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Muriuki, M.W.; Ipara, H.; Kiringe, J.W.
The cost of livestock lost to lions and other wildlife species in the Amboseli ecosystem, Kenya
2017  European Journal of Wildlife Research (63): 1-11

Though retaliatory lion (_Panthera leo_) killing as a result of livestock predation in the Maasai group ranches between the Tsavo NPs and Amboseli is remarkably high, other wildlife species are known to kill livestock. Surprisingly, lions suffer the most from retaliatory killing by the Maasai community for killing livestock. The extent of livestock predation by lions in comparison to other species is unknown. This study was carried out in the Olgulului group ranch (OGR) located adjacent to Amboseli National Park in June 2009. The cost of livestock killed by each of these species including lion, hyena (_Crocuta crocuta_), cheetah (_Acynonyx jubatus_), leopard (_Panthera pardus_), olive baboon (_Papio cynocephalus_), black-backed jackal (_Canis mesomelas_), and African elephant (_Loxodonta africana_) was analyzed. Questionnaires, focus group discussions, and key informant interviews with officials from OGR, Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), and compensation scheme organizations were the methods used to collect information. Cluster and systematic sampling techniques were used to select a sample of 199 respondents from OGR. Lions were blamed for 40.5% (US$ 374,603) of the value of livestock lost to wildlife. The costs of livestock lost to hyenas and lions were not significantly different (q = 0.24, p = 0.968). Although hyenas killed more livestock compared to lions, the economic damage between the two was not significantly different because lions attacked cattle which had high economic value. Conservation of lions will be increasingly difficult if the current levels of predation are not reduced to economically and socially acceptable levels.

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