Guide to the Naturalized and Invasive Plants of Laikipia
By Arne Witt
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About this ebook
Arne Witt
Arne Witt is currently the Regional (Africa and Asia) Coordinator for Invasive Species for CABI, based in Wilderness (George), South Africa. He has been an International Project Coordinator and/or Technical Advisor for a number of regional and national UNEP-GEF IAS Projects in Africa, Asia, Caribbean, and the Middle East. In these roles he has worked with countries in developing policies, building capacity, creating awareness, and developing and implementing best management practices, including biological control. He continues to develop and implement IAS projects in these regions. Arne has a PhD from the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. He has Master of Science degrees in Entomology (Stellenbosch University) and Conservation Biology (University of Cape Town). He has published a number of journal articles, and authored or co-authored book chapters and books on the identification and management of invasive alien species.
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Guide to the Naturalized and Invasive Plants of Laikipia - Arne Witt
GUIDE TO THE NATURALIZED AND INVASIVE PLANTS OF
LAIKIPIA
CABI is a trading name of CAB International
CABI
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© CAB International 2017. The copyright holder of this work is CAB International (trading as CABI). It is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial Licence (CC BY-NC).
Reproduction of this publication for educational or other non-commercial purposes is authorised without prior permission from the copyright holder provided the source is fully acknowledged. Reproduction for resale or other commercial purpose is prohibited without prior written permission from the copyright holder.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library, London, UK.
ISBN-13: 978 1 78639 215 2
Production editor: Tracy Head, CABI
Design and typesetting by Sarah Hilliar, CABI
Maps: Tim Beale, CABI
Line drawings: Elijah Njoroge
Printed and bound by Gutenberg Press Ltd., Tarxien, Malta
Contents
Foreword (Head of UNDP)
Foreword (Governor, Laikipia County, Kenya)
Foreword (Executive Director, Laikipia Wildlife Forum)
Executive Summary
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Forty-five Naturalized and Invasive Plants in Laikipia County – Identification and Control
Useful Websites
References
Appendix A: Status of exotic species of plants, recorded during surveys in Laikipia County, that are known to be naturalized or invasive elsewhere.
Appendix B: Biological control agents that have been released and have subsequently established in Kenya, or elsewhere, on some of the plant species described in this Field Guide
Appendix C: Herbicides registered or permissable with minor or emergency use permits in Australia, by the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority, against some of the plant species included in this Field Guide
Appendix D: Registered and minor-use herbicides applied in South Africa for the control of some of the plant species included in this Field Guide.
Index
Arne Witt is currently the Regional Coordinator for Invasive Species for CABI, based in Nairobi, Kenya. He has been involved in a host of IAS projects related to policy development, capacity building, awareness creation, and development and implementation of best management practices in Africa, Asia and the Caribbean. He continues to develop and implement IAS projects in these regions.
Arne has Master of Science degrees in Entomology and Conservation Biology and a PhD from the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. This is the third of a series of Field Guides he is authoring on invasive plants in Africa and Asia and follows on from his recently co-authored book Invasive Alien Plants and their Management in Africa.
Foreword
Established in 1966, UNDP works in some 170 countries and territories, helping to achieve the eradication of poverty, and the reduction of inequalities and exclusion. In 2016, 50 years later, UNDP is continuing its work to support the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, and the 17 new Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), or Global Goals, as they help shape global development for the next 15 years or more.
Under the Energy and Environment component of the Country Programme, UNDP supports Kenya to meet its obligations to international environment agreements, while enhancing the contribution of natural resources and the environment to poverty reduction and sustainable socio-economic development. However, the country’s natural resource base is under considerable threat from a wide range of sources, including pollution, erosion, deforestation, encroachment, etc. One such threat of growing concern is the rapid spread of invasive alien species in several parts of the country.
Although there is insufficient information on the number of invasive plant species present in Kenya, their distribution, and the ecosystems under threat, we know enough about some of the worst species to be concerned, and that the problem will continue to grow, unless measures to halt their spread are taken. The GEF Small Grants Programme of UNDP, provided financial support to the Mpala Research Centre and CABI, to implement a project that would conduct an assessment of the presence of invasive plant species in Laikipia County, and thereafter produce distribution maps and an Identification Guide as a toolkit for use by affected communities, to create awareness on the troublesome plant species, and to provide methods of managing them.
UNDP, the implementing partner of the GEF Small Grants Programme, is pleased to support this project because it largely addresses the information-gap, and highlights the extent of the problem. The surveys conducted, and their subsequent analysis, provide important data that can be used by Laikipia County policy makers as well as other key stakeholders in devising strategies to manage invasive species effectively. Furthermore, local communities will have a better understanding of the spread and impacts of invasive plants, and be equipped to better manage them.
Country Director, UNDP Kenya
Foreword
Invasive alien species (IAS) pose one of the most worrying threats on earth to biodiversity, human livelihoods and sustainable development. As a result of increased global trade, travel and transportation, IAS can now be found the world over in virtually every habitat – from snow-capped mountains to forests, woodlands, savannahs, grasslands, deserts, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and marine environments. These plant and animal invasions have the biggest impact on poor rural communities, most of whom are directly dependent on the natural resource base for their immediate needs in terms of food, fodder for their livestock, water, medicinal plants, building materials, fuelwood and other products and services.
Kenya has not escaped this IAS onslaught, and neither has Laikipia County which stretches from the slopes of Mount Kenya in the southeast to the edge of the Great Rift Valley in the west, and which descends into the semi-arid and arid lands of northern Kenya. This area, known for its abundant wildlife and its pastoralist communities, is a mosaic of grasslands, savannah woodland and forest. All these habitats are threatened by a host of invasive alien plant species, such as Australian pest pear (Opuntia stricta) and other introduced cactus species, together with a number of alien herb, shrub and tree species. These non-native plant species are rapidly displacing indigenous plants and animals, and the forage on which thousands of cattle, goats and sheep depend. Strategies for the management of such foreign species can be developed and implemented only once the presence and distribution of these species is known and awareness created about their impacts.
As such, this Guide to naturalized and invasive plants in Laikipia is a timely and important contribution towards the future management of one of the biggest threats to biodiversity and livelihoods in the County and surrounding areas. The Guide includes detailed descriptions of these plants, together with line drawings and colour photographs, distribution maps and information on best management practices, making it a critical tool for managing invasive species in Laikipia. Indeed, the project that produced this Guide, funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) with UNDP as the implementing agency, has already contributed to the initiation of a biological control programme against Australian pest pear. We hope this will provide the impetus to support the control of other invasive plants in Laikipia County.
Arne Witt, the author of this Guide, and all those who have contributed are to be commended for their efforts in making information on the naturalized and invasive plants of Laikipia County available in a format that most people should be able to understand. This Guide will make a significant contribution to enhancing livelihoods and bolstering biodiversity conservation in Laikipia County.
Joshua Irungu, Governor, Laikipia County, Kenya
Foreword
Cradled between the Aberdare Mountains and Mount Kenya, Laikipia County is a land-use model for arid and semi-arid lands in Kenya. Its unique combination of large-scale ranches and community-owned lands host wildlife populations unrivalled in other parts of Kenya. Laikipia hosts the highest populations of endangered large mammals in Kenya, including half of the country’s rhino population, together with significant populations of elephants, Grévy’s zebra, reticulated giraffe and wild dogs.
More importantly, however, the generally intact nature of this landscape is the key to its success. Generally, residents tolerate and/or encourage the movement of wildlife across property lines. Conservation of wildlife and other natural resources is reflected in a land management ethic that places value on the nation’s wildlife heritage. Landowners work hard to share the benefits accruing from this form of land use. Moreover, environmental services generated by this form of land use make Laikipia a potential economic hub for sustainable agriculture and wildlife conservation in the region.
Unfortunately, productive rangelands and livelihoods in Laikipia are threatened by the increasing prevalence of exotic plant species, many of which have already become invasive or have the potential to do so. Invasive alien plants displace native plants, especially valuable pasture species, to the detriment of wild animals and livestock which depend on the native plants.
For example, the invasive cactus, Opuntia stricta, which has already invaded thousands of hectares of private and pastoral lands, has contributed to a significant reduction in the amount of available forage, resulting in a negative impact on livestock health, forcing some people to abandon their homes in search of alternative lands. Many other cactus species, such as Opuntia engelmannii and Austrocylindropuntia subalata, are becoming just as problematic. Unfortunately, this list is growing. Without effective management, ever larger tracts of land will become unproductive.
This Identification Guide is the first step in raising awareness about the problem. With this Guide, we can now identify which naturalized and invasive species are already present in Laikipia; where they are growing, and whether they are abundant and/or widespread. The Guide also provides useful information on various management options. Of these options, prevention is paramount. We must actively engage in preventing the introduction into Laikipia of additional invasive plant species. And, in the case of those invasive species that are already present, we need to act decisively to stop their further spread. This Guide provides us with a valuable tool, which we can use to develop and implement county-wide rangeland management strategies.
Join me, then, in congratulating the author, Arne Witt, who has long held an interest in these ‘alien’ species in Laikipia, and let us thank him for giving us another tool in our sustainable rangelands management toolkit.
Peter E. Hetz, Executive Director, Laikipia Wildlife Forum, Kenya