A review of the human wildlife conflicts around the Nairobi National Park, Kenya
Human-wildlife conflicts are one of the most important challenges facing wildlife conservation. In Kenya, the Nairobi National Park (NNP) experiences various pressures due to its small size and close proximity to an expanding city. The unfenced southern part of the park is the main hotspot for confl...
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Published in | Review on Agriculture and Rural Development Vol. 12; no. 1-2; pp. 80 - 87 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
12.12.2023
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Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 2063-4803 2677-0792 |
DOI | 10.14232/rard.2023.1-2.80-87 |
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Summary: | Human-wildlife conflicts are one of the most important challenges
facing wildlife conservation. In Kenya, the Nairobi National Park (NNP)
experiences various pressures due to its small size and close proximity to
an expanding city. The unfenced southern part of the park is the main
hotspot for conflicts. For the review a content analysis of 21 publications
related to NNP published between 2011 and 2022 was conducted to identify
the causes, types and the mitigation measures of conflicts around the park.
Documents for the analysis were collected through Google Scholar, Web of
Science and Scopus. Our results indicate that livestock predation linked to
lions is the major type of conflict superseded by retaliatory killings of
the carnivores by the local communities. Other conflicts include crop raids
by ungulates and the spread of diseases especially the East Coast fever
that is transmitted from the wildebeest to livestock. Findings further
reveal that one of the main causes of the conflicts is the expanding human
population, which has encroached on wildlife dispersal corridors. It
resulted in land subdivision and fencing of the farms as farmers try to
protect their livestock from wildlife. This has greatly impeded wildlife
migration. Mitigation methods in place include compensation schemes and
landowners leasing their farms to the park management so that the corridors
can be left open for free wildlife movement. These have however been
inadequate therefore there is still a need to find sustainable mitigation
measures that ensure coexistence between humans and wildlife in and around
NNP. |
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ISSN: | 2063-4803 2677-0792 |
DOI: | 10.14232/rard.2023.1-2.80-87 |