Immature warthogs (*Phacochoerus africanus*), known as piglets or sometimes affectionately called "warthoglets," are among the most endearing and entertaining young animals of the African savanna, born in litters of typically two to four after a gestation period of around five to six months, emerging into the world as tiny, smooth-skinned miniatures of their parents that are surprisingly alert and mobile within hours of birth. Newborns are remarkably small and vulnerable by the standards of hoofed animals, weighing just a few pounds at birth and lacking the coarse, bristly hair and prominent facial warts that will eventually define their adult appearance — instead, young warthogs have a softer, more sparse coat and smooth faces that give them a comparatively delicate look, though their characteristic tusks begin to emerge within the first weeks of life and grow steadily throughout their development. The piglets are nursed by their mother in the family's burrow — typically a repurposed aardvark hole that the female, called a sow, defends with considerable ferocity against predators — and spend their earliest weeks in or near this den before beginning to venture out and graze alongside the family group, called a sounder, which usually consists of the mother and her current and sometimes previous litters. Immature warthogs are extraordinarily playful and curious, spending much of their time engaging in energetic bouts of chasing, sparring, and mock-fighting with their siblings, behavior that develops the strength, coordination, and social skills they will need as adults. One of the most iconic and charming sights on the African plains is a family of young warthogs trotting behind their mother in single file, their thin, tufted tails held bolt upright like tiny antennas — a behavior thought to help the piglets follow their mother through tall grass — and when danger threatens, they dash for the safety of the burrow with impressive speed, diving in headfirst and then spinning around to face outward, ready to defend themselves, a behavior they learn from their mothers at a remarkably young age. Despite the watchful care of their mothers, young warthogs face formidable predation pressure from lions, leopards, cheetahs, hyenas, wild dogs, and large birds of prey, meaning that mortality among piglets is high and survival to adulthood represents a genuine gauntlet of skill and luck navigated under the protective guidance of their fiercely devoted mothers.
- Subject Matter: Wildlife
- Collections: Digital photography , Mixed Media , South Africa, Wildlife