Wildlife population has increased in Maasai Mara – census

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Wildlife population has increased in Maasai Mara – census
Wildlife population has increased in Maasai Mara – census

Africa-Press – Kenya. There has been an increase of most species at the Maasai Mara National Reserve, a census report undertaken in May 2021 by the Kenya Wildlife Service and other conservation partners shows.

Wildlife Research and Training Institute head of research David Ndeereh said the census was carried on elephants, buffaloes, giraffes, impala, Thomson gazelle, topi, grants gazelle, elephants, giraffe and eland.

Ndeereh said the research covered 12,500 kilometre squares and five aircrafts were used during the census that lasted six days, with a total count time of 79 hours 51 minutes.

He said the objectives of the census were to document the abundance and distribution of all large mammals, understand the trend in wildlife numbers at the Maasai Mara National Reserve, map human activities and provide baseline wildlife data for the National wildlife census.

Others included documentation of the distribution of the numbers of livestock and interpreting the information obtained to guide management of wildlife in the ecosystem.

Despite the increasing number of wildlife, Ndeereh said, charcoal burning and tree felling continue to destroy wildlife habitat and important catchment areas at the Maasai Mara Ecosystem.

He said more than 70 per cent of the mammals were found at the conservancies, saying fencing and other human activities interfere with the free range of the animals. Ndeereh was speaking during the unveiling of the report at a Narok hotel.

Jackson ole Mpario, the chairman of the Maasai Mara National Reserve Conservancies, said the report is of great importance to the conservancies as they are the primary consumers of the information.

“One of the most emerging threats in the Maasai Mara Ecosystem affecting all the wildlife species is the shrinking habitat connectivity because of the land subdivisions and fencing,” he said.

The whole idea of a conservancy, he added, is to create a free space for wildlife movement without interference, because rainfall, water points and grazing fields are not evenly distributed.

“The future could be hard because the human population is increasing as well as the animal population while land and water points are decreasing. This means there will be intense compensation of resources. The critical solution to this is promoting more conservancies,” he said.

The report recommended that human activities that negatively impact wildlife such as erection of fences and permanent settlement on wild animal corridors need to be controlled.

“Key habitats and foraging areas outside the national reserve and existing conservancies need to be conserved through establishment of new conservancies,” he said.

The report also recommended that the government secures and maintains key habitat linkages and migratory pathways connecting Mara and Nyakwer forest, Mara- Siana- Naikarra- Naroosura and Mosiro corridors.

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