By REUTERS
In Summary
- Conservationists said construction work on the new road which will link Nairobi airport to the city centre was affecting animal behaviour and leading more big cats to attempt to break free in search of quieter hunting grounds.
- Kitili Mbathi, director general of Kenya Wildlife Service, agreed that the construction work was to blame for the increasing number of lions straying from the park.
A new road and rail project cutting through a nature
reserve on the outskirts of Nairobi threatens wildlife, livestock and
people, conservationists said on Friday, after two lions were killed
this week.
Kenyan wildlife rangers shot dead a male lion named "Mohawk"
on Wednesday after it strayed from Nairobi National Park and attacked
and injured a resident.
The next day rangers found the body of another lion outside the reserve, speared to death in a township south of Nairobi.
Conservationists said construction work on the
transport projects was affecting animal behaviour and leading more big
cats to try to escape in search of quieter hunting grounds.
"Before construction started in the park, the lions
were not escaping, so there are indications that the noise and blasting
is affecting their movements," said Robert Ndetei, species conservation
manager at World Wildlife Fund's Nairobi office.
"If you don't plan properly, if you don't do proper
environmental-impact assessments, then you are doomed to fail, and at
the Nairobi National Park this could lead to more lions and other
animals coming into contact with a growing human presence," Ndetei told Reuters.
Nairobi National Park is home to about 35 lions. There are about 2,000 left in the whole of Kenya.
Kitili Mbathi, director general of Kenya Wildlife
Service, agreed that the construction work was to blame for the
increasing number of lions straying from the park.
"Yes, it has been disruptive but we are trying and they (the contractors) are trying to minimize the disruption," he told Reuters by phone.
He said the road was nearly complete, while the
main construction work on the railway should be finished in June,
restoring some calm.
"We have a temporary fence in certain places there,
so now we will be able to put in a permanent electric fence.
Eventually, when all the construction is finished, from that side of the
park, we don't expect any more disruptions," he said.
Mbathi said the wildlife service had increased patrols along the perimeter of the park.
"A key concern is that the developer is not taking
proper care to ensure there is less disturbance of the habitat while
also not securing the perimeter fencing," said Lucy Waruingi, acting
secretary of the Conservation Alliance of Kenya.
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