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The hippopotamus — Africa's most dangerous animal you're probably underestimating

Jonas·31 January 2026·7 min read

The most underestimated dangerous animal

When I ask tourists which animal they think is most dangerous in Africa, they always say: lion, or crocodile, or elephant. Rarely: hippo.

Yet the hippopotamus kills more people than any other large land animal in Africa. Not out of aggression — but out of territorial instinct, panic, and the sneaky combination of enormous weight (2,000–4,000 kg) and surprising speed (45 km/h over short distances).

A charging hippo is not a joke. And it does it faster than you.

Why hippos are so dangerous

Hippos are territorial animals. They sleep in water during the day — disturb their rest and they react aggressively. They defend their path from the water to their grazing grounds at night.

The greatest risk to people is at night, on a footpath near a river, when a hippo crosses its path back to the water. This happens to locals, not to safari guests in vehicles.

From a safe vehicle, hippos are completely safe to observe. The key rule: never get out near a river or lake without a guide.

Where you see hippos in Tanzania

The Seronera River in central Serengeti: large groups of hippos, also visible during the day. This is the most reliable location for hippo-spotting in Tanzania.

Lake Manyara National Park: hippos in the shallow lakes and rivers of the park. Perfect to see from the vehicle.

The Ngorongoro Crater: small population on the crater floor, at the pools and marshy areas.

Ruaha and Nyerere (southern circuit): larger populations in the Rufiji River. These are Tanzania's most impressive hippo groups.

What you see and hear

During the day hippos are water-bound. They lie half-submerged and you only see their backs, ears and eyes above water. They grunt, yawn and snort. The sounds are impressive.

A hippo's yawn is not a sign of fatigue — it's a threat display. When a hippo opens its mouth wide (up to 150° — this is a unique animal), it shows its tusks as a warning.

At night they graze on land — up to 35 kg of grass per night. That's when they're dangerous to people who unwittingly walk into their path.

Facts that surprise you

A hippo's sweat is not sweat: it's a red fluid that protects skin, acts as sunscreen AND has antiseptic properties. Researchers call it "blood sweat" although it isn't blood.

Hippos are aquatic but cannot really swim — they walk along the bottom of rivers and lakes and push themselves off. They unconsciously hold their breath underwater.

Low-ranking males? They get chased away. They live alone until they're strong enough to claim a territory.

A hippo group is called a "bloat." Typical group size: 10 to 40 animals with one dominant male.

My personal hippo memory

On a game drive near the Seronera River, we sat still beside a group of twenty hippos. It was windless. We could hear them breathing. Two young males were mock-fighting — mouths open, tusks clicking.

One of my guests whispered: "This is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen."

She had just seen four lions that morning.

That's the hippo: the animal everyone expects to find boring and everyone is surprised by.

J

Jonas

Head Guide — 20+ years Tanzania experience

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