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Tuesday, October 14, 2025
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First Lady Margaret Kenyatta arrives in Spain for the World Trade and Tourism 19th Global Summit

First Lady Margaret Kenyatta arrived in Seville, Spain today for the World Trade and Tourism Council (WTTC) 19th Global Summit.

The First Lady arrived at Seville Santander Juanta Train station, at 6pm Kenyan time. This is the 3rd busiest station in Spain serving over 8 million travellers annually.

On arrival at the station, the First Lady was received by the Spanish Secretary of State for Tourism, Isabelle Maria Oliver Sagreras, and Kenya’s Tourism Cabinet Secretary Najib Balala.

The First Lady, who has been at the forefront in championing wildlife conservation through her “ Hands off our Elephants” campaign, is scheduled to give a keynote address at the Global Summit. The theme of her address is “Africa Rising”.

This year’s Summit is expected to attract a record attendance of over 1,500 delegates.

The event will be cantered on the theme of ‘Changemakers’, harnessing the 500th anniversary of the first circumnavigation of the world from Seville and the world-changing impact of that achievement.

WTTC aims to inspire delegates with change-making individuals and ideas to craft the future vision of Travel & Tourism.

Entrepreneurship, creativity, innovation, diversity, and inclusivity will drive the conversation.

Former U.S. President Barack Obama is also expected to grace the event as one of the ‘changemakers.’


The First Lady, whose efforts to conserve wildlife have gained global recognition, was in October last year invited to London, in the United Kingdom where she addressed the fourth Conference on Illegal Wildlife Trade (IWT).

During the London’s conference, the First Lady affirmed Kenya’s leadership and commitment to eradicating illegal trade in wildlife across the world. The First Lady said Kenya has recorded a significant decline in poaching due to its enhanced wildlife law enforcement efforts and the Government’s proactive anti-poaching measures.

The First Lady is later this evening expected to attend dinner hosted in honour of key delegates at the summit.

Supreme Court Judge Jackton Ojwang suspended as uhuru forms tribunal

President Uhuru Kenyatta has formed a tribunal to probe the conduct of Justice Jackton Boma Ojwang, Judge of the Supreme Court of Kenya.

With the formation of the tribunal, the Judge stands suspended from exercising the functions of his office according to Article 168 (5) of the Constitution.

The announcement was made through a special issue of the Kenya Gazette dated 29th March 2019.

The tribunal will be headed by Court of Appeal Judge Justice Alnashir Visram as Chairperson and will have six other members.

The six members of the tribunal are Justice (Rtd.) Festus Azangalala, Ambrose Weda, Andrew Bahati Mwamuye, Lucy Kambuni, Sylvia Wanjiku Muchiri and Amina Abdallah.

The tribunal will “investigate the conduct of Jackton Boma Ojwang, Judge of the Supreme Court of Kenya on the basis of Articles 168 (1) (e), 73 (1) (a) and 75 (1) and (2) of the Constitution and Judicial Service Code of Conduct and Ethics (Legal Notice No. 50 of 2003) and other relevant laws and matters including but not limited to — The allegations contained in the petition by the Judicial Service Commission of Kenya filed by Nelson Oduor Onyango and eight (8) others presented to me regarding the conduct of Jackton Boma Ojwang, Judge of the Supreme Court of Kenya.”

In the Gazette notice, the President mandated the tribunal to prepare and submit a report and its recommendation to him expeditiously.

New ‘Huduma Namba’ to help tame corruption and accelerate implementation of Big 4 agenda

President Uhuru Kenyatta today presided over the national launch of the new Huduma Namba, a project that seeks to identify all Kenyan residents through a unique primary identifier.

The President kicked-off the National Integrated Identity Management System (NIIMS) by signing up for his own Huduma Namba and flagging off the registration kits to all the 47 counties.

He rolled out the NIIMS project at the Masii Public Grounds in Machakos County while Deputy President William Ruto simultaneously kicked off the exercise in Kakamega County.

In a historic demonstration of national unity and common purpose, key opposition leaders trooped to three other launch sites to witness the roll out of the 45-day Huduma Namba registration drive which they all hailed as an important exercise.

Former Premier Raila Odinga witnessed the roll out in Mombasa, former Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka in Murang’a, and Nasa co-principal Musalia Mudavadi in Kajiado.



With the historic launch of the NIIMS project, Kenya now joins other developed nations such as the US, Europe, United Arabs Emirates, India and Australia  which have successfully used integrated data systems to manage their citizens information. 

President Kenyatta said the NIIMS exercise will not only transform civil registration and data management in the country but also tame corruption and fast-track the implementation of the Big 4 development agenda.

“Huduma Namba will reduce delays and corruption in the delivery of services such as cash transfers for elderly persons and vulnerable children, issuance of passports and border control,” he  said. 

He added: “ NIIMS  will facilitate faster and more effective implementation of the Big4 agenda.”

The President said the NIIMS registration exercise will be able to verify the actual number of government employees including civil servants that include teachers and other cadres.

He said an audit of the Kenya Police Service undertaken last year had discovered about 5,000 ghost officers who were receiving a monthly salary of over Shs 148 million.

President Kenyatta said NIIMS aims to establish and maintain a master digital national population register that will serve as the only single source of identification for everybody resident in Kenya.



“It will integrate personal and functional data that is scattered in many government agencies into one single identity,” said the president adding that the number will be used at all stages of one’s life from birth to death.

NIIMS is used to save biometric (fingerprints and facials only), demographic and physical details of Kenyans and registered foreigners, an exercise that also aims at enhancing national security.

The new Huduma Namba will not invalidate, instead it will harmonize other national registration processes like the sign up for Identity Cards, National Hospital Insurance  Fund (NHIF) , National Social Security Fund (NSSF), Birth and Death certificates or the Personal Identification Number (PIN) among others.

NIIMS will assist in issuing persons resident in Kenya with a primary identifier that will consolidate the other registration numbers in one digital wallet. The other numbers will become secondary identifiers.

The new Huduma number is aimed at enhancing the speed and efficiency of service delivery to all residents of Kenya.

Calling on Kenyans to take advantage of the next 45 days to register, President Kenyatta said there are several reasons why the government is making the extraordinary effort to undertake the biometric registration for everybody living in Kenya.

“The need for accurate data as a key enabler for national planning, issuance of birth and death certificates and associated rights of nationality, schooling, passport and property ownership are all valid reasons for the registration,” said the President.

He said Biometric identification and registration of farmers will facilitate fairer allocation of subsidized farm inputs including seeds and fertlizers.

“It will also improve accountability and transparency in the management of National Health Insurance Fund and inform planning, investment and allocation of affordable housing units,” the President said.



He said the NIIMS exercise will also facilitate and monitor capitation in schools adding that Kenyans will no longer be required to carry multiple IDs and, pensioners and widows will receive their dues with much ease.

Besides reducing transaction costs for Kenyans, said the Head of State, the new Namba will significantly reduce cases of identity theft and make financial and property transactions more secure.

President Kenyatta said a bill is currently being drafted to address concerns raised by Kenyans about security of the NIIMS DATA. 

“Once passed by PARLIAMENT, the law will give you (the individual) a right to obtain a copy of the particulars of your personal data in the NIIMS database, restrict data sharing, and ensure security of the data against unauthorised access,” he said. 

President Kenyatta criticised some church leaders for spreading lies and misleading Kenyans about the intentions of the biometric registration exercise. 

Interior CS Dr. Fred Matinag’I ,under whose docket the new initiative is being co-ordinated assured the President of precision and efficiency in  the registration exercise.

He also promised to update the President on a daily basis about the status of the exercise.

Others who spoke at the launch ceremony included   the three governors from the lower Eastern counties including the host Dr Alfred Mutua (Machakos), Charity Ngilu (Kitui) ,Prof. Kivutha Kibwana of Makueni and  the local MP (Mwala) Engineer Vincent  Musyoka (Kawaya).

Samburu Governor charged for selling fuel worth 84.7 Million to his county

By PRUDENCE WANZA – The Samburu county Governor, Moses Lenolkulal has been charged of corruption and mismanagement of public resources at the Milimani law courts. 
The Governor was arrested this morning and has been accused of payment of money unlawfully to Oryx service station which he owns. The Governor is alleged to have contracted the service station to supply fuel to the county government  with a payment of Ksh. 84.6 Million. 


Appearing before Chief Magistrate,  Douglas Ogoti at the Anti-corruption court division, he pleaded not guilty to the four charges that he is accused of. 
The prosecution led by, Alexander Muteti, has requested the court to issue orders that the governor stays away from the county government offices for  24months since the nature of the offenses touch directly to the discharge of his duties as a governor and if allowed to continue discharging his duties justice may be compromised in the matter. 


The court has directed that the governor be prohibited from accessing the county offices until the formal application is heard and determined. 
The other thirteen accused persons who are accountants of the county government of Samburu have also been directed to keep off the county government accounts and that they should present themselves in court on Thursday, 4th April. 
Governor Lenolkulal will be released on a bond of Ksh. 150 million and an alternative Ksh. 100 million. The court has cited that it can not overlook the charge against him since the case involves embezzlement of funds and that the accused person was trading with himself using public resources. 

Your smartphone apps are tracking your every move – 4 essential reads

If you feel like you’re being watched, it could be your smartphone spying on you. Jakub Grygier/Shutterstock.com Jeff Inglis, The Conversation

If you have a smartphone, it probably is a significant part of your life, storing appointments and destinations as well as being central to your communications with friends, loved ones and co-workers. Research and investigative reporting continue to reveal the degree to which your smartphone is aware of what you’re up to and where you are – and how much of that information is shared with companies that want to track your every move, hoping to better target you with advertising.

Several scholars at U.S. universities have written for The Conversation about how these technologies work, and the privacy problems they raise.

1. Most apps give away personal data

A study based at the University of California, Berkeley found that 7 in 10 apps shared personal data, like location and what apps a person uses, with companies that exist to track users online and in the physical world, digital privacy scholars Narseo Vallina-Rodriguez and Srikanth Sundaresan write. Fifteen percent of the apps the study examined sent that data to five or more tracking websites.

In addition, 1 in 4 trackers received “at least one unique device identifier, such as the phone number … [which] are crucial for online tracking services because they can connect different types of personal data provided by different apps to a single person or device.”

2. Turning off tracking doesn’t always work

Even people who tell their phones and apps not to track their activity are vulnerable. Northeastern University computer scientist Guevara Noubir found that “a phone can listen in on a user’s finger typing to discover a secret password – and […] simply carrying a phone in your pocket can tell data companies where you are and where you’re going.”

3. Your profile is worth money

All of this information on who you are, where you are and what you’re doing gets assembled into enormously detailed digital profiles, which get turned into money, Wayne State University law professor Jonathan Weinberg explains: “By combining online and offline data, Facebook can charge premium rates to an advertiser who wants to target, say, people in Idaho who are in long-distance relationships and are thinking about buying a minivan. (There are 3,100 of them in Facebook’s database.)”

4. Rules and laws don’t exist – in the US

Right now in the U.S., there’s not much regulatory oversight making sure digital apps and services protect people’s privacy and the privacy of their data. “Federal laws protect medical information, financial data and education-related records,” writes University of Michigan privacy scholar Florian Schaub, before noting that “Online services and apps are barely regulated, though they must protect children, limit unsolicited email marketing and tell the public what they do with data they collect.”

European rules are more comprehensive, but the problem remains that people’s digital companions collect and share large amounts of information about their real-world lives.The Conversation

Jeff Inglis, Science + Technology Editor, The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Beware of Fake Title deeds– Two charged for illegally selling land worth Ksh. 50 million

 
Two men have been arraigned at the Milimani Law Courts for unlawfully  selling land valued at Ksh. 50,000,000 at Riruta.
The two, Jackson Mutugi Mwangi and James Kiriko Muraguri at the Nairobi registry conspired to sell a piece of land in Riruta measuring an eighth of an hectare, to James Kingori Wahome and James Mwangi Gachuiri. 


The accused persons went ahead to obtain a registration number for the land falsely and obtained a fake title deed. 
The two who appeared before Chief Magistrate, Francis Andayi, at the Milimani Law Courts pleaded not guilty.  


The two will be released on a bond of Ksh. 2million and an alternative cash bail of Ksh. 1 million. 
The case will be mentioned on 10th May, 2019.

China’s ‘Silk Road urbanism’ is changing cities from London to Kampala – can locals keep control?

View of Kampala. Shutterstock. Jonathan Silver, University of Sheffield and Alan Wiig, University of Massachusetts Boston

A massive redevelopment of the old Royal Albert Dock in East London is transforming the derelict waterfront to a gleaming business district. The project, which started in June 2017, will create 325,000 square metres of prime office space – a “city within a city”, as it has been dubbed – for Asian finance and tech firms. Then, in 2018, authorities in Kampala, Uganda celebrated as a ferry on Lake Victoria was unloaded with goods from the Indian Ocean, onto a rail service into the city. This transport hub was the final part of the Central Corridor project, aimed at connecting landlocked Uganda to Dar es Salaam and the Indian Ocean.

Both of these huge projects are part of the US$1 trillion global infrastructure investment that is China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). China’s ambition to reshape the world economy has sparked massive infrastructure projects spanning all the way from Western Europe to East Africa, and beyond. The nation is engaging in what we, in our research, call “Silk Road urbanism” – reimagining the historic transcontinental trade route as a global project, to bring the cities of South Asia, East Africa, Europe and South America into the orbit of the Chinese economy.

By forging infrastructure within and between key cities, China is changing the everyday lives of millions across the world. The initiative has kicked off a new development race between the US and China, to connect the planet by financing large-scale infrastructure projects.

Silk Road urbanism

Amid this geopolitical competition, Silk Road urbanism will exert significant influence over how cities develop into the 21st century. As the transcontinental trade established by the ancient Silk Road once led to the rise of cities such as Herat (in modern-day Afghanistan) and Samarkand (Uzbekistan), so the BRI will bring new investment, technology, infrastructure and trade relations to certain cities around the globe.

The BRI is still in its early stages – and much remains to be understood about the impact it will have on the urban landscape. What is known, however, is that the project will transform the world system of cities on a scale not witnessed since the end of the Cold War.

Silk Road urbanism is highly selective in its deployment across urban space. It prioritises the far over the near and is orientated toward global trade and the connections and circulations of finance, materials, goods and knowledge. Because of this, the BRI should not only be considered in terms of its investment in infrastructure.

It will also have significance for city dwellers – and urban authorities must recognise the challenges of the BRI and navigate the need to secure investment for infrastructure while ensuring that citizens maintain their right to the city, and their power to shape their own future.

London calling

Developments in both London and Kampala highlight these challenges. In London, Chinese developer Advanced Business Park is rebuilding Royal Albert Dock – now named the Asian Business Port – on a site it acquired for £1 billion in 2013 in a much-criticised deal by former London mayor Boris Johnson. The development is projected to be worth £6 billion to the city’s economy by completion.

Formerly Royal Albert Dock, now Asian Business Port. Google Earth.

But the development stands in sharp contrast with the surrounding East London communities, which still suffer poverty and deprivation. The challenge will be for authorities and developers to establish trusting relations through open dialogue with locals, in a context where large urban redevelopments such as the 2012 Olympic Park have historically brought few benefits.

The creation of a third financial district, alongside Canary Wharf and the City of London, may benefit the economy. But it remains to be seen if this project will provide opportunities for, and investment in, the surrounding neighbourhoods.

Kampala’s corridor

The Ugandan capital Kampala is part of the Central Corridor project to improve transport and infrastructure links across five countries including Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda. The project is financed through the government of Tanzania via a US$7.6 billion loan from the Chinese bank Exim.

Under construction: the Chinese-funded Entebbe-Kampala Expressway. Dylan Patterson/Flickr., CC BY-SA

The growth of the new transport and cargo hub at Port Bell, on the outskirts of Kampala, with standardised technologies and facilities for international trade, is the crucial underlying component for Uganda’s Vision2040.

This national plan alone encompasses a further ten new cities, four international airports, national high speed rail and a multi-lane road network. But as these urban transformations unfold, residents already living precariously in Kampala have faced further uncertainty over their livelihoods, shelter and place in the city.

During fieldwork for our ongoing research into Silk Road urbanism in 2017, we witnessed the demolition of hundreds of informal homes and businesses in the popular Namuwongo district, as a zone was cleared 30 metres either side of a rehabilitated railway track for the Central Corridor required.

As Silk Road urbanism proceeds to reshape global infrastructure and city spaces, existing populations will experience displacement in ways that are likely to reinforce existing inequalities. It is vital people are given democratic involvement in shaping the outcomes.The Conversation

Jonathan Silver, Senior Research Fellow, University of Sheffield and Alan Wiig, Assistant Professor of Urban Planning and Community Development, University of Massachusetts Boston

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Kenya is keen on enhancing its cooperation with Cuba, President Kenyatta says

President Uhuru Kenyatta has said Kenya is keen on enhancing its cooperation with Cuba especially in the provision of quality healthcare, one of the Government’s Big 4 Agenda.

The President welcomed the ongoing collaboration that has seen the two countries partner in health research and capacity building.

Kenya and Cuba are implementing a medical exchange programme in which Cuban specialist doctors are serving in the country while Kenyan doctors are in Cuba advancing their medical training.

The Head of State spoke during a meeting with visiting Cuba’s Vice President of the Council of State and Ministers, Ines Maria Chapman, who paid him a courtesy call at State House, Nairobi.

President Kenyatta said Kenya has a lot to learn from Cuba’s healthcare delivery model which has seen the Latin American country register a life expectancy of 79.5 years compared to Kenya’s 67.5 years.

The Cuban VP thanked President Kenyatta’s leadership for enhancing the historic bilateral ties between the two countries, saying the ongoing exchange of expertise in the health sector will go a long way in cementing relations between the two countries.

Cuban Vice President of the Cuban Council of State and of Ministers, Ines Maria Chapman | PSCU



Kenya and Cuba have finalized negotiations on a Malaria Vector Control project to be implemented in the malaria prone areas in the country. The project, that will apply Cuban biological larvicides, is set to be launched later this month.

President Kenyatta observed that the relationship between Kenya and Cuba was growing by the day with the two countries also enhancing their collaboration at the multilateral levels.

Speaking after the meeting, Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Monica Juma said the two countries are working very well on the diplomatic front.

“The relationship between Kenya and Cuba is improving across the sectors. For instance Cuba is playing a crucial role in helping Kenyans learn the Spanish language,” the CS said.

Health Cabinet Secretary Sicily Kariuki said Kenya has adopted part of the Cuban medical training curricula that is set to equip students in the Kenya Medical Training Colleges with more skills to address emerging health challenges.

The meeting was attended by Head of Public Service Joseph Kinyua.

President Kenyatta mourns CAS Aman’s father

President Uhuru Kenyatta has sent a message of condolence and comfort to the family of Health Chief Administrative Secretary Dr. Rashid Aman following the death of his father, Mzee  Abdi Aman.

In the condolence message, President Kenyatta described Mzee Aman as a patriarch who was a role model and a mentor to many.

“Mzee Aman was a strong pillar to his family, an elder whose counsel and words of wisdom will be missed by many. Indeed as a respected member of the community, he was a reference point on many on issues of life,” the President said.

“In this hour of sorrow, I convey my deepest sympathies and heartfelt condolences to his family, relatives and friends,” he added.

Mzee Aman, who passed on at the age of 92 years, was also the father of former PS Dr. Mohamed Isahakia.

“It is my prayer that the Almighty God will give you the strength and courage to bear the loss,” the President condoled.

President Kenyatta eulogised Mzee Aman as a champion for education who ensured that all his children acquired quality education.

The President said Mzee Aman will be fondly remembered as an outstanding and gifted person whose legacy will live on for many generations to come.

Last of the giants: What killed off Madagascar’s megafauna a thousand years ago?

A modern mouse lemur Microcebus sits upon the cranium of an extinct Megaladapis lemur. Dao Van Hoang www.daovanhoang.com Nick Scroxton, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Laurie Godfrey, University of Massachusetts Amherst, and Stephen Burns, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Giant 10-foot-tall elephant birds, with eggs eight times larger than an ostrich’s. Sloth lemurs bigger than a panda, weighing in at 350 pounds. A puma-like predator called the giant fosa.

They sound like characters in a child’s fantasy book, but along with dozens of other species, they once really roamed the landscape of Madagascar. Then, after millions of years of evolution in the middle of the Indian Ocean, the populations crashed in just a couple of centuries.

Scientists know that over the past 40,000 years, most of Earth’s megafauna – that is, animals human-size or larger – have gone extinct. Woolly mammoths, sabre tooth tigers and countless others no longer roam the planet.

What’s remarkable about the megafaunal crash in Madagascar is that it occurred not tens of thousands of years ago but just over 1,000 years ago, between A.D. 700 and 1000. And while some small populations survived a while longer, the damage was done in a relatively short amount of time. Why?

Over the last three years, new investigations into climate and land use patterns, human genetic diversity on the island and the dating of hundreds of fossils have fundamentally changed scientists’ understanding of the human and natural history of Madagascar. As two paleoclimatologists and a paleontologist, we brought together this research with new evidence of megafaunal butchery. In doing so we’ve created a new theory of how, why and when these Malagasy megafauna went extinct.

Climate at the time of the crash

The first job is to understand exactly when the megafauna died out.

Radiocarbon dating of over 400 recent fossils demonstrates that animals under 22 pounds lived on Madagascar throughout the last 10,000 years. For animals over 22 pounds, there are abundant fossils up to 1,000 years ago, but relatively few since. The biggest decline in number of large animals occurred rapidly between A.D. 700 and 1000 – practically instantaneous given the long history of their existence on the island.

Malagasy graduate student and team member Peterson Faina with stalagmites in a cave in Madagascar. Laurie Godfrey, CC BY-ND

What was the climate doing at that time? One popular theory for the megafaunal extinction has blamed island-wide drying. To test this idea, our team has been exploring the caves of Madagascar, collecting and analyzing stalagmites. As stalagmites grow upwards from the cave floor, layer by layer, differences in the chemistry of each layer document changes in the climate outside the cave.

By analyzing chemical composition and comparing ratios of various isotopes in these stalagmites, we created new high-resolution records of changes in the Malagasy ecosystems and climate. We found minor fluctuations in the strength of the summer rains throughout the last 2,000 years, but no significant drying over that period. In fact, A.D. 780-960 was one of the wettest periods of the last 2,000 years. Chemical analyses of fossils back up this claim.

So it looks like there was no significant drying around the time the megafauna disappeared.

Many of the forests that originally existed on Madagascar are now replaced by more open, human-modified landscapes, like this palm savanna at Anjohibe. Laurie Godfrey, CC BY-ND

Instead, the stalagmite records indicated a rapid and dramatic change in the landscape. Changing ratios of the isotopes carbon-12 to carbon-13 reveal a switch from forests to grassland right around A.D. 900, the same time as the megafaunal population crash. Clearly something big happened around this time.

Cut marks and evidence of butchery

With no significant change in the climate, some point to the arrival of humans on the island as a possible cause of the megafauna population crash. It seems logical that once people arrived on Madagascar, they might have hunted the big animals into extinction. New data suggest that this timing doesn’t add up, though.

One of two chop marks on the head of a femur of an extinct lemur, Pachylemur. This individual’s hind limb was removed from the trunk at the hip joint, probably with a machete. Lindsay Meador, CC BY-ND

According to new dates on fossil bones with cut marks on them, humans arrived on Madagascar 10,500 years ago, much earlier than previously believed. But whoever these early people were, there’s no genetic evidence of them left on the island. New analysis of the human genetic diversity in modern Madagascar suggests the current population derives primarily from two waves of migration: first from Indonesia 3,000 to 2,000 years ago, and later from mainland Africa 1,500 years ago.

So it seems that people lived alongside the megafauna for thousands of years. How did the humans interact with the large animals?

Our new study found dozens of fossils with butchery marks. Cut and chop marks provide compelling evidence as to which species people were hunting and eating. Evidence of butchery of animals that are now extinct continues right up to the time of the megafaunal crash. Some people on Madagascar hunted and ate the megafauna for millennia without a population crash.

Evidence for a change in land use

If there was no obvious climate shift and humans lived alongside and sustainably hunted the megafauna for up to 9,000 years, what could have triggered the population crash?

The abrupt land use change might hold some clues. The transition from a forest-dominated ecosystem to a grassland-dominated ecosystem appears to be widespread. Scientists have identified this switch not only in the chemical signature of stalagmites but also in pollen grains buried in layers of mud at the bottom of lakes. Ancient lake sediments reveal two other changes occurred at the same time as the shift to grass species: an increase in charcoal from fires and an increase in the fungus Sporormiella, which is associated with the dung of large herbivores such as cows.

Evidence for simultaneous increases in grassland, fires, and cows and other domesticated animals points to a sudden change in Malagasy lifestyle: the introduction of cattle husbandry and slash-and-burn agriculture known locally as Tavy. Here, forests are cut down to make space for rice paddies, and grassland burned to promote the growth of nutritious seedlings for cow fodder.

This move away from foraging and hunting toward farming meant the land could support more people. The result was a rapid rise in the size of the human population – and that’s what we conclude spelled disaster for the megafauna.

Some Malagasy farmers plow agricultural fields in the traditional way. Damian Ryszawy/Shutterstock.com

Here lies the contradiction of the situation: Hunting megafauna for survival became less important as people could rely on their agriculture and livestock. But cut marks on fossil bones indicate that hunting didn’t altogether stop just because people had other food sources. It turns out that the impact on the megafauna of larger human populations hunting just to supplement their diet was greater than the impact of smaller human populations relying more heavily on the native animals as a vital food source.

Bringing together new data on land use changes, climatic histories, genetics, fossil ages and butchery of the megafauna, we call this change “the subsistence shift hypothesis.” Both the habitat loss and increase in human population arose out of a fundamental change in the way humans lived on Madagascar, from a more nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle to an agrarian society. We argue that it was this reorganization on Madagascar around A.D. 700-1000 that led to the crash in the megafaunal population.

Small populations of megafauna lived on in isolated pockets for another few centuries, but their fate was likely already sealed. The majority of the giant birds and animals that were once common across our planet have gone extinct. Many of the remaining giants, such as elephants and rhinos, are threatened or endangered. Will they go the same way as the Malagasy megafauna, casualties of humans’ changing lifestyles?The Conversation

Nick Scroxton, Postdoctoral Research Scholar in Paleoclimatology, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Laurie Godfrey, Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, and Stephen Burns, Professor of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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