Philip Shaw

Status and Conservation of the Karamoja Apalis in the Western Steppe, Tanzania

Karamoja Apalis

No Karamoja Apalis were found in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (shown here), despite the presence of suitable habitat.

Karamoja Apalis has been recorded in the Serengeti ecosystem, in acacia scrub similar to that found in the Wembere Steppe.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Wembere SteppeTanzania, United Republic ofAfrica, Birds, Farming14 Apr 2010

In 2003, a survey of the globally threatened warbler Karamoja Apalis in the Wembere Steppe, central Tanzania, confirmed that the species is largely dependent on one particular acacia species - Whistling Thorn – and showed that the warbler’s specialised habitat is less extensive in the steppe than had once been thought1. Habitat destruction, through browsing by domestic livestock and through pruning, was found to be widespread. The survey also provided an estimate of the warbler's population density, and the first recordings of its voice, which suggest that it may not be an apalis after all.

Since the early 1990s there have been increasing reports of Karamoja Apalis in the Serengeti ecosystem, where its acacia habitat has expanded, perhaps as a result of changes in grazing pressure from herbivores (A.R.E. Sinclair, pers. comm.). Most apalis records have come from the north and west of Serengeti National Park, were there are extensive patches of Whistling Thorn: the warbler's main habitat. In August 2004 I located a single Karamoja Apalis north of the Masai Mara, providing a first record for Kenya. At least two pairs have since been found at this site (B. Finch, pers. comm.).

In August-September 2005, with further support from the Rufford Maurice Laing Foundation, I began a survey of parts of the Serengeti ecosystem, to try to clarify the warbler's distribution, and to determine its habitat requirements within the National Park. The survey encompassed an area near to Seronera (the National Park HQ), an extensive area of Whistling Thorn at Togora Plains, to the north, and the Western Corridor.

The height and density of Whistling Thorn stands in these areas was measured in a series of walked transects. The warbler's presence was detected mainly by playing recordings of its song. In the Wembere Steppe, territorial pairs had normally been highly responsive to ‘playback’, but in the Serengeti they proved to be much less-so, perhaps reflecting seasonal differences. During September, Joseph Mackubi (of the Wildlife Conservation Society of Tanzania) and I extended the survey into Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA), which borders Serengeti National Park. Curiously, despite an intensive search in apparently suitable habitat, no Karamoja Apalis were detected in the NCA. A subsequent visit to an area near Moru Kopjes, in Serengeti NP, produced several birds, however, within an extensive area of Whistling Thorn.

During July 2006 I plan to return to the Serengeti, to survey the south-western area of the National Park, and will then write a report describing the species’ distribution and habitat requirements within the area. Copies of the report will be provided to Tanzania National Parks and the Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute.

1 Shaw, P. & Mungaya, E. (2006). The status and habitat of Karamoja Apalis Apalis karamojae in the Wembere Steppe, Sukumaland, Tanzania. Bird Conservation International (in press).

2 Shaw, P., Mungaya, E., Mbilinyi, N. & Mbilinyi, M. (2005). The voice and bill length of Karamoja Apalis Apalis karamojae are atypical of the genus. Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club 125(2): 122-129.

Read about Philips first grant http://www.ruffordsmallgrants.org/rsg/Projects/PhilipShaw

Project Update: March 2010

I have recently produced a paper in the African Journal of Ecology describing changes in the status of the threatened warbler Karamoja apalis in the Serengeti, based on surveys funded by the Rufford Small Grants Foundation in 2005 and 2006. Essentially, the story it tells is that:

• An increase in wildebeest numbers in the Serengeti during the 1960s-70s led to an increase in grazing pressure and a reduction in the destructive impact of seasonal grass fires, enabling whistling thorn (on which the apalis depends) to regenerate more effectively.

• This enabled the apalis to colonise the Serengeti during the early 1990s, and to spread north into southern Kenya by 2004.

• Unfortunately, the story doesn’t end there. Whistling thorn appears to have a natural cycle of about 30 years, and has declined in the Serengeti over the past 10 years. Since around 2005, Karamoja apalis sightings have also decreased, suggesting that its population has declined substantially.

• However, provided that the Serengeti’s herbivore population remains high – as seems likely - both the whistling thorn and the warbler are likely to recover, given time.

It is unusual to be able to identify the sequence of events triggering the expansion of a threatened species in Africa. This has been possible as a result of the support received from the Rufford Small Grants Foundation, combined with the long-term ecological monitoring carried out by numerous researchers in the Serengeti over the years.

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2009 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Afr. J. Ecol.pdf393.73 KB

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