NEW LOOK FOR KIBOKO PRIMARY SCHOOL PUPILS

The 25th November 2011 shall remain a memorable day for Kiboko Primary School pupils of Soysambu Conservancy since it was a day of a great blessing , though it was a closing day for the Christmas holiday as usual , it was one of  it’s  own kind because what happened has never happened since the school started at around 1952.
The pupils were Donated new school uniforms and shoes by Adam dyer from the United States to celebrate the present giving day in a home away from home  in the presence of the Soysambu Conservancy Chief Executive Officer( CEO ) , School PTA (Parents Teachers Association),  and in return the children promised to keep within and around their compound clean: free from litter.

Kiboko Primary school is  a public school within the Conservancy and has a population of Seventy Five pupils.

Kiboko is a Swahili word for the Hippopotamus.

Shared By: Beaty Limo

Community Education and Awareness Dept.

The New uniforms:Dresses, Shirts and Shorts.

The New uniforms:Dresses, Shirts and Shorts.

New Shoes

Adam Dyer arranging the Shoes as per sizes before Donating.

Uniform Allocation

Uniform Allocation

Pupils in their new uniforms

Pupils in their new uniforms

The Pupils Celebrates for the new look.

The Pupils Celebrates for the new look with Adam through an African Dance.

Kiboko Primary Pupils Promising to keep their Environment Clean

Kiboko Primary Pupils Promising to keep their Environment Clean


Pollinators season

Pollination is a keystone process in both human-managed and natural terrestrial ecosystems. It is critical for food production and human livelihoods, and directly links wild ecosystems with agricultural production systems. The vast majority of flowering plant species only produce seeds if animal pollinators move pollen from the anthers to the stigmas of their flowers. Without this service, many interconnected species and processes functioning within an ecosystem would collapse. With well over 200,000 flowering plant species dependent on pollination from over 100,000 other species, pollination is critical to the overall maintenance of biodiversity in many senses. Animal pollinators allow many kinds of flowering plants to coexist in an ecosystem, rather than restricting it to the lower-diversity stands of wind-pollinated plants that dominated before the flowering plants evolved. Pollination services thus shape plant communities and determine fruit and seed availability, providing tremendously important food and habitat resources for other animals.

wasp

Wasp

Bee

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SOYSAMBU FOOTBALL CLUB WINS AGAINST LIVERPOOL.

The newly formed Soysambu FC beat Liverpool of Kongasis Community 2-1 to lift The Wanderi Cup.

The Soysambu FC team.

The Soysambu FC team.

The Soysambu FC players.

The Soysambu FC players.

Fans cheering the team.

Fans cheering the team.

Fans celebrating the win.

Fans celebrating the win.

SOYSAMBU CONSERVANCY MAMMAL CENSUS

BY DUNCAN ODUOR

The management would like to welcome all who would like to volunteer for the dry season mammal count this Saturday, 12th November 2011.Th e briefing will be done on Friday afternoon and the exercise will take place on Saturday starting at 6:30 a.m.

The terrain is mostly is mostly open grassland .Vegetation are broadly divided into 3 main classes; wooded grassland, wooded forest and open grasslands. The grassland covers the largest areas of Congreve,Jolai,Lakeside and South Melia, The Melia North, Some parts of Soysambu and Western part of Congreve has wooded grasslands and lastly the Lake Elementeita area and hills around Jolai has wooded forest.The conservancy is divided in 9 major blocks with open grasslands taking larger blocks. More on this exercise will be provided during briefing this Friday afternoon

SPECIES.

By Duncan Odour

Species consists of individual organisms which are very similar in appearance, anatomy, physiology and genetics having relatively recent common ancestors. Many species survive in specialized habitats. When these habitats are destroyed or fragmented the threat of extinction looms.

Cape Buffalo Herd Soysambu Conservancy

Herd of Cape Buffalo in Soysambu Conservancy

Keystone species is defined as one that has a critical role in determining and maintaining the overall relationship of plants and animals within an ecosystem. If a keystone species is removed or declines, the nature of the ecosystem will change dramatically. Keystone species of plants or animals appear to exhibit a particularly large influence on the ecosystem they inhabit. Keystone Species are essential to ecosystems and biodiversity.


zbras

Zebras are keystone species in Soysambu conservancy.

Elephants as a keystone species.

As keystone species, elephants stop the progression of grassland to forest or thicket by weeding out the trees and shrubs.   Elephants browse on these woody plants, yanking young trees out by their roots or stunting their growth by eating the growth points on their branches or kill it slowly by prying away its bark. Without elephants the grasslands overgrow with woody plants and convert to forests or to shrub-lands. This conversion begins when woody plants, particularly various species of acacias e.g (Acacia nilotica, xanthophloea) sprout among the grasses. Left unchecked, these sprouts can grow and reproduce, eventually forming a closed stand of trees or shrubs. Once in place, the stand’s interlocking branches and leaves shade out the grasses. Without enough sunlight to survive, the grasses dwindle, the grassland disappears. When grasses disappear, so do grazing antelopes and without antelopes, the packs and clans of carnivores also disappear. The newly growing forest supports a new web of life that is more impoverished and less productive feeding fewer species than the grassland.

An elephant grazing does not harm the grasses as grasses are adapted to live in harmony with their grazers sacrificing a few leaves in exchange for keeping their roots and growth points intact.
Grasses ensure this compromise by forming leaves that connect to their roots through weak and narrow bases which snap when a grazer eats the leaves leaving the roots safely below the ground. When a keystone species disappears from its habitat, that habitat changes dramatically. The keystone’s disappearance triggers the loss of other resident species, and the intricate connections among the remaining residents begin to unravel.
As resident species vanish, other species move in or become more abundant. The altered mix of species changes the habitat’s appearance and character.The “new” habitat looks different from the original one, housing a new mix of plants and animals. Often, the new habitat supports fewer species and works less efficiently than the original one as nutrients and energy turn over more slowly and less efficiently, biological diversity dwindles and the landscape begins to change.