In April–May 1986, 180 male and 218 female Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood, each less than 1 day old, were marked uniquely and released unfed on Redcliff Island, Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe. Flies were recaptured on ox fly-rounds carried out twice daily for 6 months; marks were recorded and the flies released. For females, 56% were recaptured at leastonce; the capture probability for a given 9-day period changed with age, falling from 0.32 after birth to 0.16 by 30 days and rising above 0.5 by 80 days. For males, 57% were recaptured; the probability was 0.21 for age less than 9 days, but > 0.77 for all older flies. The capture probabilities and fly-round catches were used to estimate the change with age in the daily mortality. Female mortality was 6.8% shortly after emergence, < 1% for ages 20–50 days and rose to 5% by 130 days—a pattern similar to that for laboratory reared tsetse. Male daily mortality was 8.3% after emergence, fellto 5.5% by 9 days, then rose continuously to more than 10% by 30 days. The mortality changes are related to age rather than climate. Tsetse caught on ox fly-rounds from a natural population were aged using ovarian dissection and wing-fray analysis. The age distribution (corrected using the capture probabilities from Redcliff) was consistent with the idea that, here too, mortality increased with age.