The chance to see a vast array of Botswana wildlife hunting, feeding and raising young in some of Africa’s most unspoilt, pristine environments is what draws people to this desert nation. You’ll find the Big Five here, with particularly huge numbers of elephants in Chobe National Park, plus a vast supporting cast, including springbok migrating in from South Africa, flamingos on salt pan lakes, hippos wallowing in the Okavango Delta and majestic, black-maned lions prowling the Kalahari desert.
Describing the wildlife in Botswana inevitably involves big numbers and beefy superlatives. The country is home to some of the highest concentrations of lion, giraffe, hippo, wildebeest and buffalo in Africa, plus around 450 bird species. It boasts perhaps the world’s largest elephants in definitely the world’s largest herds, with total numbers estimated at up to 130,000 – more elephants than any other country in Africa. The Okavango Delta is home to some 200,000 large mammals during the dry season, while the Central Kalahari Game Reserve is the second largest wildlife reserve in the world.
These impressive figures are partly born of Botswana’s size. It’s a vast country – almost twice that of the UK and Ireland put together – with a huge mix of terrain, including marshes, rivers, salt pans, savannah, scrub and, of course, the flooded oasis of the Okavango Delta. It means a great variety of wildlife can happily live here for some or all of the year, and in large numbers. In addition to its private reserves and national parks, huge transfrontier parks exist that further support wildlife, such as the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park shared by Botswana and South Africa, and designed to protect the migration routes of wildebeest and springboks.
Thanks to Botswana’s emphasis on low visitor numbers and good conservation, animals here live largely untroubled by humans. For the few travellers lucky enough to enjoy a safari in Botswana, there is the chance to see animals behaving like, well, animals, without the distraction of tourist-packed jeeps and the chorus of ‘coos’ and camera shutters. So expect thrilling Botswana wildlife encounters, from lions hunting wildebeest and even elephants (unusual, but it does happen), to splayed-legged giraffes nervously drinking at waterholes and the sound of hippo grunts and distant roars that form the night-time soundtrack.
Source: https://www.responsibletravel.com/holidays/botswana/travel-guide/botswana-wildlife