Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive?

The semi-arid Kitengela plains south of Nairobi National Park (NNP) have been the longtime home of the Kaputiei Maasai community. Together with NNP these plains form the Athi-Kaputiei ecosystem. The plains host rich populations of wildlife and are vital to the health of NNP, since 70 to 80 percen...

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Autor principal: Reto-o-Reto Project
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Reto-o-Reto Project 2007
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2269
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author Reto-o-Reto Project
author_browse Reto-o-Reto Project
author_facet Reto-o-Reto Project
author_sort Reto-o-Reto Project
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The semi-arid Kitengela plains south of Nairobi National Park (NNP) have been the longtime home of the Kaputiei Maasai community. Together with NNP these plains form the Athi-Kaputiei ecosystem. The plains host rich populations of wildlife and are vital to the health of NNP, since 70 to 80 percent of the Park’s animals roam outside it’s boundaries at any one time. But the rangeland that once seemed endless is now splintering. Close to the ever expanding Nairobi, the Kitengela plains are experiencing a population boom, rising land prices and speculation, commercial and subsistence farming, and unregulated urbanisation. Maasai who once tended large cattle herds on communal land now often have a few animals on individual plots, and are selling off their own land for the cash to survive. Wildlife populations have dropped by more than 70 percent over 25 years. If present trends continue, the future may find - the Maasai dispossessed, a mere remnant of wildlife remaining in Nairobi National Park, severe water scarcity, and large areas of degraded land. Urgent planning and action involving all stakeholders is the best hope for giving Kitengela’s human, livestock and wildlife residents a healthy future.
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spelling CGSpace22692025-11-04T20:18:28Z Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive? Reto-o-Reto Project The semi-arid Kitengela plains south of Nairobi National Park (NNP) have been the longtime home of the Kaputiei Maasai community. Together with NNP these plains form the Athi-Kaputiei ecosystem. The plains host rich populations of wildlife and are vital to the health of NNP, since 70 to 80 percent of the Park’s animals roam outside it’s boundaries at any one time. But the rangeland that once seemed endless is now splintering. Close to the ever expanding Nairobi, the Kitengela plains are experiencing a population boom, rising land prices and speculation, commercial and subsistence farming, and unregulated urbanisation. Maasai who once tended large cattle herds on communal land now often have a few animals on individual plots, and are selling off their own land for the cash to survive. Wildlife populations have dropped by more than 70 percent over 25 years. If present trends continue, the future may find - the Maasai dispossessed, a mere remnant of wildlife remaining in Nairobi National Park, severe water scarcity, and large areas of degraded land. Urgent planning and action involving all stakeholders is the best hope for giving Kitengela’s human, livestock and wildlife residents a healthy future. 2007 2010-08-16T08:10:49Z 2010-08-16T08:10:49Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2269 en Open Access application/pdf Reto-o-Reto Project Reto-o-Reto Project. 2007. Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive? Reto-O-Reto Policy Brief 2. Nairobi (Kenya): ILRI.
spellingShingle Reto-o-Reto Project
Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive?
title Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive?
title_full Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive?
title_fullStr Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive?
title_full_unstemmed Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive?
title_short Kitengela transforming: Will pastoralists and wildlife survive?
title_sort kitengela transforming will pastoralists and wildlife survive
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2269
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