以社区为基础的保护:肯尼亚北部牲畜与野生动物交界的新兴土地利用

S. Mureithi, A. Verdoodt, J. Njoka, J. S. Olesarioyo, E. Ranst
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引用次数: 9

摘要

在东非,估计有70%的野生动物种群分散在保护区以外的社区土地上。牧民的生活方式,从本质上支持了野生动物的繁盛。然而,畜牧业正在慢慢过渡到更久坐不动的牲畜生产形式。现在,该地区野生动物种群的未来在很大程度上取决于对私人和公共土地上的栖息地和迁徙走廊的保护,这些土地的使用存在竞争。社区野生动物保护是在畜禽-野生动物界面环境中分散野生动物管理和抑制生物多样性和栖息地丧失的途径之一。此外,保护提供了一个途径放牧退化土地恢复和提高牧民的生计。本文以莱基皮亚县Naibung 'a野生动物保护区为例,回顾了肯尼亚北部以社区为基础的保护工作。通过土地分区和范围恢复进行的保护有助于提高野生动物、人类及其牲畜的安全。保护区的成功取决于对植被恢复、放牧管理、牲畜销售和利益分享的持续投资。保护区面临的威胁包括草场短缺、牛被偷以及人类与野生动物的冲突。非洲的保护目标和人类生计是密切相关的,在Naibung 'a野生动物保护协会吸取的经验教训可能对非洲的其他类似倡议特别有用。
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Community-Based Conservation: An Emerging Land Use at the Livestock-Wildlife Interface in Northern Kenya
In East Africa, an estimated 70% of wildlife populations are dispersed outside protected areas on community land. The way of life of the pastoralists, essentially support the thriv-ing of wildlife. However, pastoralism is slowly transiting to more sedentary forms of livestock production. The region‘s wildlife populations future now largely depends on the conservation of habitats and migratory corridors on private and communally owned lands with competing land uses. Community wildlife conservancies are one of the approaches of decentralizing wildlife management and curbing biodiversity and habitat loss at the livestock-wildlife interface environments. Further, conservancies present an avenue for restoration of degraded grazing lands and improving pastoral livelihoods. This paper reviews the community-based conservation unfolding in northern Kenya using the case of Naibung’a Wildlife Conservancy in Laikipia County. Conservancies through land zoning and range rehabilitation have contributed to improved security of wildlife, people and their livestock. Conservancies’ success depends on continued invest- ment in vegetation recovery, grazing management, livestock marketing and benefit shar ing. The perceived threats facing conservancies are pasture scarcity, cattle rustling and human-wildlife conflicts. Conservation objectives and human livelihoods in Africa are closely interlinked and lessons learnt in Naibung’a Wildlife Conservancy could particu- larly be useful to other similar initiatives in Africa.
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