Disturbance of a Kenya Rift Valley stream by the daily activities of local people and their livestock |
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Authors: | Mathooko Jude Mutuku |
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Affiliation: | (1) Tropical River Ecology Initiative Project, Department of Zoology, Egerton University, P.O. Box 536, Njoro, Kenya |
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Abstract: | ![]() Human and domestic animal activities and visits to an impacted site in the Njoro River, Kenya, were recorded from 1994 to 1995. The activities of people in the humid and wet zones of the stream included linen washing, water abstraction, excretion, bathing and swimming. Human and animal visits and activities along the Njoro River were on a daily basis and were patterned according to the time of the day, weather and seasons. Women formed the first group to visit the stream at dawn, followed by men and lastly, children. The diurnal pattern of visits was bimodal, with major peaks between 0600 and 1100 h and from 1600 h until dusk. The intensity of all major activities peaked at around midday and donkeys and cattle formed the largest proportion of the domestic animals that visited the stream. Much of the small-scale water abstraction occurred between 0700 and 1100 h, coinciding with the time when most people visited the stream. Water abstraction was most intense during the dry season. A mean discharge of 1.7 litres per second was measured whilst 0.3 litre of water per second was abstracted at the impacted site, implying that about 20% of the flow volume of the Njoro River was abstracted at a single site in one day.The effects of the human and animal activities on the structure of macrozoobenthos in the wet zone of the Njoro River were studied on the impacted site in relation to an upstream reference site and a downstream reference site . Oligochaetes and chironomids dominated the fauna in all three sites. The impacted site had low patchiness and mean crowding, with the taxa distribution tending toward a randomly dispersed spatial pattern. The mean turnover (±SD) of the macroinvertebrates was 47±18, 48±26 and 36±22 in the impacted, downstream and upstream sites, respectively. The trampling of the streambed by humans and livestock could, therefore, alter the benthos structure through redistribution and reduction of faunal patchiness. The cumulative effect of small-scale, but widespread and frequent disturbances might have large impacts on whole river systems. This study demonstrated that, in the tropics, quantification of the daily activities of people and domestic animals is important for future management of the Njoro River and consequently, Lake Nakuru. |
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Keywords: | tropical rivers livestock disturbances macrozoobenthos Kenya |
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