A wild African black leopard has been photographed for the first time in more than 100 years

2019-02-13T11:20:00Z
  • A black leopard has been photographed in Africa for the first time in more than 100 years.
  • There aren't many of the creatures in the region, and sightings are extremely rare.
  • The stunning images were captured by Will Burrard-Lucas, who used a Camtraptions camera trap to take the photos in the dead of night.
  • Melanism (black coloration) occurs in about 11% of leopards, but most are found in Asia.
  • The last confirmed photograph of a black leopard in Africa was taken in Ethiopia in 1909, according to the African Journal of Ecology.

"Since childhood I have been fascinated by stories of black panthers," British photographer Will Burrard-Lucas' recent blog post begins.

"For me, no animal is shrouded in more mystery, no animal more elusive, and no animal more beautiful," he wrote.

It's hard to argue with Burrard-Lucas, who just became the first person in more than a century to capture an image of a wild African black leopard (also known as a black panther).

The images are out of this world.

Burrard-Lucas traveled to Laikipia Wilderness Camp in Kenya after hearing about a nearby sighting. There he set up a Camtraptions camera trap, complete with wireless motion sensors and a digital single-lens reflex camera, on a trail that multiple leopards seemed to be using.

Black leopard in Africa Will Burrard-Lucas / Camtraptions camera trap

After several days, he returned to his trap hoping, but not expecting, to find imagery of the elusive black leopard.

"I had a quick look at the last trap, not expecting to find much," he wrote on his blog. "As I scrolled through the images on the back of the camera, I paused and peered at the photograph below in incomprehension … a pair of eyes surrounded by inky darkness … a black leopard!

"I couldn't believe it and it took a few days before it sank in that I had achieved my dream."

willbl black leopard 6 Will Burrard-Lucas / Camtraptions camera trap

Capturing imagery of black leopards is so difficult not only because they are extremely secretive, Burrard-Lucas said in an email to INSIDER, but because only a tiny percentage of leopards are black. The dark color in black leopards is caused by an excess of melanin, which is passed down via recessive genes, meaning both parents must be carriers.

"Melanism occurs in about 11% of leopards globally, but most of these leopards live in Southeast Asia," Nick Pilfold, a San Diego Zoo global conservation scientist, told CNN.

"It is likely that black leopards have been living in Kenya all along, it is only that high-quality imagery to confirm it has been missing until now," Pilfold said.

willbl black leopard 4 Will Burrard-Lucas / Camtraptions camera trap

An article in the African Journal of Ecology states that the last confirmed report of a black leopard in Africa was in 1909 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

"Collectively these are the first confirmed images in nearly 100 years of [a] black leopard in Africa, and this region is the only known spot in all of Africa to have [the] black leopard," Pilfold told USA Today.

Burrard-Lucas posted a behind-the-scenes video showing how he captured the stunning images, which you can watch below.

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