiative.
Colleen Begg (nee
Zank)
Born in 1969 in Johannesburg, South
Africa. From 1987 to 1990 she completed her undergraduate studies
at the University of the Witwatersrand, majoring in botany and zoology. During her undergraduate studies Colleen volunteered to work on
various research projects which included the translocation of Redbilled
oxpeckers from the Kruger National Park to Ben Lavin Nature Reserve (I
Whyte, Kruger National Park) ; Wahlberg's eagle breeding biology
and siblicide (Dr. R Simmons, Sabie Sand Game Reserve)
During 1991 Colleen completed her Honours
degree in Zoology on a comparative study of the non-breeding foraging
behaviour of Lesser Kestrels and Eastern Redfooted Falcons.
To gain a broader experience of field
research Colleen traveled to the U.S.A. where she assisted work on
Chicagof island in Alaska studying Mink and Martens (Dr M
Ben David, University of Alaska). In Utah she assisted in an investigation
of the influence of forest fragmentation on American Pine Marten
populations in the Uinta mountains (Dr T Hargis, Utah State University).
In Colorado she studied Big Horn sheep at the Foothills Wildlife Research
Facility, Fort Collins (Dr J Gross, Colorado State University and Dr T
Hobbs, Colorado Division of Wildlife).
In 1993 she returned to South Africa
where she was employed to complete the final two months of study of small
rare birds in the northern Kruger park (Dr A Kemp, Transvaal Museum).
This lead to a year long position working on vultures (Dr P Benson,
University of the Witwatersrand) in the Kruger park. For two years Colleen studied at the
University of Harare, Zimbabwe, where she completed a Masters degree in
tropical resource ecology. Her thesis on a population
viability analysis of Cheetah in the Matusadona National Park,
Zimbabwe was awarded with distinction.
Colleen's PhD. was registered at the Mammal
Research Institute, University of Pretoria and supervised by Dr G Mills (Specialist
scientist, Kruger National Park) and Prof. J du Toit (Director: Mammal
Research Institute). She was awarded her PhD in April 2002 for a thesis
entitled "The feeding ecology and social organisation of honey
badgers in the southern Kalahari". She is currrently a Research
fellow with the Mammal Research Institute, University of Pretoria, South
Africa
Popular & scientific
publications for Keith & Colleen:
Popular
articles
Begg,
C.M. & Begg, K.S.2003. The Honey
Badger: Conserving “the most fearless animal in the world”. Science in
Africa
Begg,
K.S. 2001 Vicious Circles: Gin Traps in South Africa. Africa Geographic
6: 40-45
Begg,
K. & Begg, C. 2000. Honey badgers the mystery nest predator? Hornbill:
35-36.
Begg,
K.S. & Begg, C.M. 2000. Honey badgers of the Kalahari. Endangered
Wildlife 35: 9-11.
Begg,
K.S & Begg, C.M. 2000 So taai soos 'n ratel. SA Wild & Jag:
November: 19.
Begg,
K.S & Begg, C.M. 2000. Honey badger research. Africa - Environment
& Wildlife 8 (2).
Begg
K.S. & Begg C.M. 2000. Birds and badgers. Africa - Birds and
Birding 5 (2):19.
Begg,
C.M. & Begg K.S. 1997. Badger bonding. Africa: Environment &
Wildlife 5:26-27
Begg,
K.S. & Begg C.M. 1997. Badger antics in the Kalahari. Custos November:
8-10
Zank,
C.M. & Begg K.S. 1997. In search of badgers. Endangered Wildlife
27: 4-6
Begg,
K.S. 1995. The honey badgers of the
Mana Pools National Park. Endangered Wildlife 20:20-23.
Kemp,
A.C. & Begg, K.S. 1992. Wanderers
in search of wild places, Getaway magazine. Feb.
Kemp, A.C. Begg, K.S. and Chadwick P. 1992.
Kruger Park's rarer bird species studied. Custos magazine:20
(7)12-15.
Scientific
Begg,
C.M., Begg, K.S., Du Toit, J.T. & Mills, M.G.L. 2003. Sexual and
seasonal variation in the diet and foraging behaviour of a sexually
dimorphic carnivore, the honey badger Mellivora capensis. J. Zool
(Lond) 360: 301-316.
Begg,
C.M., Begg, K.S., Du Toit, J.T. & Mills, M.G.L. 2003. Scent-marking
behaviour of the honey badger, Mellivora capensis (Mustelidae) in the
southern Kalahari. Animal behaviour 66:917-929.
Begg,
K.S. & Begg, C.M. 2002. The conflict between beekeepers and
honey badgers in South Africa: a Western Cape perspective. The Open
Country 4: 25-37.
Verwey,R.,
Begg,C.M., Begg, K.S. & Matthee, C.A. A microsatellite perspective on
the reproductive success of subordinate male honey badgers, Mellivora
capensis. African Zoology. In press.
Begg,
K.S. 2001.Report
on the conflict between beekeepers and honey badgers Mellivora capensis, with reference to their conservation status and
distribution in South Africa. Unpublished Report: Endangered Wildlife
Trust, Johanessburg. Available on this website
Zank,
C.M. & Kemp, A.C. 1996. A comparison of hunting behaviour by Lesser
Kestrels Falco naumanni and Eastern Redfooted Falcons Falco
amurensis in their non-breeding South African range. Ostrich 67:
63-66
Gross, J.E., Zank C.M., Hobbs, N.T. &
Spalinger, D.E. 1995. Movement rules for herbivores in spatially hetrogeneous environments:
responses to
small scale pattern. Landscape Ecology 10:209-217
Kemp, A.C. Benn G.A. & Begg, K.S. 1998.
Geographical analysis of
vegetation structure and sightings for four large
bird species in
the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Bird
Conservation
International 8: 89-108
Grobler, D.G., Begg, K.S. & Kemp, A.C.
1997. Chemical capture of the Kori bustard (Ardeotis kori). Newsletter
of the Wildlife Group of the South African Veterinary Association.
April 14-16
Kemp, A.C., Begg, K.S., Benn, G.A. &
Chadwick, P. 1997. A visual assessment of vegetation structure for the
Kruger National Park. Koedoe 40: 117-121
Kemp, A.C. & Begg, K.S. 1996. Nest
sites of the Southern Ground Hornbill Bucorvus leadbeateri in the Kruger
National Park, South Africa, and
conservation implications. Ostrich
67:9-14.
Benn, G.A., Kemp, A.C. & Begg, K.S.
1995. The distribution, size and trends of the saddlebilled stork
Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis population in South
Africa. South African
Journal of Wildlife Research. 25 (3) 98-105
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