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THE IMPACT OF THE 2009 DROUGHT ON WILDLIFE, LIVESTOCK AND TOURISM IN THE AMBOSELI ECOSYSTEM: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR PROMPT ACTION AND ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION Proceedings of the Amboseli Ecosystem workshop Serena Lodge, Amboseli 9 th December 2009 Convened and organized by Kenya Wildlife Service, African Conservation Centre and Amboseli Conservation Program Sponsored by African Conservation Centre and Dutch Government Institutional Support programme

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THE IMPACT OF THE 2009 DROUGHT ON WILDLIFE, LIVESTOCK AND

TOURISM IN THE AMBOSELI ECOSYSTEM: RECOMMENDATIONS

FOR PROMPT ACTION AND ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION

Proceedings of the Amboseli Ecosystem workshop

Serena Lodge, Amboseli

9th December 2009

Convened and organized by

Kenya Wildlife Service, African Conservation Centre and Amboseli

Conservation Program

Sponsored by

African Conservation Centre

and

Dutch Government Institutional Support programme

2

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The workshop was convened at short notice to take stock of the devastating impact of the 2009

drought on Amboseli National Park and ecosystem. The meeting, convened by Kenya Wildlife

Service, Amboseli Conservation Program and African Conservation Centre, brought together 50

representatives from among government agencies, local communities, researchers, conservationists,

non-government organizations and the tourism sector. The meeting reviewed data on the wildlife

and livestock losses and proposed ways to minimize further losses and conflict and to restore the

damage to herds, park and ecosystem after the drought.

Heavy losses have occurred in wildebeest, zebra and buffalo populations and many elephant and

hippos have died. Overall losses to the large migratory herbivores are in excess of 75%. Wildebeest

losses may exceed 95% and the small remaining herd is vulnerable to further losses in the coming

year before any new calves are born. The precipitous drop in herbivore numbers will soon affect the

carnivore populations, causing additional pressure on herbivores and the likelihood of a sharp rise in

livestock predation. Livestock losses were reported as 81% among cattle and 64% among sheep and

goat, and still rising. The losses pose enormous hardship on the pastoral community. The resulting

poverty will see the use of natural resources, including charcoal making, bush meat and trophy

hunting, rise sharply in the coming year.

Solutions to the drought impact recommended by the workshop included: setting up a carnivore-

herbivore monitoring team; surveillance of the remaining herbivores; reinforcing KWS and

community anti-poaching operations, gathering intelligence information and setting up a hotline for

communications; expanding the Lion Guardians program to the Amboseli basin area to cover

carnivore monitoring and community protection for lions; an immediate expansion of the Maasai

land Preservation Trust programme to reduce carnivore-human conflict in the Amboseli area, and

the establishment of a task force to implement the immediate actions called for by the workshop.

The workshop recognized the need for the community to re-establish its livestock economy as

rapidly as possible, taking into account the need for environmental restoration and a transformation

from subsistence to commercial herds based on few numbers and larger market value. It was

recognized that subdivision had worsened the frequency and impact of drought. Remedial action

should include restocking with improved quality of livestock; developing "grass" banks with grazing

3

management; improved veterinary services and rehabilitation of livestock dips, the diversification of

pastoral economies in the area and higher education to provide better opportunities off the land.

The tourism sector concluded that it was not possible to "manage" the news of wildlife loss and that

"spinning" the information would backfire. Instead visitor experience in Amboseli should be

diversified and improved through richer interpretation and expansion to the surrounding group

ranches. To stem further impact on wildlife and habitat, an immediate moratorium should be placed

on any new tourist facilities in and around the Amboseli basin. NEMA should be presented the

results of the meeting and involved in discussion on the restoration of Amboseli and visitor planning.

Measure should also be taken to restore wildlife populations and habitat in Amboseli and to

coordinate information and programs. The measures should include a species and habitat

restoration plan. Habitat restoration should be based on the woodland and swamp restoration plots

ACP and ACC have established in the basin, under the guidance of KWS, and with the co-sponsorship

of lodges, non-government organizations, research programs. The restorations costs could be offset

by carbon trading mechanisms.

The Amboseli Ecosystem Management Plan will need to be revised in light of the large wildlife losses

and impact of drought on the local community. An Amboseli resource-cum-information centre

should be established on community land outside the park to coordinate and integrate research,

planning and information dissemination in the ecosystem under the newly established Amboseli

Ecosystem Trust.

4

Table of Contents

Contents

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ....................................................................................................................... 2

ACRONYMS ....................................................................................................................................... 5

1. INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................... 6

1.1 Workshop process ................................................................................................................... 6

1. 2 THE OPENING SESSION............................................................................................................ 7

2. WILDLIFE AND THE DROUGHT .................................................................................................... 7

2.1 Wildlife Numbers, drought losses and the challenges for Amboseli .......................................... 7

2.1.1 Unprecedented Wildlife Deaths: ....................................................................................... 8

2.1.2 Population recovery times: Wildebeest, Zebra and Buffalo .............................................. 13

2.1.3 Immediate implications of the drought ........................................................................... 13

2.2 Carnivore Monitoring in Amboseli and Surrounding Areas ..................................................... 15

2.3 Amboseli Elephant Mortalities for 2008 and January - October 2009 ..................................... 17

3. LIVESTOCK AND THE DROUGHT ............................................................................................... 19

3.1 The "transformational" drought: ............................................................................................ 19

3.2 Livestock Counts .................................................................................................................... 20

3.3 Stresses on livestock due to drought ...................................................................................... 21

4. TOURISM AND THE DROUGHT ................................................................................................. 22

5. FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS....................................................................................... 23

5.1 The Impact of Drought on Wildlife: ........................................................................................ 23

5.2 The Impact of the Drought on Community ............................................................................. 24

5.3 The Impact of the Drought on Tourism................................................................................... 25

6. CONCLUSIONS ON IMPACT OF DROUGHT: THE WAY FORWARD ............................................... 26

6.1 Task Forces to Implement the Recommendations .................................................................. 26

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................................... 28

List of Attendants ........................................................................................................................ 29

Workshop Program...................................................................................................................... 32

5

ACRONYMS

ACC- African Conservation Centre

ACP- Amboseli Conservation Program

KWS- Kenya Wildlife Service

ANP- Amboseli National Park

AEP- Amboseli Elephant Program

SNV- Netherlands Development Organization

AWF- African Wildlife Fund

AET- Amboseli Ecosystem Trust

DVO- District Veterinary Officer

DLPO- District Livestock Production Officer

DRSRS- Department of Resource Survey and Remote Sensing

DCP- Drought Contingency Plan

PEV- Post Election Violence

GDP- Gross Domestic Product

LWL- Living With Lions

MWCT- Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust

OGRPCF- Olgulului Group Ranch Predator Consolation Fund

ATGRCA- Amboseli Tsavo Group Ranches Conservation Association

6

1. INTRODUCTION

1.1 Workshop process

Workshop participants were represented by the sectors concerned with the impact of drought in

Amboseli. The participants included Kenya Wildlife Service, African Conservation Centre, Amboseli

Conservation Program, government officials from the Ministry of Livestock, community members

and their associations (Ilkisonko Professionals Development Forum, Amboseli Ecosystem Trust),

members of the tourism sector including investors and managers, the wildlife sector, including

researchers and non-government organizations, Amboseli Elephant Program (AEP), African Wildlife

Foundation (AWF), and Amboseli Baboon Project. Donor and aid organizations included the

Netherlands Development Organization (SNV).

The workshop was divided into four sessions. The introductory session laid out goals for the

workshop. The second session presented research findings on the impact of the drought on key

wildlife species, including wildebeest, zebra, buffalo, elephants and carnivores. The third session

looked at the impact of drought on livestock. The fourth session considered the impact of drought

on the tourism sector. The breakout sessions discussed the impact of drought on wildlife, livestock,

and tourism and drew up recommendations for prompt action. The concluding session drew up

recommendations and an action plan to address the impact of drought.

7

1. 2 THE OPENING SESSION

The workshop was officially opened by Mrs Florence Kulecho, Ag. Assistant Director Southern

Conservation Area, KWS. The Ag Assistant Director noted that the workshop was convened to draw

attention to the devastating impact of the 2009 on wildlife, livestock and the local communities

around Amboseli. The impact of drought called for some immediate solutions. Mrs Kulecho urged

the workshop to develop plans for cushioning wildlife and the Amboseli community. The primary

goals of KWS in co-convening the workshop are to address the following concerns and issues:

The Implications of the drought on wildlife, habitat, community and tourism

Short term and long term measures to recover from the effects of drought

Collaboration among parties concerned with the Amboseli ecosystem

The Impact of carnivores on vulnerable herbivores

Predation of carnivores on livestock and the resulting human-carnivore conflict

Measures to anticipate and reduce the conflict

The viability of Amboseli ecosystem after the drought

Follow-on meetings and forums to discuss the impact of drought and remedial measures

On behalf of the director ACC, Godfrey Masinde, Program Manager, thanked all participants for their

quick response to the short workshop notification. He urged the workshop to assess the impact of

the drought; avoid blame and focus on solutions. He asked all parties to help Amboseli recover from

drought, address the impact on tourism and tourism revenues and to suggest ways to buffer and

restore wildlife, the environment, livestock and tourism in the area.

2. WILDLIFE AND THE DROUGHT

2.1 Wildlife Numbers, drought losses and the challenges for Amboseli

David Western, director of ACP, presented the background to the 2009 drought. The long rains failed

in April and May of 2009. He referred to the ACP website, amboseliconservation.org , for a fuller

description of the drought country-wide and in Amboseli. The first signs of an unprecedented

drought in Amboseli began with buffalo moving deep into the swamps to graze. By September, zebra

and wildebeest had followed buffalo into the swamps and were grazing on the heavily depleted

sedges and herbs. In October ACP expanded and intensified its monthly monitoring plots to record

the rapid rise in animal carcasses.

8

2.1.1 Unprecedented Wildlife Deaths:

Large numbers of animals began dying in Amboseli in September through November

Table 1 shows carcass estimate and table 2 shows live population estimate for the height of the

drought.

Table 1 showing carcass estimates for the Amboseli Basin

10185616160036123972357Wildebeest

57930367721956118957Zebra

76276842079114Buffalo

SEEstimateSEEstimateSEEstimate

November 25th 2009November 5th 2009October 5th 2009Species

Carcass Population Estimate in the Amboseli Basin

9

Table 2 showing live population estimates for the Amboseli Basin

1643121741260----4872**Wildebeest

109718286653364----5320**Zebra

---185*---205*-----235*Buffalo

SEEstimateSEEstimateSEEstimate

November 25th 2009November 5th 2009October 5th 2009Species

Live Population Estimate in the Amboseli Basin

**Estimates reconstructed by adding live and dead from the November 5th 2009 estimates *Complete aerial census

These counts document the extremely rapid collapse of wildlife populations between September

and November. The close match between the falling live counts and rising carcass counts accounts

for the animal populations in the Amboseli basin at the start of the drought. There is no significant

discrepancy in animal numbers that needs to be explained by migration out of the basin. The

absence of any outward movement from the basin was confirmed by aerial surveys across the entire

Amboseli ecosystem. The outlying pastures were so heavily grazed that cattle were moved out of the

Amboseli region to distant locations as early as June. The close match between the rising carcass

counts and falling populations of wildebeest and zebra is shown in Figure 1.

10

Figure 1 shows the close match of rising carcass counts and falling wildebeest and zebra populations in the Amboseli

basin.

The collapse of wildebeest, zebra and buffalo populations will have immediate consequences for

carnivores, livestock, community and tourism industry and longer term implications for the wildlife,

the park, community, ecosystem recovery and tourism.

2.1 The cause of increasing drought exposure in Amboseli

The depletion of the drought refuges in Amboseli amplified the severity the 2009 drought. The

woodlands had largely disappeared by the 1980's due to heavy browsing pressure by eleplhants. The

tall sedges that dominated the swamps and the cynodon grasslands that sustained Amboseli’s large

concentrations of herbivores during dry seasons and droughts have been all but depleted over the

last 10 years. Historically, these late season habitats supported upwards of 80% of the migratory

herbivore populations during extreme droughts. Since 1967, when ACP began its ecological

monitoring of Amboseli, drought mortalities have not exceeded 20% among wildlife. The 2009

mortalities are more than four times recorded levels.

The increasing vulnerability of wildlife to droughts in Amboseli is captured in the long-term decline

in pasture production measured on 19 permanent plots monitored monthly. Figure 2 shows the

steady decline in the standing crop of pastures since the 1980s. The decline was reversed

11

temporarily by the heavy El Niño rains of 1998, then continued to fall after the 2000 drought, mainly

because of heavy grazing pressure on the swamp sedges and swamp-edge pastures.

Total Plant Biomass in the Amboseli Basin 1976-2009

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Figure 2. The decline in Amboseli pastures production and increasing vulnerability to drought

The change in habitat and depletion of the swamp sedges in Amboseli can largely be attributed to

the compression of elephants into the Amboseli following the heavy ivory poaching of the 1970s and

the simultaneous exclusion of livestock from the park. The rapid increase in elephant populations is

shown in Figure 3. The formerly migratory elephant herds concentrated in the basin for protection

then increased steadily. Numbers in the park peaked in the early 1990s then began falling as the

elephants moved out of the park with declining swamp pastures during the dry seasons.

12

Yearly Means of the Elephant population in the Amboseleli Basin

1968-2009

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Figure 3. Yearly means of elephant population in the Amboseli basin from 1968 to 2009

The change in composition of the herbivores in Amboseli as a result of livestock exclusion and

habitat change is shown in Figure 4. Wildebeest and zebra numbers increased with the exclusion of

livestock in the 1970s, then again with the expansion of grasslands with habitat change. The large

numbers of grazing species by 2007 and the diminishing pastures in and around the Amboseli

swamps left little reserve in the event of an extreme drought, such as occurred in 2009.

Figure 4. Changing species numbers in Amboseli before and after the exclusion of livestock from the

park in the late 1970s, before the drought and during the drought (October and November 2009).

The March 2007 and October 2009 numbers are based on KWS total counts of the park and

November 2009 on ACP counts.

13

2.1.2 Population recovery times: Wildebeest, Zebra and Buffalo

The slump in wildebeest, zebra, and buffalo herds in Amboseli will take a long time to recover. The

natural population recovery time for wildebeest population will take 15 to 20 years, if the few

remaining animals survive the coming year. The slow recovery times are illustrated in Figure. 5

Wildebeest Population Projection in Amboseli

Estimated rate of increase 20% Per Year

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Figure 5 showing projected wildebeest recovery times based on the remaining population.

The recovery times to pre-drought population numbers will take some 8 to 10 years for zebra and

buffalo.

2.1.3 Immediate implications of the drought

The collapse of the wildebeest, zebra and buffalo populations put the large carnivore populations at

risk of starvation in the coming weeks. The 150 or so hyenas are likely to pose severe competition

for prey animals with the 56 lions in the Amboseli basin. The sharp rise in predator to prey ratios will

place extreme pressure on the remaining herbivore populations and the raise the risk of

exterminating the last 150 or fewer wildebeest counted in and around the park early December.

The species composition of the wildlife community in the Amboseli basin has already change

dramatically in the last three months and will continue to change further in the coming few years.

There are now far few large species and proportionally more small species such a Thomson’s gazelle

and warthog. The small species will increase more rapidly that the large in the coming few years.

Predators, especially lions, are likely to decline steeply in numbers.

14

The Amboseli habitats will see a large increase of pasture across the ecosystem because of absence

of grazers. The swamps and woodlands will recover only if elephants are excluded from major

sections of this habitat.

The ecological changes have large and immediate implications for tourism in Amboseli. Wildlife and

bird viewing will be far poorer. Vehicular congestion around key attractions will grow. Poor habitat

cover and low variety will compound the poor experience and vehicular congestion, leading to a loss

of visitor experience and, almost certainly, reduced revenues to KWS, the community and the

tourism industry.

The impact of drought will also affect the community and in turn its relationship with wildlife.

Predation on livestock is likely to increase, and with it human-wildlife conflict. The low livestock

holdings will place greater expectations on wildlife and tourism income and lead to less tolerance of

livestock losses to wildlife. Increased poverty will see a sharp rise in natural resources use such

charcoal production for cash, bush meat consumption and trophy hunting.

2.1. Restoring Amboseli after the Drought:

The data from ACP clearly documents the amplified impact of drought in Amboseli due to the loss of

woodlands and swamp cover. The overall loss of wildlife and habitat calls for urgent steps to restore

diversity of the ecosystem and its resilience to drought. The resuscitation of the livestock sector,

and a retooling of the tourism sector, is essential. Specific recommendations include:

Reseed degraded livestock pastures to create grass banks and drought refuges;

A transformation of livestock economy from subsistence to commercial production;

Strengthen the Cattlemen’s Association to accelerate commercial livestock management;

Form a carnivore-herbivore monitoring team;

Form a human-wildlife conflict management team;

Draw up a restoration plan and establish a public-private partnership;

Revise Amboseli Ecosystem Plan to reflect the impact of the drought;

Impose a moratorium on new lodges around park;

The ecotourism industry should put in place a plan to manage visitor expectations and their

impacts;

Establish a resource/information centre under the Amboseli Ecosystem Trust

15

2.2 Carnivore Monitoring in Amboseli and Surrounding Areas

The Amboseli Lion Project is collaboration between KWS and the Institute for Environmental

Sciences (CML) of Leiden University. The project has tracked the movements of lions in the

Amboseli ecosystem, calculated their home ranges, population estimates, determined social

structure and group size and determined lion prey in order to assess the human-lion conflict in

Amboseli NP. The project is also raising awareness of lion movements and how to avert livestock

depredations in the communities surrounding the park.

Six lions in Amboseli National Park have been fitted with GPS-GSM collars. Data from the collars

documents lion movement in the Park (Figure 6).

Lion movement Oct 2009

Figure 6 showing lions movement in Amboseli National Park

16

Lion population have increased from an estimated 34 in 2007 to 56 in 2009 (Figure 7), with a pride

size and sex ratio as indicated in Figure 8 and 9. There are more female than male lions, pointing to

accelerated growth in population.

Figure 7 showing an increasing lion population in Amboseli National Park

Pride size

Figure 8 showing pride size in ANP

17

Sex ratios

Figure 9 showing sex ratios of lion s in the ANP

Despite an increase in population size, lions face the threats of habitat loss, conflict with humans

and with spotted hyenas, and now a reduced wild prey base because of drought. Predators also

suffer from many misconceptions on the part of the pastoralist community.

2.3 Amboseli Elephant Mortalities for 2008 and January - October 2009

The Amboseli Elephant Project began collecting information in 1971. Because of the transformation

of Amboseli habitats by elephants, Amboseli can no longer support the population. They now

frequently move out of the Park looking for food and often raid small farms (shambas), thus

increasing conflict with humans. The recently created consolation scheme has reduced spearing of

elephants. Of the 62 families of elephants studied in the Park, only half visit the Park now while 7

families have disappeared in Tanzania. Elephant mortality has increased from all sources during this

drought (Figure 10).

18

Figure 10 Causes of elephant mortality in the Amboseli Ecosystem

High calf mortality arose because starvation and the death of matriarchs above age 50 is also leading

to poor coordination of family units.

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3. LIVESTOCK AND THE DROUGHT

3.1 The "transformational" drought:

Andrew Muchiru and Dr Jeff Worden presented the ACC Drought Surveys completed in ACC core

research areas. Preliminary results show a difference in cattle herd sizes and losses in different areas

(Table 3) until September.

Site

Mean Starting herd

size

Mean number

lost

Mean percent lost

Amboseli 86.2 38.3 37.5

Magadi 114.7 72.0 67.2

Table 3 showing herd sizes and losses in Amboseli and Magadi until September.

The livestock losses have continued to rise since September. A cell phone survey conducted in late

November gives the following aggregated livestock losses for the Amboseli region.

Table 4. Livestock losses due to drought among livestock owners in the in the Amboseli region in November 2009. Most

cattle left the area in June and died in other locations.

20

3.2 Livestock Counts

Aerial counts carried out by Amboseli Conservation Program and the Department of Resource

Survey and Remote Sensing (DRSRS) indicate that there has been no significant increase in the

number of livestock using the park since 1980. There was a sharp four to five-fold decline in

livestock numbers in the Amboseli Basin after the park was formally established in the late 1970s.

Livestock have not, therefore, been a significant factor in the decline of habitat in Amboseli and the

collapse of the wildlife herds.

Annual monthly averages of cattle in the Park

Figure 12 showing annual averages of cattle in the park, Amboseli basin

21

Cattle Shoats

Historical ContextAerial counts – ACP + DRSRS

Figure 13 showing Cattle and Shoat numbers with a projected decline as a result of the drought.

Livestock populations in the Amboseli ecosystem and the adjoining areas have fluctuated with

drought and rainy periods since the 1960s. Figure 13 shows the number of cattle in the region from

1974 onwards. Numbers have been falling steadily since the 1990s and will fall steeply as a result of

the 2009 drought. Sheep and goat rose after the 1970s drought and have held steadily since the

1990s. Numbers will decline two thirds or more with the 2009 drought.

The heavy livestock mortality among Amboseli pastoralist will cause acute poverty in the coming

months and for several years to come as herds recover. This raises risk of predation on the depleted

livestock herds. The situation needs to be monitored and the rehabilitation of rangeland and herds

must be given high priority. Alternative livelihoods also need to be explored.

3.3 Stresses on livestock due to drought

Dr. N Mwangi, District Veterinary Officer, reviewed the impact of drought on livestock health. He

noted that starvation reduces immunity of livestock, leading to more deaths from disease. In normal

situations, livestock deplete their pastures earlier than wildlife, resulting in some livestock

movements into the Park. When grazing in the Park, livestock contract vector-borne diseases and

suffer predation. Whether grazing inside or outside the Park, livestock succumb to various diseases

because they are not dipped. There is not a single functional dip in the whole district.

22

Wildlife and livestock deaths have led to an increase in the number of domestic dogs running wild,

raising the risk of rabies in the area.

Alphonse Musili, District Livestock Officer, stated that drought had caused heavy livestock losses

through Kajiado. Livestock from Amboseli moved to as far as Lake Manyara in Tanzania, Nairobi,

Thika, and Machakos. Over 3000 families have lost all their livestock (Rombo 843 households,

Intonet 249, Kimana/Imbirikani 997, Lengisimu 352, Central 958 households).

The Ministry of Livestock, through the ASAL program, is in the process of establishing a

District Drought Contingency Plan (DCP), a restocking program and rehabilitation of the

rangelands in collaboration with ACC and a Relief Fund.

4. TOURISM AND THE DROUGHT

The tourism sector produces significant income for the central government and the local

community. It is also a leading employer of skilled and unskilled personnel. Tourism was badly

affected by the post-election violence. Then, just as it was recovering, the drought of 2009 took

a further toll, making it hard to market destinations in Kenya. Many hotels, lodges and tented

camps are experiencing cancellations. Problems such as drought and poor management in a

single destination can adversely affect the entire circuit. Visitors prefer a complete itinerary and

are now looking elsewhere, including Tanzania and Zambia. It will be hard to recapture our lost

market. In addition to the drought, greed and corruption is destroying the tourism sector, with

new unregulated developments being built everywhere, most of poor quality. The future of

Kenyan tourism may depend on capturing low-impact, high-income destinations to counter the

overcrowded national parks and reserves and low visitor satisfaction.

Amboseli National Park exemplifies the problems. More lodges are being developed in

Amboseli, despite reaching its tourist threshold. Local communities do not benefit as much as

they should from tourism. For example, tour drivers exploit local communities at cultural

manyattas. The problem involves the collusion of many people, including manyatta

representatives. Some solutions to Amboseli’s tourism problems have already been proposed

but not implemented, such as ticketing at the hotel instead of at the manyattas, restoring of

woodland habitat, limiting visitor numbers, and rehabilitating the elephant fence at Ol Tukai

Lodge to recover biodiversity. Basic maintenance of the roads is also necessary and conflict

between livestock and wildlife could be resolved in a better fashion.

23

How will tour operators justify bringing tourists to Amboseli in its current state? Certainly, Amboseli

can no longer be called a "World Class Park". The challenges can only be solved by partners working

together.

5. FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

The workshop received the findings and recommendations from the three discussion groups

representing wildlife, community, and tourism interests in the Amboseli Ecosystem. Each group

consisted of a cross section of discussants was asked to address the following:

The challenges the drought has created for the Amboseli region.

Recommendations for managing the challenges.

Suggestions for how to restore Amboseli.

Suggestions for how to manage visitor expectation and visitor impact on the area.

Action plans for implementing the recommendations.

5.1 The Impact of Drought on Wildlife:

The wildlife group considered the immediate problems caused by the drought. What are the likely

immediate and longer-term consequences if the drought continues and if it rains?

Immediate problems caused by the drought include predator starvation, local extinction of several

species of wildlife, increased human-wildlife conflict, stepped up poaching and unsustainable use of

natural resources. The lack of community awareness of the broader impacts of drought presents a

major obstacle to implementing any solutions.

In the case of continued drought:

The remaining herbivore populations will suffer higher predator pressure when they are weak and few in number

Human-Wildlife conflict will increase as carnivores target livestock to replace wild herbivores Human-elephant encounters will increase as elephants move out of the park in search of

forage

In the case of rains;

Human-baboon conflicts will decrease Carnivore pressure on the remaining herbivores will fall as predators disperse from

the park The carnivores will suffer an immediate shortfall in prey

24

The recommendations for arresting the impact of drought on wildlife included the following

immediate actions:

Create a carnivore-herbivore monitoring team

Protect the remaining herbivores

Improve community awareness of the impact of drought and the wildlife situation

Increase anti-poaching coverage through KWS rangers and community scouts

Improve intelligence gathering through local informers

Establish a hotline for wildlife infractions and human-wildlife conflict

Extend the Lion Guardians program to the national park region to complement KWS’ efforts

to monitor lions

Extend the program to include hyenas, given the large numbers in the park

The following longer-term measures were proposed:

Develop a habitat restoration plan

Restock locally endangered herbivores. Wildebeests and buffalo call for special attention

Establish an Amboseli information/resource centre to integrate and disseminate information

important for wildlife conservation, community planning and tourism

Establish a plan for managing tourism expectations and impact

Revise the Amboseli Ecosystem Management Plan to reflect the major drought losses and

restore wildlife and habitat

Address the impact and consequences of drought in planning land use and future

developments in the ecosystem

5.2 The Impact of the Drought on Community

The community discussions noted the huge losses of livestock and the community’s wish to

restore it livestock economy, taking into account environmental impact and economic viability.

The following recommendations were made for recovery and economic transition:

Improve livestock quality and productivity through cross-breeding and commercial sales

Develop "grass banks" and reinstitute collaborative grazing management

Reduce conflict by improving herding techniques to reduce livestock vulnerability to

predation

Improve veterinary services

Rehabilitate dips in Loitokitok District

25

Create a pastoral forum to address the environmental and developmental challenges

The priorities listed for action were to establish a community task force; a conflict mitigation

mechanism; monitoring rangeland trends; grazing management and rehabilitation, and husbandry

improvements and diversification of livelihoods.

5.3 The Impact of the Drought on Tourism

The tourism group recognized that managing press reports would not help the situation and

might even backfire when tourists are lured to an Amboseli that no longer exists. However

there are simple and immediate things that can be done to improve visitor experience and

make Amboseli a "friendly Park". These includes improving the infrastructure, specifically

rehabilitating roads to reduce corrugations, improving visitor reception at the Amboseli

gates, tidying up the area around Ol Tuka Lodge and generally improving lodges and camps to

be more appealing. The following urgent measures were recommended:

Impose a moratorium on further lodge developments in the Amboseli Basin. Future

developments should be confined to outlying community ranches. The results of the

meeting and lodge moratorium should be communicated to NEMA

Diversify visitor experience to counterbalance the loss of biodiversity

Develop an action plan for the restoration of Amboseli basin

Explore possibilities for carbon credit to finance the restoration plan

Consider culling hyenas if their numbers threaten lions (given their precarious status in

Kenya and the ecosystem) and other locally endangered species

Refocus planning away from mass tourism to low-impact, high-revenue tourism

26

6. CONCLUSIONS ON IMPACT OF DROUGHT: THE WAY FORWARD

While many of the problems facing the Amboseli Ecosystem are deep and endemic, the solutions

must address the broader challenges facing pastoralists, the rangelands and wildlife in Kenya. To do

so, poverty must be addressed as the highest priority. Solutions include diversifying the pastoral

economy in the area and creating employment opportunities off the land. Recognizing that Gross

Domestic Product (GDP) is positively correlated with educational levels beyond primary school,

secondary schooling must be developed in the area to provide opportunities for the growing

younger generation. The Amboseli Ecosystem Trust (AET) and Ilkisongo Development Forum should

take a lead in the restoration and development of pastoralist communities

6.1 Task Forces to Implement the Recommendations

The workshop participants agreed that there is an urgent need to act now on the biggest challenges

created by the drought and the key recommendations of the workshop. Further delays will worsen

the fallout from the drought. A Task Force was therefore set up to implement recommendations of

the workshop and communicate the findings widely. The task force was composed of the interested

parties and institutions in the Amboseli ecosystem. Including the Kenya Wildlife Service (Senior

Warden), Amboseli tourism sector (Stefano Cheli), carnivore research (Richard Bonham), Ilkisongo

Professional Forum (Daniel Mayani), community (Sayanki Oloitiptip) and non-governmental

organization (ACC and AWF).

It was also concluded that monitoring the ongoing changes is essential, and that urgent measures

must be taken to minimize human-wildlife conflict. The carnivore, herbivore and ecological changes

should therefore be closely monitored in the coming weeks and the findings posted on a website for

easy access by all stakeholders. Dr Musyoki , head of ecosystems research, KWS, has proposed a

herbivore-carnivore monitoring team to include members from KWS, ACP, Amboseli Elephant

Program, Carnivore Group, and one or two other members. This proposal was endorsed. The

participants urged that the situation with lions, wildebeest and buffalo be closely tracked, given their

precarious status in the ecosystem. It was noted that a wildlife survey of the Amboseli ecosystem is

planned by ACC and DRSRS to assess the impact of the drought on wildlife and livestock across the

region.

It was also recommended that the Maasai Land Preservation Trust expand its program to the vicinity

of Amboseli National Park immediately in order to communicate the rising threat of carnivore

predation on livestock and to build the skills and measures for minimizing conflict and offsetting

community losses. The meeting also encouraged KWS to assist financially in these efforts.

27

Finally, restoration was seen as crucial for re-establishing the wildlife and habitat richness of

Amboseli, as well as its ecological resilience to drought. Lodges, camps and other interested parties

were urged to support (financially and logistically) the proposed restoration plots slated under the

Amboseli Ecosystem Management Plan. Sponsorship for restoration plots could be established

through the newly established Tourism Forum.

28

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The workshop was organised by the Kenya Wildlife Service and African Conservation Centre working

with the Amboseli Conservation Program. Funding was provided by the Royal Netherlands Embassy

and through its Dutch Government Institutional Support programme to ACC. Notes of the meeting

the final report were prepared by John Kuloba (ACC), assisted by Victor Mose and Miriam Kaloki of

(ACP). Shirley Strum and David Western helped in editing the report.

The convenors and organizers wish to thank all the participants for attending at such short notice.

Serena Lodge hosted the workshop. We also wish to thank the Amboseli Ecosystem Trust for

arranging to hold its inaugural meeting the previous day so that it could participate fully in the

workshop and take on major role in implementing its recommendations.

29

Appendices

List of Attendants

NAME INSTITUTION CONTACTS

1 Florence Kulecho

KWS P.O. Box 42076 [email protected]

2 Godfrey L. Masinde

ACC

[email protected]

3 Gwili Gibbon

Maasailand Preservation Trust

[email protected]

4 Muterian Ntanin

MWCT

[email protected]

5 Kevin Currey

MWCT

[email protected]

6 David Western

ACP/ACC

7 Jeff Worden

ACP/ACC

[email protected]

8 Daniel L. Mayiani

Ilkisongo Development Forum

P.O. Box 195 LTK

9 Wilson Tikwa

Amboseli/Tsavo Game Scout

[email protected]

10 Jackson Mwatu

ACC

[email protected]

11 Philip P. Olekimiti

Loitokitok Dev. Community Imbirikani G.R.

P.O. Box 97 LTK 0723 349 528

12 Lolkinyiei S.G.

Kuku Group Ranch

P.O. Box 155 LTK

13 Lucy S. Nashuu

Women Representative Amboseli Ecosystem Trust

P.O. Box 22 LTK

14 Tarayia Lekanayia

ATGRCA

[email protected] 0722 821 730

15 Agnes Kilowua Women Representation

0724 458 992 P.O, Box 84 LTK

16 Stephen Ndambuki M.

KWS – Amboseli N. P.

[email protected]

17 Lekishon Kenana KWS- Southern Conservation Area

[email protected]

30

NAME INSTITUTION CONTACTS

18 Andrew Muchiru

ACC

[email protected]

19 David K. Maitumo

ACC/ACP

0725 431 662

20 John P. Mareinka

OGRPCF

0721 812 946

21 Bob Oguya

Chief Naturalist, Serena Hotels

0733 814 113 [email protected]

22 Kylie McQualter

Living With Lions

[email protected]

23 Elizabeth Carabine

Lion Guardians

[email protected]

24 Leela Hazzah

LWL/ Lion Guardians

[email protected]

25 Richard Bonham

Ol Donyo Waas

bonham@swiftkenya

26 Shirley C. Strum

Uaso Ngiro Baboon Project (Mukogodo)

[email protected]

27 Soila Sayialel

Amboseli Elephant Trust

[email protected]

28 Fiesta Warinwa

AWF

[email protected]

29 John Kioko

Amboseli Elephant Trust

[email protected]

30 Joel Ketukei

Kuku ‘A’ Group Ranch Secretary

0720 815 150

31 James S. Oloitiptip

Olgululli Ranch Trust

0722 867 410

32 Eric Ole Kesoi

Lion Guardian Project

0717 763 057

33 Stephany Dolrenry

LWL/Lion Guardian

0727 880 756

34 Charles Lengete

Kuku Group Ranch

0720 899 592

35 Stephano Cheli

Tortilis Camp

[email protected]

36 Dr. N. J. Mwangi

DVO LTK

[email protected] 0721 210 585

37 Alphonce S. Musili

DLPO LTK

[email protected] 0721 869 580

38 Herman Mwasaghua

Lodge Manager Serena Amboseli

[email protected]

39 Chris Thouless

SNV

[email protected]

31

NAME INSTITUTION CONTACTS

40 Christine Kiecha

SNV

[email protected]

41 Kinyua Warutere

Amboseli Baboon Research

0721 550 875

42 John Kuloba

ACC

[email protected]

43 Miriam W. Kaloki

ACP/ACC

[email protected]

44 Victor N. Mose

ACP/ACC

[email protected]

45 Adan H. Kala

KWS

[email protected]

46 Serah Sayialel

Amboseli Baboon Research

P.O. Box 18 NMG

47 Simeon Oyieko Serena Hotels P.O. Box 48690-00100 NBI [email protected]

32

Workshop Program

AMBOSELI STAKEHOLDERS’ WORKSHOP

A REVIEW OF THE IMPACTS OF THE RECENT DROUGHT

Amboseli Serena Lodge 9th December 2009-

Chair: Senior Warden, Amboseli National Park

TIME

PARTICULARS

RESPONSIBILITY

9:00 Official welcome and KWS goals Florence Kulecho Ag. Assistant Director Southern Conservation Area, KWS

9.10 A welcome Address behalf of Africa Conservation Centre

Godfrey Masinde

WILDLIFE AND DROUGHT

9:15 Wildlife numbers, drought losses and the challenges for Amboseli

Dr. David Western – Amboseli Conservation Program

9:45 Carnivore monitoring: Amboseli and surrounding areas

Lekishon Kenana/ Stephen Ndambuki, Kenya Wildlife Service With Inputs from Mbirikani and Selengei carnivore projects

10.10 Elephants, baboons and other species Amboseli Elephant Project, Amboseli Baboon Project and other inputs

10.30 General discussion of findings and implications

11.00

TEA

LIVESTOCK AND DROUGHT Chair: Amboseli Ecosystem Trust Representative

11:20 Kajiado Livestock mortalities and movements from surveys

Dr. Jeff Worden/David Maitumoi

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TIME

PARTICULARS

RESPONSIBILITY

11.30 General discussion on the outlook for livestock

TOURISM IMPLICATIONS Chair: Tourism Industry representative

12.00 Views from members of the tourism, ecotourism and hoteliers sectors

12.30 General discussion on the outlook and implications

Selection of breakout topics the afternoon.

13.00

LUNCH

14.00 Breakout sessions built around environmental, community and tourism interests

FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS Chair: David Western, Amboseli Conservation Program

15.00 Presentations and recommendations David Western

15.30 General discussions and workshop recommendations

16.00 The way forward