Monkey Sighting Stirs Climate Fears in Kenya
KENYA: November 1, 2007
NAIROBI - The discovery in Kenya of a new population of monkeys far from
their normal habitat is a sign of how climate change may already be changing
Africa's ecology, a leading conservationist said on Wednesday.
The white-bearded De Brazza's monkeys were found in the Great Rift Valley, a
place they had never been spotted before, Richard Leakey, a prominent white
Kenyan credited with ending the slaughter of the nation's elephants, told
Reuters in Nairobi.
"That is telling us a lot about the climate change scenarios we are looking
at now," he said. "It puts climate change as the most critical consideration
as we plan for the future."
The monkeys had moved into an area of forest which had dried out as Kenya's
climate had become more arid.
Africa is expected to be hit hardest by global warming blamed on carbon
dioxide emissions from industry, transport and modern lifestyles in rich
countries.
It is also the continent least ready to cope with the droughts, floods and
extreme weather predicted by scientists.
Leakey, whose palaeontologist father, Louis, caused a radical rethink of
human evolution with key fossil finds in east Africa, said African
governments lacked funds to do their own climate change studies, and so had
to rely on researchers who he said were typically more focused on temperate
regions.
But he said he had witnessed dramatic ecological changes in northern Kenya
himself, including a 50-foot (15 metre) fall in the level of Lake Turkana
over the last four decades. African leaders were not taking the climate
threat seriously, he added.
Governments must be urged to save indigenous forests, plant trees, utilise
rainwater and ban charcoal burning, he said.
"Why do we think that we are somehow not going to have to deal with this
issue?" he asked.
Story by Duncan Miriri
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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