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Fauna · Masai Mara NR, Narok County, Kenya

African Civet Scent Marking — Masai Mara Kenya

The African civet (Civettictis civetta) — a large viverrid at 9–11 kg, its boldly spotted-and-striped monochrome patterning making it one of Africa's most visually striking nocturnal mammals — is reliably encountered on night drives in the Masai Mara's forest-edge and riparian habitats, where individuals follow established scent-marking routes that predictable night-drive routes intersect. The civet's perineal gland secretion — civettone, a musk that was the foundation of European perfumery for centuries (the civet musk industry keeping captive civets in Ethiopia until the 20th century for scent extraction) — is deposited on specific grass stems called 'civeteries' in patterns observable from the vehicle. The civet's unusual galloping gait, its low-carried head, and the way it freezes in the spotlight with its high-contrast pattern creates one of the African night's most photogenic and most underappreciated large nocturnal mammal encounters.

When
Year-round
Best viewing
Spotlight a boldly patterned, 9–11 kg civet following its nightly scent-marking route through forest-edge and riparian habitat. Expect extended freeze-frame views from a night-drive vehicle.
Category
Fauna
Status
Off-season

About this spectacle

On a night drive through the Masai Mara's forest-edge and riparian corridors, the beam of a spotlight may suddenly freeze a large, boldly patterned animal mid-stride — the African civet. At 9–11 kg, it is far more substantial than most visitors expect, its black-and-white spots and stripes standing out sharply against the dark vegetation. Watch as it moves with a distinctive low-slung, galloping gait, head carried close to the ground, nose working the grass stems where it deposits — or reads — musky civetone secretions from its perineal gland. These 'civeteries' are revisited on established routes, making encounters refreshingly repeatable on successive nights. The civet tends to freeze when caught in the light, holding its high-contrast pose long enough for extended observation and photography. The soundscape is all rustling grass and distant lion rumbles; the smell, if you are close enough, carries a rich, complex musk that once anchored European perfumery. This is an underappreciated jewel of the African night — large, visually dramatic, and behaviorally fascinating.

When to go

Year-round

Getting there

Nearest airport: NBO. Nearest city: Nairobi.

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