Kenyan Cattle Herders Are
Using The American Pesticide Furadan To Kill The Predators
CBS-
We all grew up learning that the lion is the king of the jungle. And now that
we're not little any more, we know just how vulnerable they are. In fact, when
exposed to man's devices, lions are extremely fragile.
The latest weapon being used against them is poison. African herders whose
livestock and livelihood are threatened by lions are killing them in the most
effective and economical way they can.
And overwhelmingly, that is by using a cheap American chemical called Furadan.
It is marketed as a pesticide, to be used for protecting crops. But it's bought
by many to kill animals. And that's one reason why, conservationists say,
Africa's lions are in trouble.
60 Minutes and correspondent Bob Simon took a journey
through the bush in Kenya to find out what's going on. We learned that 20 years
ago, there were some 200,000 lions in Africa. Today, there are 30,000 and the
numbers are going down all the time.
The purpose of the
trip was to document the poisoning of lions by local farmers, who have been
using a pesticide to kill off potential predators of their cattle. (Photo: Drew Magratten/CBS)
Lions are being poisoned at a staggering rate in Kenya, and there's little
chance cubs outside the wildlife reserves there will make it to adulthood.
Dr. Laurence Frank, of the University of California Berkeley, told Simon he
believes that poison, combined with other threats, will make the lion in Africa
extinct.
Frank has been following lions for the last 30 years, looking for ways to keep
them alive. While 60 Minutes was there, Alayne Cotterill, his
colleague, needed to put a new collar on a lioness named Mara. She darted her
and put her to sleep.
Cotterill and Frank had less than an hour to do their work before Mara would
wake up. A sleeping lion is a deceptively gentle creature. Her coat, which looks
exquisitely smooth, is actually quite rough to the touch.
Seeing Mara's claws retracting into soft, padded paws, you understand why she is
such an efficient killer. But actually, she may be more afraid of us than we are
of her.
"They're very unlikely to attack us," Cotterill explained.
"There's been so many years of conflict with people in this area, it's
almost hardwired into their systems to be terrified of people."
And with good reason: over the millennia, people have speared, shot and trapped
lions. Today, the primary culprit appears to be poison.
"We know of 30-plus poisonings just in this area in the last five or six
years. We have data on another 35 or 40 poisonings in our other study area,
elsewhere in Kenya. But that's gotta be just the tiny tip of the iceberg,"
Dr. Frank told Simon.
Mara is part of a pride which lives on Claus Mortensen's ranch. Five years ago
he found out just how devastating poison can be when he discovered that another
of his prides had gone missing.
"After a few days, vultures were seen circling on our northern boundary
there. And we went out and we found first one lion, then another, and then
another," Mortensen remembered.
Seven lions in all had perished. The lions had been vomiting and there were no
bullet wounds.
Mortensen said he was sure the lions had been poisoned and suspects that Furadan
was responsible. It's one of the most toxic pesticides sold in Kenya, widely
available and hard to detect because it dissipates quickly in poisoned animals.
Lab tests, he says, ruled out any other poison.
So why would anyone want to poison these glorious creatures? The first thing you
need to know is that 70 percent of the country's wildlife is found outside the
protected game reserves, on Kenya's vast plains, where wild animals and cattle
mingle. Lions are there too, and that's where the trouble begins. The lions
attack and eat the cattle.
The area is inhabited by the Maasai people, who always had a way of dealing with
that. The young men went out hunting lions with spears; it was a rite of
passage. Antony Kasanga was one of them.
Asked what it means for a young Maasai man to kill a lion, Kasanga told Simon,
"It makes you famous. You get the whole community to know you, because you
killed a lion ... .If you had one girlfriend, you get 20 more."
It's more than just having 20 girlfriends: killing lions protects cattle, the
very foundation of the Maasai's existence.
When a cow is killed by a lion, Kasanga said it's a disaster.
And Kasanga's job now is to avert that disaster and save the lion at the same
time. He is a leading member of the Lion Guardians, a group of reformed Maasai
warriors who keep track of collared lions and warn herders when the lions get
too close to their cattle.
Last year, they were too late in reaching an old herder whose cow had been
killed. The herder laced the carcass with poison, knowing the lions would return
to finish their meal.
That night, Sengale and Birdie, two collared lions the Guardians knew well,
feasted on it. If the carcass was poisoned with Furadan, they wouldn't have
suspected it because Furadan has no taste and no smell. It didn't take long
before the lions were found dead; Birdie was pregnant with five cubs.
Cows are a cash crop in Kenya. They put food on the table, and they send kids to
school. Mengistu Sekeret and his friends all lost cows to lions. That turned
them into lion killers.
Asked how one kills a lion, Sekeret told Simon, "In very silent way."
"What is the silent way?" Simon asked.
"Actually, we use the poison," Sekeret said, explaining that it is
very effective.
One poisoned lion captured on camera could barely walk. Its nervous system was
shutting down, so it was put down by vets from the Kenyan Wildlife Service who
conducted an autopsy.
The official government chemist's analysis found Furadan in the lion's stomach.
A subsequent report by the agency that regulates pesticides in Kenya did not
mention that finding and claimed that Furadan was not connected.
When 60 Minutes asked Mengistu Sekeret and his friends about
Furadan, they didn't recognize the name, but knew exactly what it looked like.
He told Simon they call it "the blue stuff" and that that is actually
the common name.
Simon showed them a bottle of Furadan to make sure we were talking about the
same thing.
"Oh wow, it's the one," one of the men replied, after seeing the
purplish-blue chemical.
Sekeret and his friends wouldn't have any trouble finding Furadan: it can be
bought in towns and villages all over Kenya in stores called
"Agro-Vets," which sell agricultural products, including pesticides.
But when Simon tried buying Furadan with 60 Minutes cameras
rolling, the shopkeepers told him they didn't have it in stock, so we decided to
go undercover with a hidden camera.
When Simon walked into a shop - filmed with the hidden camera - he had no
problem buying a bottle of Furadan for 120 shillings, or about $2.
There was actually plenty of Furadan on the shelves and we were surprised that
the storekeeper didn't ask what we wanted it for. Asked if many people buy
Furadan, the shopkeeper told Simon, "So many people buy Furadan."
But when asked what they use it for, the shopkeeper simply laughed.
It seemed clear from stores 60 Minutes visited that shopkeepers
knew Furadan was not only used on crops. In fact, some stores which stocked
Furadan were in areas where there wasn't a crop for miles.
In its granular form, Furadan is banned in Europe and the United Kingdom; it is
severely restricted in the United States. Just a tiny amount from a $2 bottle
like this one is enough to kill an entire pride of lions.
Furadan, even when used as directed, is estimated to have wiped out millions of
birds in the United States. That's one of the reasons why the Environmental
Protection Agency restricted its use and wants to ban it entirely.
But in Africa, Furadan is perfectly legal when used as a pesticide. However,
when the granules are sprinkled on carcasses, any animal that feeds on them will
die. And not just lions - hyenas, leopards, jackals, vultures and other birds
die in droves.
"It's inexcusable to use Furadan for killing animals. It wasn't designed
for the purpose. It's grossly irresponsible to use it in that way," said
Dr. Richard Leakey, the doyen of conservationists in Africa, who has spent years
fighting for the conservation of Kenya's wildlife.
"But you can understand why cattle farmers do use it," Simon remarked.
"I can understand why people rob banks. I mean, there are a lot of things I
can understand," Leakey replied. "It's irresponsible to put on the
market something that is so utterly dangerous to wildlife in a country where
wildlife is so critical for our economic future."
Wildlife is in fact crucial for Kenya's economic future. Hundreds of thousands
of tourists bring hundreds of millions of dollars to the country. But most
Kenyans see very little of that, so there is little incentive to value the
wildlife.
"The amount of tourism that's here is not sufficient to offset the cost of
these people living with wildlife," said Tom Hill, an American
philanthropist who wanted to make wildlife worth something to the people.
Hill and Richard Bonham, a Kenyan
naturalist, recognized that time was running out.
"It just became very clear unless we stepped in and made some sort of
intervention, we were gonna lose the lion," Bonham said.
So they began meeting Maasai to ask what it would take to stop killing lions.
"The answer as they gave it to us is: if you would pay us back for our lost
livestock once it's been killed by predators and we can replace it, then we
would quit killing them," Hill said.
"That's what we're doing," Hill said. "They don't hate lions.
They hate the economics of lions."
So Hill and Bonham set up a fund to compensate the Maasai for their livestock
losses. Teams of monitors crisscross the countryside to inspect dead cattle and
reimburse the owners if they don't poison the lions.
The program has achieved some success, but covers only a small area. Throughout
the rest of Kenya the poisoning goes on.
Asked how one stops farmers from doing it, Leakey told Simon, "You stop
farmers by using unregulated chemicals by not having the chemical on the market.
You ban the product."
But the Kenyan government hasn't banned the product. The company that makes it,
FMC, declined 60 Minutes' request for an interview but said in a
written statement that Furadan is important to the sustainability of agriculture
in Kenya. They said that the labels clearly illustrate its proper use and that
they condemn the illegal use of their products to kill predatory wildlife.
But does it have to be a choice between cubs and corporations? There are other
ways to protect cattle without using lethal chemicals. But for lion cubs to grow
up to be the splendid creatures they can be, Furadan cannot be part of their
future.
The maker of Furadan, FMC, told 60 Minutes that in response to
reports of poisonings last year they suspended all exports to Kenya. Last month,
we went back check if it was still on sale. Even without new shipments, we found
that in some of the shops it was still on the shelves. FMC continues to export
it to neighboring countries where lions are also disappearing. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/03/26/60minutes/main4894945.shtml