Type | Book |
Title | Staying Maasai? |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
Publisher | Springer |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Patti_Kristjanson/publication/226353983_Assessing_Returns_to_Land_and_Changing_Livelihood_Strategies_in_Kitengela/links/00b7d520ffa37d2b3b000000.pdf |
Abstract | Kitengela comprises an area of approximately 390 km2 (GOK, 2001) within Kajiado District and is part of a larger rangeland ecosystem called the Athi-Kaputiei Plains (a 2,456 km2 ecosystem). The study area corresponds to Isinya Division (one of seven administrative units of Kajiado District). Neighboring Nairobi, a city with a population estimated to be approaching 3 million, Kitengela is unique in that it supports a large and long distance wildlife migratory community (Figure 1) that have lived alongside the resident Maasai for centuries. Nairobi National Park sits at the northernmost tip of Kitengela. This park is only 114 km2 in size, and is not large enough to support the twenty-four species of large mammals that exist in this ecosystem. Wildebeest, eland, giraffe and zebra migrate into and out of the park, accessing its water and abundant grass during the dry season and moving south into the open pastoral lands during the wet season when the calves are born (Reid et al., 2006). When Nairobi National Park was established in 1946, Kitengela Plains and the Ngong Hills were declared conservation areas. However, Kitengela was never formally gazetted. |
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