Kenyans protect wetlands to curb water scarcity
Armed with a hoe and Wellington boots, George Wandera planted bamboo seedlings in neatly dug holes along the banks of a stream on his farm that feeds a nearby lake in western Kenya. “I’ve never tried this on my farm before but it’s the first step in protecting the stream,” he said. “Before the last downpour a few days ago, the water source had completely dried up.” Large swathes of Kenya - including parts of Busia county where Wandera lives - are experiencing severe water shortages, which have damaged crops and left 2.6 million people in need of aid.
The country’s wetlands too have suffered in the drought, putting at risk communities who depend on them for fishing or irrigation, and who rely on them to act as a buffer from floods and drought. “Wetlands such as lakes and floodplains act as natural safeguards against disasters, by absorbing excess rainfall during floods, with the stored water then available in times of drought,” said Julie Mulonga, program manager at Wetlands International Kenya, a conservation charity in Busia.
During the current drought, farmers and herders have been drawing water from the wetlands, and streams feeding them have run dry. Unpredictable rainfall is not the only reason Kenya’s wetlands are under threat. Local communities have also been draining them to grow crops, Mulonga said. Wandera remembers when large parts of the Sio-Siteko wetland, near the border with Uganda, were drained to make way for farmland. “We never thought our activities were harmful until we saw the consequences - that is, more floods during the rainy season and less water during the dry season, leading to a decline in vegetation and animal species,” he said.