The Ishaqbini Hirola Conservancy is a community-based conservation area located in the Ijara District in the North Eastern Province of Kenya. The conservancy
covers approximately 72 km2. It is situated along the eastern bank of the Tana River and boarders
the Tana River Primate National Reserve.
Despite its small size, the conservancy is a core refuge and breeding ground for the endemic and critically endangered
Hirola antelope. Together with the Arawale National
Reserve, the conservancy forms a key part of the Hirola habitat.
The Hirola population, endemic to north-eastern Kenya, has been at the centre of the
formation of the conservancy. In 1963, fears for the species’ survival prompted the Kenyan Wildlife Service to attempt a precautionary translocation of about 50 Hirola to the
Tsavo East National Park. Although well-intentioned, the translocation was
strongly opposed by local communities.
The escalating conflict in Somalia in the 1990s and continuous decrease in population numbers of the Hirola, led to a second
translocation by the Kenyan Wildlife Service in 1996. Afresh opposition to the plan resulted in the formation of a number of
community-based conservation groups, one of them successfully filing a case in the Kenyan High Court against any future
translocation. Nevertheless, the translocations had resulted in an isolated and viable ex situ population of perhaps 120 Hirola
antelopes in Tsavo East National Park.
In 2005, with the aim to conserve the Hirola as part of their natural and cultural heritage, four local communities (Kotile,
Korisa, Hara and Abaratilo), supported by Terra Nuova, developed and put forward a proposal
to the government of Kenya to establish the Ishaqbini Hirola Conservancy.
The number of bird species in the conservancy is estimated at 350. 60% of the total number of bird families recorded in Kenya
are present in the conservancy. 13 species are listed on East Africa’s regional red data list, including the Saddle-billed Stork. Other, more common species inhabiting the conservancy are Eastern Violet-backed Sunbird, the White-throated Bee-eater
and the Crested Francolin.
The conservancy is unique in that it has significant numbers of species of the East Africa Coast and the Somali-Masai biomes,
species that qualify an area as an important bird area.
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