Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T08:05:28.094Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Degradation Debates and Data Deficiencies: The Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2011

Abstract

The Mkomazi Game Reserve is contested by people who wish to use its resources and by conservationists who have argued that the reserve should be set aside for wildlife. Underpinning the conservationist case is the argument that people are harmful to the reserve's environment. Former residents of the reserve, notably pastoralists, argue that human use of the reserve did not cause its degradation. The debate is characterised by a lack of data extraordinary in view of the assertions made. An earlier paper set out the contrasting views and defined the data that would be needed to test them. This paper assesses what data there are, and whether it is possible to evaluate the extent to which people caused environmental change at Mkomazi. Using physical data and comments about the environment made by observers it is argued that no firm conclusions can be drawn about small-scale change but that there are indications of large-scale resilience. As a result of this uncertainty the article goes on to consider the extent to which there can ever be clarity about environmental change at Mkomazi as a philosophical contention or as a researchable issue.

Résumé

La réserve naturelle de Mkomazi est contestée par ceux qui souhaitent exploiter ses ressources et par les écologistes qui veulent la voir consacrée exclusivement à la faune et à la flore. L'argument sous-jacent des écologistes est que l'homme nuit à l'environnement de la réserve. Des anciens résidents de la réserve, notamment des pasteurs, affirment que l'utilisation de la réserve par l'homme n'a pas entraîné sa dégradation. Le débat se caractérise par un manque de données, ce qui est extraordinaire compte tenu des affirmations présentées. Un article antérieur exposait les avis divergents et défmissait les données nécessaires pour déterminer leur validité. Cet article évalue les données existantes et détermine s'il est possible d'évaluer l'impact de l'homme sur l'environnement à Mkomazi. Se servant des données physiques et des commentaires formulés par des observateurs concernant l'environnement, les auteurs affirment qu'il est impossible de tirer des conclusions fermes quant à un changement à petite échelle, mais observent des signes de résilience à grande échelle. Compte tenu de cette incertitude, ils se demandent s'il pourra un jour se dégager une clarté quant à l'évolution de l'environnement à Mkomazi en tant que différend philosophique ou objet d'étude.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2001

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Anderson, C. A. 1959. Handbook on range management: Near East –Southeast Asia. International Co-operation Administration, Washington DC. Beirut:Catholic Press..Google Scholar
Anderson, D. M. 1984. ‘Depression, dust bowl, demography and drought: the colonial state and soil conservation in East Africa during the 1930s’, African Affairs 83: 321–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, G. D. 1967. ‘A Reconnaissance Survey of the Land Use Potential of Mkomazi Game Reserve and an Appraisal of Factors affecting present and potential Land Use and Productivity in its Environs'. Unpublished report to the Ministry of Agriculture and Co-operatives.Google Scholar
Anstey, D. 1958. ‘Mkomaze Game Reserve’, Tanganyika Notes and Records 50, 6870.Google Scholar
Behnke, R. H. 1985. ‘Measuring the benefits of subsistence versus commercial livestock production in Africa.’ Agricultural Systems 162: 109135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Behnke, R. H., and Scoones, I. 1993. ‘Rethinking range ecology: implications for rangeland management in Africa’, in Behnke, R. H.,Scoones, I. and Kerven, C. (eds), Range Ecology at Disequilibrium, new models of natural variability and pastoral adaptation in African savannas. ODI: London..Google Scholar
Bell, R. H. V. 1987. ‘Conservation with a human face: conflict and reconciliation in African land use planning’, in Anderson, D. M. and Grove, R. (eds), Conservation in Africa: people, policies and practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press..Google Scholar
Berkes, F. 1989. Common Property Resources, ecology and community-based sustainable development.London: Belhaven Press..Google Scholar
Brockington, D. 1998. ‘Land Loss and Livelihoods. The effects of eviction on pastoralists moved from the Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania’. PhD, University College London..CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brockington, D. 1998---Forthcoming. ‘Pastoralism on the margins. The decline and dispersal of herding on the Umba Nyika from 1800 to 1919', Azania.Google Scholar
Brockington, D. and Homewood, K. M. 1996. ‘Received wisdom, science, and pastoralists: debates concerning Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania’, in Leach, M. and Mearns, R. (eds), The He of the Land: challenging received wisdom on the African environment. Oxford: James Currey; Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, in association with the International African Institute..Google Scholar
Brockington, D. and Homewood, K. M. 1999. ‘Pastoralism around Mkomazi: the interaction of conservation and development’, in Coe, M.McWilliam, N., Stone and M. Packer, G. (eds),Mkomazi: the ecology, biodiversity and conservation of a Tanzanian savanna London: Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)..Google Scholar
Bromley, D. W.and Cernea, M. M. 1989. The Management of Common Property Resources: some conceptual and operational fallacies. World Bank Discussion Papers 57. Washington DC: World Bank..Google Scholar
Caughley, G., Shepherd, N.and Short, J. 1987. Kangaroos: their ecology and management in the sheep rangelands of Australia.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press..CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clements, F. E. 1916. ‘Plant succession: an analysis of the development of vegetation’, Carnegie Institute Publications 242: 1512..Google Scholar
Cobb, S. 1976. ‘Distribution and Abundance of the large Mammal Community of Tsavo National Park, Kenya’. DPhil thesis, University of Oxford..Google Scholar
Coe, M. 1990. ‘The conservation and management of semi-arid rangelands and their animal resources’, in Goudie, A. S. (ed.), Techniques for Desert Reclamation. Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Coe, M. 1995. ‘A preliminary report on the field research of the Mkomazi research programme’, Mkomazi Research Programme: progress report, July 1995. London: Royal Geographical Society.Google Scholar
Coe, M. J. 1999. ‘Introduction’, in Coe, M.McWilliam, N.Stone, G.Packer, M. (eds), Mkomazi: the ecology, biodiversity and conservation of a Tanzanian savanna. London: Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers).Google Scholar
Coe, M. J., Ndolanga, M. A. 1994. ‘Scientific Report for Mkomazi Ecological Research Programme 1994-6’. Mkomazi Ecological Research Programme. London: Royal Geographical Society.Google Scholar
Dyson-Hudson, N. 1980. ‘Strategies of resource exploitation among East African savanna pastoralists’, in Harris, D. R. (ed.), Human Ecology in Savanna Environments. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Dyson-Hudson, R., Dyson-Hudson, N. 1969. ‘Subsistence herding in Uganda’, Scientific American 220: 7689.Google Scholar
Ellis, J. E., Swift, D. M. 1988. ‘Stability of African pastoral systems: alternate paradigms and implications for development’, Journal of Range Management 41: 450–59.Google Scholar
Ellis, J. E., Coughenour, M. B., Swift, D. M. 1993. ‘Climate variability, eco-system stability and the implications for range and livestock development’, in Behnke, R. H.Scoones, I. and Kerven, C. (edss), Range Ecology at Disequilibrium, new models of natural variability and pastoral adaptation in African savannas. London: ODI.Google Scholar
Entrikin, J. N. 1996. ‘Place and region 2’, Progress in Human Geography 20 215–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardin, G. 1968. ‘The tragedy of the commons’, Science 162 1243–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harris, L. D.. 1972. ‘Some Structural and Functional Attributes of a Semi-arid East African Eco-system’. PhD. thesis. Michigan State University.Google Scholar
Hemmingway, P., Cormack, A., Robinette, L. 1966. ‘Appraisal of Range Condition on the Kalimawe Controlled Area’ 5 April, Tanga Regional Archives File TA4 box 12 Gl.Google Scholar
Homewood, K. M. 1994. ‘Pastoralists, environment and development in East African rangelands’, in Zaba, B.Clarke, J. (eds), Environment and Population Change.Liège: Ordina Editions.Google Scholar
Homewood, K. M. 1999. ‘Pastoralists and pay-offs: comment on L. Ruttan and M. Borgerhoff- Mulder, “Are East African pastoralists truly conservationists?”’, Current Anthropology 40 (5) 641–2.Google Scholar
Homewood, K. M., Brockington, D. 1999. ‘Biodiversity, conservation and development’, Global Ecology and Bio geography Letters 8: 301–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Homewood, K. M., Rodgers, W. A. 1991. Maasailand Ecology: pastoralist development and wildlife conservation in Ngorongoro, Tanzania.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Homewood, K. M., Kiwasila, H., Brockington, D. 1997. ‘Conservation with Development? The case of Mkomazi, Tanzania’ Research report R6037. Department for International Development, ESCOR..Google Scholar
Homewood, K., Lambin, E. F., Coast, T., Kariuki, A., Kikula, I., Kivelia, J., Said, M., Serneels, S., Thompson, M. Forthcoming. ‘Long Term Changes in African Savanna Wildlife and Land Cover: pastoralists, population or policies?’ Paper submitted to Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences.Google Scholar
Huish, S. A., Ole Kuwai, J. and Campbell, K. L. I. 1993. Wildlife Census Mkomazi 1991.Tanzania Wildlife Conservation Monitoring.Google Scholar
Ibeun, J. S.. 1976. ‘A Management Plan Proposal for Mkomazi Game Reserve’. Thesis submitted for Diploma in Wildlife Management. MwekaMCollege of African Wildlife Management.Google Scholar
Igoe, J. 2000. ‘Ethnicity, Civil Society, and the Tanzanian Pastoral NGO Movement’. Unpublished PhD thesis, Boston University.Google Scholar
Igoe, J. and Brockington, D. 1999. Pastoral Land Tenure and Community Conservation: a case study from North-East Tanzania. Pastoral Land Tenure Series 11. London: International Institute for Environment and Development.Google Scholar
Illius, A. andO'Connor, T. 1999. ‘On the relevance of non-equilibrium concepts to arid and semi-arid grazing systems’, Ecological Applications 9, 798813.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inamdar, A. 1995. ‘Wildlife Census, Mkomazi. April 1994: an interim report on results of an aerial census of the Mkomazi Game Reserve'. Nairobi: WWF Regional Office, Eastern Africa.Google Scholar
Inamdar, A. 1996. ‘The Ecological Consequences of Elephant Depletion’. PhD thesis,University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Leach, M. and Mearns, R. 1996. ‘Challenging received wisdom in Africa’, in Leach, M. and Mearns, R. (eds), The Lie of the Land: challenging received wisdom on the African environment. Oxford: James Currey; Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, in association with the International African Institute, London.Google Scholar
Mace, R. 1991. ‘Overgrazing overstated’, Nature 349: 280–1.Google Scholar
Mace, R. and Houston, A. 1989. ‘Pastoralist strategies for survival in unpredictable environments: a model of herd composition that maximizes household viability’, Agricultural Systems 31: 185204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mangubuli, M. J. J. 1991. ‘Mkomazi Game Reserve: a recovered pearl’, Kakakuona 4: 1113.Google Scholar
McWilliam, N. and Packer, M. 1999. ‘Climate of Mkomazi: variability and importance’, in Coe, M.McWilliam, N.Stone, G. and Packer, M. (eds), Mkomazi: the ecology, biodiversity and conservation of a Tanzanian savanna. London: Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers).Google Scholar
MNRT. 1997. The Mkomazi I Umba Game Reserves General Management Plan, Draft. Dar es Salaam: Wildlife Division, Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism.Google Scholar
Mustaffa, K. 1997. Eviction of Rastoralists from the Mkomazi Game Reserve in Tanzania: an historical review. Pastoral Land Tenure Series 8, London: IIED.Google Scholar
Neumann, R. 1998. Imposing Wilderness: struggles over livelihood and nature preservation in Africa. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ostrom, E. 1990. Governing the Commons, the evolution of institutions f or collective action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ostrom, E.Burger, J.Field, C. B.Norgaard, R. B. andPolicansky, D. 1999. ‘Revisiting the commons: local lessons, global challenges’, Science 284: 278–82.Google Scholar
Parker, I. S. C. and Archer, A. L. 1970. ‘The Status of Elephant, other Wildlife and Cattle in MGR with Management Recommendations'. Wildlife Services Ltd report to the Government of Tanzania.Google Scholar
Parker, K. W. 1951. ‘A Method for Measuring Trend in Range Condition on National Forest Ranges'. Washington: US Forest Service, (mimeo).Google Scholar
Prins, H. H. T. 1992. ‘The pastoral road to extinction: competition between wildlife and traditional pastoralism in East Africa’, Environmental Conservation 19: 117–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Proctor, J.D. 1998. ‘The social construction of nature: relativist accusations, pragmatist and critical realist responses’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers 88: 352–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinette, W. Leslie and Gilbert, V. C. 1968. ‘Appraisal of Range Conditions for Livestock in Umba River Area adjacent to Mkomazi Game Reserve', 2 January 1968. Tanzania National Archives (TNA), file Gl/7.Google Scholar
Rogers, P.,Brockington, D.Kiwasila, H. and Homewood, K. 1999. ‘Environmental awareness and conflict genesis: people versus parks in Mkomazi Game Reserve’, in Granfeit, T. (ed.), Managing the Globalised Environment. London: Intermediate Technology Publications.Google Scholar
Sandford, D. 1983. Management of Pastoral Development in the Third World. Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Scoones, I. 1995. ‘New directions in pastoral development in Africa’, in Scoones, I. (ed), Living with Uncertainty: new directions in pastoral development in Africa. London: Intermediate Technology Publications.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sinclair, A. R. E., and Fryxell, J. M. 1985. ‘The Sahel of Africa: Ecology of a Disaster’, Canadian Journal of Zoology 63: 987–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sullivan, S. 1996. ‘Towards a non-equilibrium ecology: perspectives from an arid land’, Journal of Biogeography 23, 1–5.Google Scholar
Sullivan, S. 1999. ‘The impacts of people and livestock on topographically diverse open wood- and shrub-lands in arid north-west Namibia’, Global Ecology and Biogeography, Special Issue on Degradation of Open Woodlands 8: 257277.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sullivan, S. 2000. ‘Getting the science right, or introducing science in the first place? Local “facts”, global discourse: “desertification” in north-west Namibia’, in Stott, P. and Sullivan, S. (eds.), Political Ecology: science, myth and power. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Sullivan, S. and Rohde, R. Forthcoming.Non-equilibrium grazing systems: a response to Illius and 0O'Connor’, Journal of Biogeography.Google Scholar
Tiffen, M.Mortimore, M. and Gichuki, F. 1994. More People, less Erosion: environmental recovery in Kenya. Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Turner, M. 1998a. ‘Long-term effects of daily grazing orbits on nutrient availability in Sahelian West Africa, I, Gradients in the chemical composition of rangeland soils and vegetation’, Journal of Biogeography 25: 669–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, M. 1998b. ‘Long-term effects of daily grazing orbits on nutrient availability in Sahelian West Africa, II, Effects of a phosphorus gradient on spatial patterns of annual grassland production’, Journal of Biogeography 25: 683–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, M. 1999. ‘Spatial and temporal scaling of grazing impact on the species composition and productivity of Sahelian annual grasslands’, Journal of Arid Environments 41: 277–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, R. M. 1991. ‘Mkomazi: restoring Africa’, Swara 14: 14–16.Google Scholar
Watson, R. M., Parker, I. S. C. and Allan, T. 1969. ‘A census of elephant and other large mammals in the Mkomazi region of northern Tanzania and southern Kenya’, East African Wildlife Journal. 7: 1126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
WCMD 1988. ‘Tsavo Elephant Count, 1988’. Nairobi: Wildlife Conservation and Monitoring Department, Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife.Google Scholar
Western, D. 1982. ‘Amboseli National Park: enlisting landowners to conserve migratory wildlife’, Ambio 11: 302–8.Google Scholar
Western, D. and Finch, V. 1986. ‘Cattle and pastoralism: survival and production in arid lands’, Human Ecology 14: 7794.Google Scholar
Westoby, M.Walker, B. H. and Noy- Meir, I. 1989. ‘Opportunistic management for rangelands not at equilibrium’, Journal of Rangeland Management. 42: 266274.Google Scholar