http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/safariandwildlifeholidays/7220102/Safari-Are-too-many-tourists-killing-Africas-wildlife.html
Safari: Are too many tourists killing Africa's wildlife?
After an extensive study of
Africa’s most famous reserves, Graham Boynton says to save its
great creatures we need a conservation revolution.
By Graham Boynton
Published: 2:59PM GMT 12 Feb 2010
I have barely been in Zarafa, Botswana’s newest exclusive safari
camp, five minutes when I have my first encounter with a wild
animal. I am halfway along the pathway that leads to my tented
room when a bull elephant emerges out of the bush and stands,
stock still, just 20 yards up the path, directly in front of me.
I hold my ground, as the guides instruct you to do, but I can
hear my heart beating, partly out of excitement and partly out
of fear. For a moment there is complete stillness as two tons of
bull elephant stares down on 190 pounds of puny homo sapiens.
Then I hear footsteps and, looking over my shoulder, see the
lean figure of Dereck Joubert striding towards me. As he passes
me he raises his hands and claps twice. The big bull shakes his
head, looks Joubert up and down, and turns off the path towards
the fever berry trees. “Isn’t that fantastic?” Joubert says with
a broad grin. “These elephants are so relaxed. They’re already
getting used to this camp and we’ve only been operating here for
six months.” That isn’t quite what is going through my mind.
Joubert is one person you would expect to know the difference
between a relaxed elephant and one that in an instant would drop
its head, flatten its ears and charge you with deadly effect. He
has, after all, with his wife Beverly, spent the past quarter of
a century living out here cheek-by-jowl with wild animals. In
that time, spent mostly in tents, they have come to know the
wilderness and its inhabitants in the way we city dwellers have
come to know the neighbourhood shops, art galleries, bars and
restaurants… the contents of our urban lives.
Once Joubert has dispatched the bull elephant he returns to the
main camp and I walk on to my room. Then I sit for half an hour
on my veranda looking out onto the lagoon that lies in front of
the camp. That brief exchange between man and animal, the smell
of the bushveld, the serene quiet of the wilderness and the
changing light as the sun begins to set behind the ilala palms
beyond the lagoon – all of this infuses me with the spiritual
nourishment that seems absent from so much of our scurrying
daily lives in the so-called civilised world’s great urban
agglomerations.
Out here I can breathe again, I can feel connected to the planet
whose sides I barely touch in my city life. Out here my
olfactory senses come alive and my skin tingles as the evening
breezes whip up.
Joubert’s call from the main tent interrupts my reverie. We are
to drive off across the lagoon to look for a lion pride that has
recently moved into the area. The Jouberts are now the most
famous wildlife film-makers on the continent: five-time Emmy
winners who last year released their first major film. In 25
years of bush living they have all but become integral parts of
the ecosystem, as much components of the environment as the
leopard, lion and elephant. Now this camp, Zarafa, and Great
Plains, the wildlife tourism company they have launched with
Colin Bell, a conservationist, and two other partners, promise a
revolutionary step into the future for African wildlife
conservation.
The company’s mission is “conserving and expanding natural
habitats”, according to Bell. The strategy: high-tariff,
low-volume tourism. Instead of paying fees based on the number
of tourists who come in, camp owners guarantee payment every
month to the local people, regardless of occupancy. In exchange,
the tribal landowners agree to create and maintain a viable and
sustainable conservancy that ensures that wildlife prospers.
Great Plains claims to make these communities direct financial
beneficiaries (and even shareholders), earning income streams
from tourism, encouraging the tribespeople to become custodians
of the African wilderness.
If a model based on working with the community sounds blindingly
obvious, one should be aware that, in most of Africa’s
diminishing wilderness areas, safari tourism has had such
minimal financial impact that local tribespeople see the animals
as competitors for the land.
Zarafa is the penultimate stop on a long trek that began in
Kenya and has taken me through the Maasai Mara, KwaZulu Natal in
South Africa, the fabled Kruger National Park and Botswana.
Ahead lie a couple of days at South Africa’s Londolozi, the
private luxury camp on the border of Kruger.
Everyone I have met on my trek says the same thing: the
wilderness is at a tipping point. Hell, the whole of Africa is
at a tipping point, faced as it is with unsustainably massive
population growth, attendant poverty, corrupt government and the
growth of misguided mass-tourism safari outfits. It has been
like this for decades, but the decline of animal populations
seems to have accelerated with the turn of the century, and the
veld, that last refuge for the planet’s most varied mammal and
bird population, is facing a crucial decade.
The problems have become especially apparent in Kenya’s Maasai
Mara reserve, one of the world’s most famous safari
destinations, which has for decades been cursed with
low-revenue, high-volume tourism. There has been little benefit
for the fast-growing local communities and a shocking impact on
the animals.
In the early Eighties there were maybe half a dozen lodges in
the Mara with fewer than 300 beds; today there are more than 25
permanent lodges and well over 3,000 beds. East African
conservationists say that soaring visitor numbers have severely
damaged roads and grasslands.
Equally threatening to wildlife have been the growth and
changing lifestyles of the rural population. The once nomadic
Maasai have left their mud-and-wattle homesteads and gravitated
to more permanent settlements along the borders of the Mara
reserve. Thus the wild animals that have moved in and out of the
reserve are now competing for habitat with Maasai livestock that
no longer move over the vast plains, and large-scale crop
cultivation that comes with a more settled lifestyle.
According to a recent report by the International Livestock
Research Institute, the reserve’s ungulate population declined
sharply from 1989 to 2003 as a result of poaching and human
encroachment. Giraffe numbers are down 95 per cent, warthogs 80
per cent, hartebeest 76 per cent and impala 67 per cent. The
carnivores that depend on these wild animals are, according to
the institute’s Joesph Ogutu, the next casualties. “The number
of lions are going down, the cheetah numbers are declining, “and
the wild dogs in the Mara system have become extinct,” he says.
The Mara is famously the setting for the annual wildebeest
migration, also known as the greatest wildlife show on earth. In
previous decades more than 1.2 million wildebeest and an
attendant caravan of predators – mainly large lion and hyena
groups – would move from Tanzania’s Serengeti up onto the Mara
plains. A recent count suggested that migratory numbers have now
dropped to 300,000. According to Brian Heath, chairman of the
Mara Conservancy Trust, “the migrations into the Mara will not
be sustained if the numbers keep falling as they have in recent
years.”
This rush towards extinction in one of the world’s most famous
wildlife habitats supports the views of Bell and the Jouberts
that nothing short of a conservation revolution will save
Africa’s wild places.
Great Plains’s move into the Maasai Mara is a great test of the
Bell and Joubert model. In Botswana, they are operating in an
environment of relative stability with government support that
is free of corruption; by comparison Kenya is the Wild West.
Conservationists argue that cynical tour operators and lodge
owners, and corrupt county councils, have over the years
siphoned off most of the profits from foreign tourism, leaving
almost nothing to trickle down to local tribespeople. Add to
this a volatility surrounding foreign tourist arrivals, which
fell spectacularly after the 2008 post-election riots and are
now subject to the global downturn in foreign travel following
the credit crunch, and it’s easy to see how the ordinary Maasai
need some convincing that their financial security is best
served by ecotourists photographing animals.
Thanks to guaranteed community payments by Mara Plains, Great
Plains’ six-room, 12-bed camp on the Olare Orok Conservancy (OOC)
on the Maasai Mara’s northern border, the Maasai have moved
their homesteads, cattle and goats out of the 30,000-acre area.
Lions and other predators are starting to come back. Wild Africa
is reclaiming itself.
The OOC deal was brokered by Jake Grieves-Cook and Ron Beaton,
two respected Kenya hands who have long been involved in
wildlife tourism, and among the four partners are Sir Richard
Branson’s Virgin group and the Great Plains group, which have
collectively put up $250,000 (£160,000) for the right to build
and operate tented camps. What is unique for Kenya about the OOC
is that it has strict limits on visitor numbers: there is one
tourist tent for every 700 acres of conservancy land. “This land
is critical to the survival of most resident and migratory
wildlife species such as elephant and wildebeest,” says Dickson
Ole Kaelo, a well-known Maasai ecologist, who is urging the
government to support the expansion of conservation and tourism
on Maasai community lands along the lines of the OOC. “These
conservancies have demonstrated pragmatic approaches to
sustaining the Mara’s wildlife, giving a better tourist
experience and providing returns to the land owners for
investing in conservation.”
Botswana is Africa’s conservation poster boy, in large part
because of its stable government. In contrast, many wildlife
rivals – Kenya, Tanzania and Zimbabwe – have been riven with
corruption that starts in the higher reaches of public office
and finds its way to the gates of the national parks. One
conservationist in east Africa told of an official arriving at
the conservancy he manages with a black briefcase which, when
opened, revealed $200,000 in crisp notes.
“This was what he was offering me to allow some Middle Eastern
clients to come big game hunting in this proscribed park,” he
told me. “I told him to get off the conservancy immediately.”
Without strong, stable government, Africa’s wildlife is
particularly vulnerable, as is painfully evident in Robert
Mugabe’s all but collapsed Zimbabwe. With almost no policing of
the country’s proscribed wildlife areas, famous national parks
such as Hwange have become open house for illegal hunting
parties. Conservationists say that we will only know the true
cost of almost a decade of anarchy when the Mugabe era is over
and a full audit is taken of once-abundant parks.
Botswana also stands out from its neighbours for its wise
policies when it comes to tourism. In the Eighties the
government took the advice of a group of conservationists and
decided to develop the high-revenue, low-volume tourist model,
with communities being direct beneficiaries. The policy has paid
off handsomely, as Botswana has not been as susceptible to the
ebbs and flows of western tourists as, say, Kenya, which has
traditionally depended on more mass-market tourism. Kenya’s
volatile mixture of political instability and dependence on
western tourists hit home in 2008, when post-election riots
stopped international tourism in its tracks during its peak
season and left most of the Mara’s lodges empty for the first
half of the year.
The Botswana government also wrings a bigger commitment out of
the companies that run the lodges and safaris in its wildlife
parks. Companies such as Great Plains, Wilderness Safaris and
Abercrombie & Kent are obliged to pay sizeable lease fees –
sometimes up to $250,000 per concession per annum – to the local
communities, plus 4.5 per cent of turnover during the year.
According to safari insiders, that 4.5 per cent works out at
about 25 per cent of the net profits of a well-run safari
operation. On top of that, leases are contracted for 15 years,
encouraging camp operators to invest in their surroundings. By
contrast, in east Africa most operators pay only a bed-night
lease fee, which means that the community benefits only if
someone sleeps in the bed . In a bad year, such as 2008, when
tourists stop coming, revenue dries up, and local communities –
left questioning the benefits of wildlife tourism – are thus
inclined to revert to other land uses, such as domestic
livestock and subsistence agriculture.
The Toyota Landcruiser is bouncing across the rutted track when
Joubert sees movement in the jackalberry trees to the left of
the vehicle. It is a female leopard heading west into the dusk
light.
Reluctantly, Joubert tells our driver, Dukes, to keep going or
we will miss seeing the lion pride hunting buffalo. This part of
Botswana was until recently a hunting area, and the Jouberts’
conservation philosophy is not surprisingly driven by a fierce
anti-hunting position. Dereck points out that in the time it
took him and his wife to make their documentary film Eye of the
Leopard, about a leopardess called Lagadema, “10,000 leopards
like her were legally hunted and killed, all with permits
approved by CITES, [the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species].”
Although sport hunting was banned in Kenya in 1978, it remains
legal and a source of considerable revenue in Tanzania,
Zimbabwe, Namibia, South Africa and some parts of Botswana.
Thanks to the Jouberts, Bell and a small group of like-minded
conservationists, Botswana is leading the drive to ban hunting
completely in prime areas. There are now seven major wilderness
areas in the country, totalling two million acres, that have
been converted from hunting to photographic safaris. Botswana’s
president, Ian Khama, a close friend of the Jouberts, has
personally endorsed the initiative.
Bell and the Jouberts are taking their anti-hunting message into
the heartland of big game safaris: Tanzania. Trophy fees there
have remained the same since the mid-Eighties, making Tanzania
the international hunter’s bargain basement. Though there are no
statistics available on the number of animals shot annually, it
is estimated that Tanzania generates $13 million from what is
coyly termed “wildlife utilisation”, which includes hunting and
live animal capture. In South Africa, which does keep
statistics, more than 54,000 animals of all species were hunted
in 2006, earning the country more than $250 million in trophy
fees. Big business, indeed.
“We are buying the hunting licences in the Selous Game Reserve
and tearing them up,” says Joubert with glee. “Our total bill
will be close to $90,000 this year. We are saying that we are
going to own these animals for the year.”
Having wrenched Dereck away from the lone leopard, we head out
into the evening looking for the lions. It isn’t long before we
find them, a pride of nine animals doing little more than
lolling around in the turpentine grass, occasionally standing
alert as a nearby herd of buffalo shows signs of movement.
As dusk envelops us and the extraordinary night sky fills with
stars, we find ourselves contemplating the impact homo sapiens
is having on this magnificent wilderness. Dereck stares intently
at the pride and says “around the time the occupants of this
vehicle were born just over half a century back, there were more
than 450,000 lions roaming across Africa.” His voice echoes in
the stillness: “Today, there are fewer than 20,000 left on the
whole continent.”
Soon, grim statistics and analysis are punctuating the night
air. We all agree we are overpopulating at such a pace and to
such dramatic effect that we are minutes from midnight
ecologically, with rural Africa experiencing one of the highest
population growth rates on earth. For most of human history, the
fields grew plants, the plants made cellulose, we ate the
plants, we ate the animals and we were living off current
sunlight. From the earliest evidence of human civilisation,
around 150,000 years ago, until the industrial age in the 19th
century, that was how we lived and our population did not pass a
billion people. Our second billion took just 130 years to
appear, the third only 30 years, taking us to 1960; since 1963,
our population has doubled to more than six billion. We are
living on environmental credit.
The pressure in Africa is most serious. The population has grown
from 100 million at the beginning of the 20th century to
700 million at the end. By midway through this century it will
have ballooned to two billion and, although the massive
concentrations are in the cities, the wilderness areas are
increasingly under pressure from burgeoning rural populations
and their domestic animals. It’s most notable in the Maasai
Mara, increasingly one of the most competed-for tracts of
wilderness on the continent – both from the point of view of
local residents and foreign tourists.
My last stop on this extended safari is Londolozi, a private
reserve with four luxurious camps. I feel I need to catch up
with Dave Varty, the man who, by creating in the early Seventies
one of the first high-revenue, low-impact safari camps on the
edge of South Africa’s giant Kruger National Park, set the tone
for luxury light safaris. Where once big names such as Teddy
Roosevelt, Ernest Hemingway and John Huston used to go on safari
with hunting rifles and retinues of bearers, their present
equivalents pitch up with a few overnight bags on a private jet
and hope that the spa and masseurs are in order and that the
wines have been kept at the correct temperature.
Like the most progressive East Africans, Varty thinks the
solution lies in returning this entire area of South Africa to
wildlife, moving the rural population that is pressing up
against Kruger’s western boundary away from the area, and
creating an enormous wildlife corridor that reinstates the
elephant migratory paths that existed here until the arrival of
white colonials.
There are five dirt-poor villages with some 40,000 people living
in this hardscrabble landscape, and to say that their existence
is subsistence almost understates the case. The men are away in
the cities earning money; there is nothing here for the women
and children. In the same way that the Maasai have been given
incentives to move out of the OOC, so Varty believes that
wildlife tourism can help the translocation of these communities
into more viable rural towns.
Over the next two days, we drive around Londolozi tracking
leopards, looking for lions and watching a large herd of
elephant drinking and grazing along the banks of the Sand River.
This is part of the 155,000-acre Sabi Sands reserve, and
Londolozi and its similarly luxurious neighbours, Mala Mala,
Singita and Richard Branson’s Ulusaba, promise their wealthy
American and European clientele accessible wildlife from the
comfort of a vehicle with perfectly mixed sundowners at some
beautiful spot at the end of the drive.
Over sundowners on my last night, Varty goes intergalactic,
waving his arms around and raving about corridors and optimum
land usage and why “we Africans have to tell people like Sir
Richard Branson and Bono what it is exactly we need here. We
don’t want a school to be built here – we want you to pay for
300 miles of fence and you can tell the world that Virgin built
the Sir Richard Branson Fence.” Then he’s off again, this time
addressing South Africa’s president, Jacob Zuma. “I’m not going
to build a school here, Mr Zuma,” he declares to an audience of
elephants washing themselves and drinking down at the water’s
edge. “No, let’s build one at Thulamahashe or at Bushbuck Ridge
[rural towns some way off]. Let’s put up proper housing, proper
towns. There is nothing for people in these semi-arid,
low-rainfall areas. This is for wild animals. Don’t put any more
bricks and mortar on this thing.” Then he falls silent. There is
nothing nuanced about what Varty is saying.
And there you have it, the rolling thunder of so many voices,
desperate to be heard, messianic in their message. Cut
corruption. Stop hunting. Create corridors. Move people. Pay
people. Make tourism pay.
The sun has set, the elephants are barely visible in the soft
moonlight. The stars stud the inky sky. It has all been said. Is
anybody listening? |