Opuntia ficus, an invasive cactus plant that is now considered the
second biggest threat to the elephant population in northern Kenya after
poaching. PHOTO | PAUL LETIWA
It is round and comes in different shades of
green, covered with spines and hair-like prickles with yellow flowers
and a few edible purple-reddish fruits.
These
are the traits that biologists say ensure the survival of the
Opuntia ficus, an invasive cactus plant that is now considered the
second biggest threat to the elephant population in northern Kenya after
poaching.
It’s not clear when the
plant was introduced in Kenya, but Mzee Loitemu Letiktik, one of the
elders in Labarishereki Village on the border of Isiolo and Laikipia
counties, says the invasive species, which has taken over their grazing
land, was introduced by white colonial farmers who settled in the area
in the early 1950s.
Today, the
cactus that has long been domesticated for use as a barrier nd liked for
its juicy fruits is killing elephants in the two counties and making
the environment inhospitable.
Mr
Peter Lekurtut, the manager of Oldonyiro Conservancies in Isiolo North,
says that in the past five months, six elephants died after eating the
plant.
RIGHT CONDITIONS
“We
do not have an accurate figure, but we can confirm that six elephants
died after eating the plant. When elephants swallow it, glochids (small
spines on the fruit) get lodged in their throats, stomachs or
intestines. If they get stuck in the elephants’ mouths, the beasts
develop abscesses and eventually starve to death because they can no
longer eat,” he says.
At the Naibunga Conservancy in
Laikipia North, the cactus has already taken over about 17,000 acres. Mr
Lekurtut says the arid conditions in the vast area have made it easy
for the cactus to spread rapidly.
“The
plant has taken over our conservancy and is an irritant due to its
spines. It prevents access to many areas in the ecosystems, displaces
pastoral communities and causes injuries and infection to people,
livestock and to other wild animals,” he says.
Mzee
Letiktik says when herders in the area slaughter a goat, they are
puzzled by what eats up the animals’ intestines. He says many cattle,
goats, sheep and donkeys have died due to complications caused by eating
the cactus. The situation is made worse by perennial droughts, which
reduce food for livestock and wildlife, forcing them to turn to the
prickly cactus.
Environmental
experts say the eradication of any plant depends on factors such as the
terrain, cost and availability of labour, severity of the infestation
and presence of other invasive species.
But
because of the limited resources in the arid and semi-arid lands in the
north, controlling the fast spreading cactus is difficult. The possible
methods include manual removal, chemical poisoning and biological
control.
Elephants in Laikipia and
Isiolo roam in big herds from arid landscapes to subtropical forests.
They are widespread due to an extensive a community-based conservation
strategy supported by a community led, non-governmental organisation,
the Northern Rangelands Trust (NRT).
“We have tried manual control but the spines made this difficult,” says Charity Mukono, a communication officer at NRT.
Lewa
Conservationist Ian Craig says the cactus is now found in northern
Kenya and Tsavo National Park, both of which are suitable habitats for
elephants.
“Currently, it’s invading
at least two kilometres of habitat per year. It is a real serious threat
not only to elephants, but to a wide range of wildlife and plant
diversity, especially in the Isiolo, Laikipia and Samburu
conservancies,” he says.
BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
Mr
Lekurkut says that nomadic pastoralists contribute to the spread of the
cactus since most of them use it as fencing to keep wild animals out of
their homesteads.
Elephants too,
which feed on the juicy fruits of the cactus, scatter fragments of the
plants as they roam the grazing lands of Naibunga. When they eat the
fruit, the seeds spread through their droppings.
A
partnership of scientists from South Africa, conservationists,
commercial ranchers and the local communities was formed to find ways of
eradicating the cactus. They sought help from the Centre for
Agricultural Biosciences International (CABI) — an international
non-profit organisation which focuses on agriculture and the
environment.
This gave birth to a
biological control mechanism, whereby a cochineal, a sap-sucking insect,
was introduced in the region; the method that is said to have been
effective in controlling the same cactus species in the Kruger National
Park in South Africa.
However, local
pastoralists say the insect was released in a few areas and now the
plant is spreading faster, especially in the mountains and valleys.
“We
had hoped that the plant would vanish when the insect was introduced
last year. It has destroyed the cactus in some areas but the plant is
spreading fast in areas that it had not invaded like mountains and
valleys,” says Mzee Letiktik
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