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Frank, L.; Cotterill, A.; Dolrenry, S.; Ekwanga, S.; Hazzah, L.; Howard, A.; Maclennan, S.
Living with lions - Laikipia predator project and Kilimanjaro lion conservation project annual report
2006  Full Book

We are working to restore, conserve and manage viable populations of large carnivores by developing management techniques that foster coexistence of people, livestock and predators in areas bordering parks and other regions without formal protection. Large predators have been eliminated from most of the world because they prey on livestock. Only in the last few years has the public become aware that populations of African lions have plummeted. Few parks are large enough to ensure lions' long term survival, and because conflict with livestock is by far the most serious threat to large carnivores, it is critical that we find methods to integrate predator conservation with realistic livestock management. The Laikipia Predator Project is the first integrated investigation into the ecology, management and conservation of large predators in human-dominated African landscapes. Laikipia is the only part of the world where ranchers enthusiastically tolerate a healthy population of large carnivores, making it an ideal laboratory in which to develop realistic and progressive predator and livestock management practices. The Kilimanjaro Lion Conservation Project is attempting to save one of the world's most important remaining lion populations. Masailand is the vast ocean of grass straddling the Kenya-Tanzania border, home to Serengeti, Ngorongoro, the Masai Mara, and Amboseli National Parks. On the Kenya side, lions are under severe and increasing pressure, as people are spearing and poisoning lions at a rate which threatens population extinction within a very few years. This is an international conservation emergency; the KLCP and its partner the Mbirikani Predator Compensation Fund are the only groups confronting it.

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