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Kings of the jungle fight for survival

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Tourists take photos as a lion rests in the expansive Maasai Mara Game Reserve. Photo/FILE

Tourists take photos as a lion rests in the expansive Maasai Mara Game Reserve. Photo/FILE 

By KIBIWOTT KOROSS
Posted  Wednesday, October 14  2009 at  18:58

They may be kings of the jungle but now conservationists say lions in some of Kenya’s most scenic parks are reduced to fighting for their lives. Africa’s wild lion population is in trouble. And their population could disappear in the next 20 years because of climate change, habitat destruction, disease and conflict with humans.

Scientists do not know how many lions there were a few decades ago, but today’s estimate of fewer than 23,000 on the entire continent is much less than previously thought. Lions and other large predators like hyenas and leopards are killed by livestock owners for preying on cows, sheep, and goats.

According to the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), an estimated 100 lions die each year, which could see the prized animal out of sight in the next 20 years, given that their current population in Kenyan parks stands at not more than 2,000.

Lions are one of the famed "big five" along with elephants, buffaloes, leopards and rhinos that are the major tourist attraction in Kenya’s game parks. According to an international British journal Mother Nature, the lion, elephant, black rhino, cheetah and tiger are the most endangered animals and are on the verge of extinction.

“The situation is bad. We are losing about 100 lions each year and from our statistics, we have realised that in the last seven years; the population of the lions has dropped from 2,700 in 2002, to some 2,000,” says the director in a statement.

And to try and save the lions, KWS said it has fitted them with tracking devices to monitor their movement and better understand the human-lion conflict. This is a pilot process in the southern Amboseli ecosystem where according to KWS, some 35 lions have been found.

The Amboseli Lion Project is a joint effort between KWS and the Leiden University, Netherlands under a Memorandum of Understanding between the two institutions. The five collared lions in the project include three females and two males.

In the Maasai Mara, there are 825 lions. Pastoralists and farmers have been accused of killing lions by lacing chemicals on carcasses of dead animals which the lions then come and eat.

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Tsavo has 675 lions while Laikipia has 230, Isiolo/Samburu 100, Northern Kenya 100, Meru 40 and Nairobi 25.

According to conservationists, a pesticide marketed under the trade name furadan, that is manufactured by Philadelphia-based Farm Machinery and Chemicals (FMC), is responsible for the deaths of dozens of lions, hundreds of vultures and other animals in Kenya’s wildlife sanctuaries.

In early September, one lion, a number of hyenas and 35 vultures are reported to have died at the Maasai Mara Game Reserve from retaliatory poisoning. The poison, suspected to be furadan, was found from a cow's carcass.

This poisoning was confirmed by the Kenya Wildlife Service, which said that a suspect has been arrested and was assisting with investigations. According to the KWS senior scientist, Dr Dominic Mijele, the carcass had a pinkish colouration on the bones indicating that a heavy dose of the substance was used.

Over the past six years, 62 lions have been killed through poisoning. In 2004, 187 vultures died after feasting on a carcass that had been laced with furadan on the Athi-Kapiti plains adjoining the Nairobi National Park.

And a month later, a deadly agricultural pesticide — carbofuran — introduced by a US manufacturer is still being sold despite reports that it has caused wildlife deaths in various locations in Kenya.

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Add a comment (4 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by harriison

    Watch out Kenyan government! It is very easy to save these animals. As a county with so many rivers draining water to Indian ocean and lake victoria i do not understand why we can not build cataracts after every 1-3 kilometers on rivers. Water can be pumped from them to irrigate the land, make food available for the these animals. Kenya has everything it takes to realise this dream; the military personnel, money and materials are in plenty to do this. If KENYA does this, it will be like eden- evergreen and a goodbye to droughts!!!

    Posted  October 15, 2009 06:34 PM  
  2. Submitted by yesuwangu

    our leaders are too old to think and not creative at all.that is why even the wildlife we love to see are loosing hope infront of us. Imagine the government helped to we burry thousands of cows in mass which died due to hunger, these starved cows were left to die .not thinking these coould be thrown to the wild and This could be a feasting season for lions cheatahs,hyenas atleast.even the dead cows is a lions food.even farmers could feel no loss in selling a cow at 200Shs.old men in Tourism and wildlife think

    Posted  October 15, 2009 05:21 PM  
  3. Submitted by Make1

    Nothing can be done about climate change as what is occurring now is a cycle similar to the one that happened when ice melted to give way to current climatic conditions. Then there were no carbon emmissions argued today (albeit with no merit) to be the cause of climate change. Those/that which is/are destined to die will die to answer to Darwinian predictions.

    Posted  October 15, 2009 12:08 PM  
  4. Submitted by hurstvonberg

    Kenya the land of the beautiful...Our country is dying. This is what happens when greed and selfishness are the norm of governance. What will we do when the beauty of Kenya's soul is dead? What good will Kenya be when she has no soul and she's no more?

    Posted  October 15, 2009 03:40 AM