Long-term changes in Serengeti-Mara wildebeest and land cover: Pastoralism, population, or policies?

被引:159
作者
Homewood, K
Lambin, EF
Coast, E
Kariuki, A
Kikula, I
Kivelia, J
Said, M
Serneels, S
Thompson, M
机构
[1] UCL, Dept Anthropol, London WC1E 6BT, England
[2] Univ Louvain, Dept Geog, B-1348 Louvain, Belgium
[3] Kenya Wildlife Serv, Nairobi, Kenya
[4] Dept Resource Survey & Remote Sensing, Nairobi, Kenya
[5] Univ Dar Es Salaam, Inst Resource Assessment, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.221053998
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Declines in habitat and wildlife in semiarid African savannas are widely reported and commonly attributed to agropastoral population growth, livestock impacts, and subsistence cultivation. However, extreme annual and shorter-term variability of rainfall, primary production, vegetation, and populations of grazers make directional trends and causal chains hard to establish in these ecosystems. Here two decades of changes in land cover and wildebeest in the Serengeti-Mara region of East Africa are analyzed in terms of potential drivers (rainfall, human and livestock population growth, socio-economic trends, land tenure, agricultural policies, and markets). The natural experiment research design controls for confounding variables, and our conceptual model and statistical approach integrate natural and social sciences data. The Kenyan part of the ecosystem shows rapid land-cover change and drastic decline for a wide range of wildlife species, but these changes are absent on the Tanzanian side. Temporal climate trends, human population density and growth rates, uptake of small-holder agriculture, and livestock population trends do not differ between the Kenyan and Tanzanian parts of the ecosystem and cannot account for observed changes. Differences in private versus state/communal land tenure, agricultural policy, and market conditions suggest, and spatial correlations confirm, that the major changes in land cover and dominant grazer species numbers are driven primarily by private landowners responding to market opportunities for mechanized agriculture, less by agropastoral population growth, cattle numbers, or small-holder land use.
引用
收藏
页码:12544 / 12549
页数:6
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