Processes of fragmentation in the Amboseli ecosystem, Southern Kajiado district, Kenya

The Amboseli ecosystem is known worldwide as one of Kenya’s “conservation jewels,” and is recognized as a landscape where humans, livestock, and wildlife have co-existed for centuries. However, there is a long-term shift underway, pushed by a transition in human land-use from extensive pastoralism b...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: BurnSilver, S.B., Worden, J., Boone, Randall B.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/56745
Description
Summary:The Amboseli ecosystem is known worldwide as one of Kenya’s “conservation jewels,” and is recognized as a landscape where humans, livestock, and wildlife have co-existed for centuries. However, there is a long-term shift underway, pushed by a transition in human land-use from extensive pastoralism by Maasai to intensive pastoralism carried out within legally-prescribed private parcels of land. In the face of this transition, the region’s wildlife populations and its system of seasonal livestock and wildlife movements appear increasingly fragile, and Maasai pastoralists themselves are facing significant challenges to their economic and cultural well-being.