Cheetah Coalition Hunt — Serengeti Tanzania
Returns Jan 2027
Photo: Unknown · CC
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Fauna · Seronera Valley, Mara Region, Tanzania

Cheetah Coalition Hunt — Serengeti Tanzania

Cheetah coalitions of 3–5 male cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) in the Serengeti's central plains — brothers that remain together after their mother's independence, hunting cooperatively to take prey (including buffalo calves and wildebeest) far beyond any individual cheetah's capability — provide the Serengeti's most sophisticated and most rarely observed predator behaviour. The coalition hunt's preparation (the slow approach, the separation of individual prey from the herd, the coordinated chase at 110 km/h) and the kill's sharing (the hierarchy determined by birth order) create a predator encounter of exceptional behavioural complexity. At Seronera's coalition territories, the Serengeti's long-term cheetah research (the Cheetah Conservation Fund's 20-year dataset on known coalitions) allows guides to locate specific named males whose hunting histories are documented and whose territories are predictable, creating a personal quality to each encounter.

When
Jun — Mar, peak Jun — Feb
Best viewing
Witness one of Africa's rarest predator behaviours — coordinated coalition hunts by named, research-tracked male cheetahs on the open Seronera plains, most active at dawn. Expect high drama and genuine unpredictability.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Jan 2027

About this spectacle

In the open grasslands of Seronera Valley, cheetah coalitions of three to five related males hunt together in a display of coordination rarely witnessed in the wild. At dawn, the group fans out low across the grass, scanning for vulnerable prey — a wildebeest calf separated from the herd, a gazelle momentarily isolated. The approach is unhurried, deliberate, almost silent. Then the chase erupts: multiple cheetahs splitting roles, reaching speeds of 110 km/h, cutting off escape angles that no solitary cat could cover. The kill is swift. Afterwards, the brothers settle into a hierarchy shaped by birth order, each taking its turn at the carcass while vigilant siblings scan for lions and hyenas. Thanks to decades of Cheetah Conservation Fund research, specific named coalitions with documented hunting histories roam known territories, giving each encounter an intimate, almost personal quality rarely found in wildlife watching.

When to go

Jun — Mar, peak Jun — Feb

Getting there

Nearest airport: SEU. Nearest city: Arusha.

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