A Space Where People and Wildlife Thrive
In Maasai Mara’s community conservancies, people prosper and wildlife flourish.
The Maasai Mara is a world-renowned destination for wildlife tourism. Kenya’s “big five” wildlife species—lion, elephant, buffalo, leopard and rhino—are all found here.
But the best wildlife viewing is not only in the national reserve, operated by the Narok County government. The land around the reserve is largely protected through 23 community conservancies, offering habitat for the wildlife that makes Maasai Mara so iconic while still providing a home for the people who have lived in this region for generations.
About 65% of Kenya’s wildlife lives outside of government-protected areas, like the Maasai Mara national reserve. That’s one reason why community conservancies are imperative for wildlife to survive and thrive.
Kenya’s Community Conservancies
Wildlife and people both benefit from the community conservancy model.
ExploreHumans and Wildlife
Wildlife are part of a daily life for community conservancies but can also pose challenges. On one hand, the Maasai people have coexisted with wildlife forever, and animals are the reason that thousands of tourists flock to this region every year. On the other, wildlife can wreak havoc on human livelihoods. Zebras eat the grass that people need to feed their livestock. Wildebeest leave behind their toxic amniotic fluid in the grass after giving birth. Lions and hyenas kill livestock, and elephants have killed people. Sometimes the overarching benefits of wildlife are hard to justify when a few incidents like this happen in a community.
Pardamat Conservation Area—one of the conservancies just outside the Maasai Mara national reserve—is working to address these challenges. “Our main vision is to have a harmonious existence of both the people with their livestock and wildlife,” said Pardamat manager Jackson Sasine.
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In 2016, The Nature Conservancy and the Maasai Mara Wildlife Conservancies Association (MMWCA) partnered to support the community in establishing Pardamat.
Pardamat Conservation Area is a block of land in Koiyaki group ranch set aside for settlement. Landowners from three nearby conservancies (Mara North, Olare Orok, Motorogi and Naboisho) could settle in Pardamat. Landowners were allocated land in either of the conservancies and a certain percentage in Pardamat for settlement, allowing their original homeland to be prioritized for wildlife habitat and tourism. Landowners are compensated by the conservation area with profits brought in from revenue-generating operations, like tourism.
Pardamat is also home to wildlife. Wildebeest, giraffes and wild dogs wander its lush habitat, which stays green during the dry season thanks to its many natural springs. Locals call it a “maternity ward” for elephants, because so many elephants come here to give birth and nurse their young.
Quote: Kanyike Ole Nabaala
When the animals started bringing in profit, we started loving them even more.
Fencing
A big barrier—literally—to wildlife conservation in Maasai Mara is fencing. Landowners use fences to mark their property, contain their livestock and keep wildlife and neighbors’ livestock out. The fences restrict wildlife movement, which can force animals and humans into situations that lead to conflict.
“Because of the fences, we realized that, you know, human-wildlife conflicts were getting very high,” said Sasine. “More often than not, you find elephants in places where they’re not supposed to be because they cannot access their habitat.”
That’s what led Pardamat, in partnership with The Nature Conservancy, to compensate landowners to take down their fences. Conservationists make the case to landowners that fences are expensive to maintain and do not guarantee protection from wildlife nor a sustainable supply of grass, and landowners learn and understand they are better off accepting compensation. To date, 473 kilometers of fences have been brought down through this program.
There are still challenges to living with wildlife, as the Maasai have known for generations. But now, there are more benefits to living with wildlife in Pardamat. The conservation area ensures that there are grass banks available for grazing during the dry season and provides training for jobs, scholarships and other opportunities for young people, especially in tourism. And landowners are compensated for allowing wildlife to use their land, in the form of a monthly lease in exchange for removing their fences.
“We want to see a community that is transformed, whose livelihoods are transformed by the conservation that we are doing,” Sasine said. “That's the ultimate goal, to ensure that whatever we do here in terms of conservation means a positive change in the lives of the people who are hosting this wildlife.”
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