Masai Mara Wildlife & Animals
One of the densest concentrations of wild animals on Earth — the Big Five, the great cats, a million-strong migration and 470-plus birds. Your complete, conservation-led gateway to every animal of the Mara, and where to find it.
The Masai Mara is one of Africa’s greatest wildlife reserves — home to over 95 mammal species and around 470+ birds, all of the Big Five, exceptional numbers of big cats, and the annual Great Migration of more than 1.3 million wildebeest, zebra and gazelle. Together these make the Mara one of the densest concentrations of large wildlife anywhere on Earth. This guide is the gateway to it all — use the sections below to dive into any animal or group.
The reason for that abundance is the land itself: open, productive grasslands fed by the Mara’s rivers and wetlands support vast herds of grazers, and those herds support one of the world’s richest communities of predators. To understand why the Mara teems as it does, read this alongside the ecosystem guide; to understand when the spectacle peaks, see the Great Migration.
What are the Big Five of the Masai Mara?
The Big Five are the lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo and rhino — and the Mara is one of the few places you can realistically see all five. Lion, elephant and buffalo are common; leopards are elusive; black rhino are rare and a genuine prize.
The Big Five
What they are, the dark origin of the name, and how to see all five in the Mara.
Start here →Lions
The Mara holds one of Africa’s densest lion populations — famous prides and constant action.
Read →Leopards
Solitary and secretive, haunting the riverine forests along the Mara and Talek rivers.
Read →Elephants
Big breeding herds shape the landscape itself — and are reliably seen across the reserve.
Read →Cape buffalo
Abundant, herd-living and famously dangerous — a true Big Five member, often near water.
Read →Black rhino
Critically endangered and hard to find — Kenya’s only indigenous population, closely protected.
Read →Which big cats and predators live in the Mara?
The Mara is, above all, big-cat country — with lions, leopards and cheetahs alongside spotted hyena and the rare African wild dog. The density and visibility of its predators are what set the reserve apart.
Predators of the Mara
The full cast of hunters and scavengers, and how they share the plains.
Start here →Cheetahs
The fastest land animal, hunting by day on the open plains like Topi Plains.
Read →Spotted hyenas
Far more hunter than scavenger — one of the Mara’s most successful and social predators.
Read →African wild dogs
Endangered and highly mobile pack-hunters, an increasingly hopeful Mara comeback story.
Read →Lions & leopards
The Mara’s iconic cats — covered in depth in the Big Five guides above.
Lions · Leopards →The predator heartland
The Musiara sector and Marsh Pride — the Mara’s most famous predator stage.
Read →What plains game and herbivores will you see?
The grazers are the engine of the whole ecosystem — wildebeest and zebra in their hundreds of thousands, plus giraffe, hippo and a wealth of antelope. Together with the Big Five’s cheetah, giraffe, hippo and zebra, they round out the famous “Big Nine.”
Wildebeest
The keystone grazer and star of the migration — over a million move through the Mara.
Read →Zebra
Migrating alongside the wildebeest, and a striking, ever-present resident of the plains.
Read →Maasai giraffe
The iconic, jagged-patterned giraffe of the Mara, browsing the acacias across the savannah.
Read →Hippos
Holding the deeper pools of the Mara and Talek rivers — dangerous, vocal and fascinating.
Read →Antelope & gazelle
Topi, impala, eland, Thomson’s and Grant’s gazelle — the Mara’s abundant grazing cast.
Read →The Great Migration
Where the herds come from, when they cross, and the drama of the river crossings.
Explore →What about birds, primates and river life?
The Mara is a birder’s paradise of 470+ species, with primates in the woodlands and a rich cast of reptiles and river life — the famous Nile crocodiles among them. There is far more to the Mara than the headline mammals.
Birds of the Mara
From lilac-breasted rollers to secretary birds, fish eagles and giant vultures.
Read →Primates
Olive baboons and vervet monkeys, plus the riverine forest’s quieter residents.
Read →Nile crocodiles
The ancient ambush predators of the Mara River — decisive at the great crossings.
Read →Reptiles & more
Monitor lizards, snakes, tortoises and the smaller life that completes the web.
Read →Which Mara species are endangered?
Some of the Mara’s most remarkable animals are also its most threatened — the black rhino, the African wild dog, several vulture species and the elusive pangolin. Their survival is the sharp edge of Mara conservation.
Endangered wildlife
The Mara’s threatened species, the pressures they face, and the work to save them.
Start here →Black rhino
From ~120 in the 1970s to a closely guarded, recovering low-tens population today.
Read →Conservation
Poaching, habitat loss and human–wildlife conflict — and how the Mara responds.
Explore →When and where can you see the wildlife?
Wildlife viewing is rewarding year-round, but the season and the sector shape what you’ll see.
| What you want | When / where |
|---|---|
| Resident big cats & game | Year-round; superb at dawn and dusk across all sectors |
| The migration & river crossings | Roughly July–October — see the crossings guide |
| Cheetah on open plains | Topi Plains & the open central / eastern grasslands |
| Predator density & the Marsh Pride | The Musiara sector & Musiara Marsh |
| Black rhino | Rare everywhere; best chance in the Mara Triangle |
| Fewer crowds, green scenery & birds | The wet season (roughly Nov–May); migratory birds peak |
For the full picture, see best time to visit, choose your ground with the sectors guide, and plan experiences — game drives, balloons, walks — in things to do.
Why responsible wildlife viewing matters
The Mara’s wildlife is abundant, but it is not invulnerable. Resident wildlife in the wider ecosystem has declined sharply over recent decades, and the pressures — habitat loss, fencing of the dispersal lands, poaching and the crush of vehicles at famous sightings — are real. The single best thing a visitor can do is travel well: stay on the tracks, keep your distance, never crowd a hunt or a crossing, and choose guides and operators who put the animals first.
That is the spirit of this whole guide. We want you to see the Mara’s wildlife — and to help make sure it’s still here, in all its abundance, for the generations after you. The full story is in our conservation hub.
The Mara doesn’t perform for us — it simply lives, and lets us watch. Hang back, switch off the engine, and the longer you sit quietly, the more it shows you. The best sightings are earned with patience, not pursued with a throttle.
Masai Mara wildlife — FAQ
What animals can you see in the Masai Mara?
All of the Big Five (lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo, rhino), plus cheetah, hyena, giraffe, hippo, zebra, wildebeest, many antelope, primates, crocodiles and over 470 bird species — one of the richest wildlife assemblages on Earth.
What are the Big Five and the Big Nine?
The Big Five are lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo and rhino. The Big Nine adds the four other most-sought species: cheetah, giraffe, hippo and zebra. More →
How many species of animal live in the Mara?
Over 95 mammal species and roughly 470–570 bird species, plus many reptiles, amphibians and countless invertebrates.
How many lions are in the Masai Mara?
An estimated 850–900 lions across the reserve and surrounding conservancies — one of the densest lion populations in Africa. More →
When is the best time to see wildlife in the Mara?
Resident wildlife is excellent year-round; the migration and river crossings peak roughly July–October. Best time to visit →
Are rhinos easy to see in the Mara?
No — black rhino are critically endangered, shy and rare. Sightings are special; the Mara Triangle is the stronghold. More →
Try our tours — explore & learn the Mara firsthand
Let our local guides take you to the Mara’s wildlife where it lives — big cats at dawn, elephants at the water, the migration in full flow — with the field knowledge that turns a sighting into a story. Travel that explores the park and helps protect its animals.
To start planning, use the quick booking form below. ↓
Book your Masai Mara safari
Tell us your dates and what you’d like to see, and our team will put together a tailored, conservation-minded safari. Quick and no obligation.
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Related guides
The Great Migration
The million-strong journey and its river crossings.
Explore →Sectors of the Mara
The Triangle, Musiara, Sekenani, Talek & the south.
Explore →Landmarks & attractions
The rivers, plains, escarpment and viewpoints.
Explore →Conservation
The threats to the Mara’s wildlife — and the response.
Explore →
