Abstract

Fire was a key element of grass savanna formation all over eastern Africa. In the northern Baringo plains, Pokot pastoralists prospered in the nineteenth century, coexisting with huge herds of wildlife. During the twentieth century, the savanna ecosystem changed from a grass-dominated to bush-dominated as a result of growing numbers of livestock and people, which brought not only elephant hunts but also intensive grazing and changing fire regimes. Subsequently, herders diversified their livelihoods, and these land-use changes in the East Pokot highlands led to the spread of the endemic plant Dodonaea viscosa (Sapindaceae) beyond its original habitat. Ingolds’ concept of taskscape is applied here to illustrate a temporal, consecutive perspective of landscape transitions against the background of disappearing landscape agents (in this case large herbivores and fire).

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