Most travelers visit Africa for wildlife moments such as elephants at a waterhole, lions in the grass and rhinos on open plains. But a lot has to happen before any of that is possible: gathering intelligence, setting up patrols, checking fences and tracks, monitoring wildlife movements and working closely with nearby communities.

Africa’s safari industry sells access to extraordinary wildlife landscapes, but travelers rarely realize that there is a 'hidden' workforce behind the scenes making those experiences possible: rangers.

We are "protecting the wild so it can stay wild and being the voice for the voiceless," says Abongile Paula Sodlula, member of The Green Griffons , a new all-female ranger team in Mkambati Nature Reserve in South Africa.

I interviewed several conservation leaders and female rangers working across South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe. Across all interviews, one message was clear: a safari landscape is not just a backdrop for wildlife sightings; it is a workplace, a source of livelihoods, but first and foremost, a home.

What Happens When Rangers Are Not There

When rangers are absent, the damage is not always immediate or dramatic. While high-profile poaching syndicates targeting rhinos or elephants may get the headlines, Corne Schalkwyk, head of commercial and partnerships at Bushwise Field Guides , says reserves can suffer a slow collapse without trained people on the ground.

Bushwise, a South Africa-based safari field guide training provider, also runs Bushwise Academy , which trains local youth for safari guiding and conservation careers.

"The absence of a protective shield triggers a slower, equally lethal 'death by a thousand cuts’ through smaller activities that silently bleed the ecosystem dry," Schalkwyk says.

Without a ranger presence, he says, subsistence poaching for bushmeat can increase, wire snares can spread and smaller herbivore populations can decline. Other pressures can move in as well, from unregulated charcoal and coal production to the stripping of fallen timber and deadwood for firewood.

These losses may seem small compared to rhino or elephant poaching, but they can destroy nesting sites, remove microhabitats and weaken the entire ecosystem.

The consequences also reach nearby communities. "For the rural communities, reserves are the primary economic engine," Schalkwyk says. “If the ecosystem degrades, ecotourism dries up, lodges close, and local jobs disappear.”

The Physical And Mental Toll Of Protecting Wildlife

Ranger work is physically challenging, often emotionally distressing, but essential. It involves long patrols through heat, cold, rain and thick bush, sometimes covering 9 miles with a backpack full of equipment.

But the mental strain may be just as heavy, says Sodlula in an email interview. "Poachers and trespassers don't announce themselves," she says. “The weight of knowing one missed sign could cost an animal its life stays with you even after patrol ends.”

"Field rangers are the backbone of conservation in protected areas," says Dr. Div de Villiers , a conservation law enforcement specialist with 40 years of experience in nature conservation. "They do not sit in offices punching computer keys. They patrol the nature reserves to see first-hand what is happening on the ground," he adds.

De Villiers established South Africa’s Green Scorpions environmental enforcement unit in 2007 and served as its director until he retired in 2023. He was also the lead trainer of the Green Griffons.

For him, the value of rangers is not only in responding to threats but in preventing them. "It is far better to have reliable intelligence to prevent poaching than to react once there have been incidents," he says.

That is where female ranger teams can play a critical role. De Villiers says women are often able to gather information from the communities where they live, educate people about conservation and open avenues for information about poaching syndicates.

"The Green Griffon concept is based on the very effective Black Mambas model that has been employed in the west of the Greater Kruger National Park," says De Villiers. "Women have intuition that is sometimes lacking in men. They handle conflict in a different manner and are often able to diffuse it before it occurs," he notes.

"Green Griffons are nine women, selected from a community squad of 24 and put forward by local chiefs of the Mkambati Land Trust," says Holly Budge, founder of World Female Ranger Week , which celebrates its 6th year between June 23 and June 30, 2026 and founder of Wildlife Positive Travel , a conservation travel company.

The Green Griffons are Wild Coast’s first all-female anti-poaching unit, using e-bikes to patrol about 12,355 acres to protect the home of one of the largest Cape Vulture (also known as Cape Griffon) breeding colonies in South Africa, with 170 to 190 nesting pairs on the cliffs of the Msikaba River Gorge.

For Colin Bell, co-founder of Wilderness Safaris and one of the driving forces behind GweGwe Beach Lodge at Mkambati, the Green Griffons are part of the reserve’s rhino reintroduction plan.

"Security is going to be big, and for that we need the Green Griffons to be really effective," he says.

Mkambati could eventually support more than 100 white rhinos, though the first translocation would likely involve a founder population of 22 to 30 animals. But that will not happen, he says, until the reserve has broad-based community support and security enhanced by the Green Griffons.

Why Conservation Needs More Female Rangers On The Ground

For Beverly Joubert, co-founder of Great Plains Foundation , the question was not whether women could do the work. It was why they were still being left out.

"We’ve always felt that women in Africa could and wanted to play a more active role in conservation, so we decided to create a platform for them," says Joubert in an email interview.

The Great Plains Foundation’s Female Ranger Programme launched in Botswana in 2022 to train and deploy women as wildlife rangers in ecologically significant areas across Botswana and Zimbabwe.

The response was immediate. When the program advertised for 12 positions, Joubert says it received 200 applications in 24 hours.

Katlego Maitumelo, a wildlife ranger at the Great Plains Foundation, based in Botswana’s Okavango Delta, says the work extends well beyond patrols. "It involves the protection of wildlife, conservation of habitats and supporting the communities that rely on these ecosystems. The responsibility of safeguarding biodiversity for future generations is what motivates me each day," she adds in an email interview.

In Zimbabwe’s Sapi Reserve, biodiversity ranger Kristie Kundai Kabwe sees the uniform as both responsibility and transformation. "Being a ranger means much more to me than simply having a job; it is a journey of purpose, healing, and personal growth," she says in an email interview.

The most difficult mental challenge for Kabwe is being away from her family for extended periods. "There are times when I wish I could be there to support and celebrate with my loved ones, but the responsibilities of my work often require sacrifice," she adds.

What Rangers Want Travelers To Understand

For travelers, the message from rangers and conservation leaders is direct.

"I would want them to understand that this area is not merely a scenic landscape but a complex living ecosystem and the home of countless species," says Maitumelo, a ranger in Botswana.

"Responsible tourism is essential. Every visitor plays a role in ensuring this environment remains protected for generations to come," she notes.

Sodlula agrees that they cannot do it alone. "So please, close gates, respect the 'no entry’ signs, and report anything strange. This land protects the animals, and we protect the land," she adds.

Kabwe says travelers often see only one part of the job, simply protecting wildlife, but their work goes far beyond that. "We are custodians of nature, ensuring that future generations have the opportunity to experience and appreciate the incredible wildlife and landscapes that we are privileged to protect today," she explains.

But ranger work is invisible by design. "Generally, anti-poaching rangers operate covertly," Schalkwyk says. “For their own security and the security of the wildlife, they need to remain unseen; if a tourist can spot a ranger, a poacher can too.”

But unseen does not mean disconnected. Schalkwyk says tourists should understand that their money can support local livelihoods and create community stakeholders in conservation.

"A ranger or a guide is not just a uniform," he says. “You aren't just saving a rhino; you are feeding a family and educating the next generation.”

Why Conservation Without Money Is Just Conversation

For Bell, the point is simple: “Conservation without cash is a conversation.”

In a voice interview, he explained that the issue is not only about how to protect land and wildlife, but also about how to make the reserve financially meaningful for the community that owns it.

Safari conservation also needs something less romantic: funding that tourism can provide .

"This is no longer public land. This is private land. This is owned by a community," Bell says.

GweGwe Beach Lodge , which opened in 2024 on South Africa’s Wild Coast, is one example of how that model can work. The lodge sits in the northern section of Mkambati Nature Reserve, where a private concession was designed to generate conservation funding, community benefits and local jobs.

After nine months of operation, GweGwe’s first royalty payment to the Mkambati Land Trust was nearly 500,000 rand, far more than the 25,000 to 50,000 rand many community members had expected.

"When I unrolled it and they saw it was nearly 500,000 rand, oh my goodness, the joys and the tears," Bell says. Afterward, the community agreed to divide the money among nine primary schools for needs such as stationery and blackboards.

For travelers, the final lesson of this story is simple: the safari experience does not begin when the vehicle stops beside a lion, elephant, or rhino. It begins much earlier, with the people walking fence lines, reading tracks, removing snares, gathering intelligence and monitoring ecosystems. Their work needs funding, training and visibility. Without them, the wildlife landscapes that travelers cross the world to see cannot stay wild for long.