BACKGROUND
INFORMATION
Amboseli lies immediately North West of Mt. Kilimanjaro, on the
border with Tanzania. Amboseli was established as a reserve in
1968 and gazetted as a National Park in 1974. The Park covers
392 km2, and forms part of the much larger 3,000 Km2 Amboseli
ecosystem. Large concentrations of wildlife occur here in the
dry season, making Amboseli a popular tourist destination. It
is surrounded by 6 communally owned group ranches. The National
Park embodies 5 main wildlife habitats (open plains, acacia woodland,
rocky thorn bush country, swamps and marshland) and covers part
of a pleistocene lake basin, now dry. Within this basin is a temporary
lake, Lake Amboseli, that floods during years of heavy rainfall.
Amboseli is famous for its big game and its great scenic beauty
- the landscape is dominated by MT Kilimanjaro.
Location:
On the border with Tanzania, Kajiado District, South Kenya; Covers
392km2
Climate:
The climate is mainly hot and dry. Amboseli is in the rain shadow
of Mt. Kilimanjaro. The maximum average temperature of the warmest
month is 33°C during the day, while that of the coldest is
27-28°C. An annual rainfall of 300mm per annum is distributed
in two seasons: April/May and November/December. Recurrent droughts
and potential evaporation of 2200mm per annum typifies the region
(KWS, 1991)
.
HOW TO GET THERE
Roads:
The main road into the Park is from Nairobi are via Namanga (240
km) on the Nairobi - Arusha Road, via Meshanani Gate. The road
is tarmac upto Namanga but is badly corrugated and potholed in
places from Namanga to Meshanani Gate (75km). The other road and
via Emali (228 km) on the Nairobi - Mombasa Road. The road is
tarmac up to Emali and murram from Emali to Remito Gate (64 km)
Access from Mombasa is mainly through Tsavo West via Kimana (Olkelunyiet)
Gate.
Airstrips:
The park has a single airstrip for light aircraft at Empusel gate.
Other airstrips exist at Kilimanjaro Buffalo lodge and Namanga
town.
Park Roads:
Viewing roads network covers the park adequately. Many of the
park viewing roads are not usable during the rains and because
of the loose ashy nature of volcanic soil, the roads become very
dusty during the dry season.
Park Gates
The park has five gates, Kelunyiet, lremito, Ilmeshanan; Kitirua
and Airstrip.
MAJOR ATTRACTIONS
Mt. Kilimanjaro
Mt. Meru
Observation Hill which allows an overall view of the whole park
especially the swamps and elephants,
Contemporary Maasai culture and indigenous lifestyle
FACILITIES
Lodges:
Oltukai Lodge; Amboseli Serena Lodge; Kimana Lodge; Tortilis Tented
Lodge.
Campsites:
Nairushari Special; Olgulului Public Campsite; Abercrombie &
Kent Tented Camp; Ker & Downy Tented Camp; Chyulu Tented Camp;
Kimbla Campsite; Cottar's Tented Camp; Leopard Tented Camp; Tortilis
Tented Camp.
ACTIVITIES
Wildlife viewing
WILDLIFE
Reptiles
Python, Turtles, Tortoise, Black Mamba, Cobra.
Insects/arthropods
Scorpions, Butterflies, Dragon flies, May flies, Grasshopper.
Major Animals
Aardwolf; Ant Bear; Baboon, Yellow; Bat, Angola Free-tailed; Bat,
Banana; Bat, Epauletted Fruit; Bat, False Vampire; Bat, Hollow-faced;
Bat, Lander's Horseshoe; Bat, Lesser Leaf-nosed; Bat, Rousette
Fruit; Bat, White-bellied Free-tailed; Bat, Yellow-bellied; Bat,
Yellow-winged; Buffalo, African; BushBaby; Bushbuck; Caracal;
Cat, African Wild; Cheetah; Civet, African; Dik-dik, Kirk's; Dog,
Hunting; Dormouse, African; Duiker, Red; Eland; Elephant, African;
Fox, Bat-eared; Gazelle, Grant's; Gazelle, Thomson's; Genet, Large-spotted;
Genet, Small-spotted; Gerenuk; Giraffe, Masai; Gnu, White-bearded;
Hare, African; Hare, Spring; Hartebeest, Coke's; Hedgehog, East
African; Hippopotamus; Hyaena, Spotted; Hyaena, Striped; Hyrax,
Rock; Hyrax, Tree; Impala; Jackal, Black-backed; Jackal, Golden;
Jackal, Side-striped; Klipspringer; Kudu, Lesser; Leopard; Lion;
Mongoose, Banded; Mongoose, Dwarf; Mongoose, Large Grey; Mongoose,
Marsh; Mongoose, Slender; Mongoose, White-tailed; Monkey, Black-faced
Vervet; Monkey, Sykes; Oryx, Fringe-eared; Porcupine, Crested;
Ratel; Reedbuck, Bohor; Rhinoceros, Black; Serval; Shrew, Giant
White-toothed; Shrew, Short-snouted ; Shrew, Spectacled Elephant;
Squirrel, Bush; Squirrel, Striped Ground; Squirrel, Unstriped
Ground; Steinbok; Warthog; Waterbuck, Common; Zebra, Common.
Major Birds
Apalis, Black-breasted; Apalis, Red-faced; Avocet; Babbler, Black-lored;
Babbler, Northern Pied; Barbet, Brown-throated; Barbet, D'Arnaud's;
Barbet, Red and Yellow; Barbet, Red-fronted; Barbet, Spotted-flanked;
Bee-eater, Blue-cheeked; Bee-eater, European; Bee-eater, Little;
Bee-eater, Madagascar; Bee-eater, White-throated; Bishop, Yellow;
Bishop, Yellow-crowned; Bittern, Dwarf; Bittern, Little; Bonbon,
Slate-coloured; Bonbon, Tropical; Brownbul, Northern; Brubru,
Northern; Bulbul, Yellow-vented; Bunting, Cinnamon-breasted; Bunting,
Golden-breasted; Bush Shrike, Grey-headed; Bush Shrike; Bustard,
Black-bellied; Bustard, Buff-crested; Bustard, Hartlaub's; Bustard,
Jackson's; Bustard, Kori; Bustard, White-bellied; Buzzard, Augur;
Buzzard, Grasshopper; Buzzard, Honey; Buzzard, Lizard; Buzzard,
Steppe; Camaroptera, Grey-backed; Canary, Brimstone; Canary, Kenya
Grosbeak; Canary, White-bellied; Canary, Yellow-fronted; Chat,
Anteater; Chat, Cliff; Chatterer, Rufous; Cisticola, Pectoral-patch;
Cisticola, Rattling; Cisticola, Winding; Coot, Red-knobbed; Cordonbleu,
Blue-capped; Cordonbleu, Red-cheeked; Coucal, Blue-headed; Coucal,
White-browed; Courser, Heuglin's; Courser, Temminck's; Courser,
Two-banded; Crake, Black; Crane, Crowned; Crombee; Crombee, Red-faced;
Crow, Pied; Cuckoo; Cuckoo, Black; Cuckoo, Black and White; Cuckoo,
Didric; Cuckoo, Emerald; Cuckoo, Great-spotted; Cuckoo, Klaas';
Cuckoo, Levaillant's; Cuckoo, Red-chested; Curlew, Spotted Stone.
COMMON VEGETATION
The national park embodies several types of semi-arid vegetation
and swampland/marshland. In general there is a gradient of vegetation
from the bare lake bed, through grassland to Acacia woodland following
a North -North West to South - South East pattern sandwiching
the permanent swamps.
Water flowing underground from Mt. Kilimanjaro upwells in a series
of lush swamps and marshland which support sedges of Cyprus spp.,
including Cyprus papyrus and that provide dry season water and
forage for wildlife.
These swamps are flanked by tracts of acacia woodland with yellow-barked
acacia, Acacia xanthophloea and Acacia tortilis. Acacia tortilis
also occurs in the southern part of the park along on drainage
lines.
The basin is surrounded by acacia/commiphora bushland while the
level floor of open plains with saline/alkaline soils supports
thickets of Salvadora persica and Suaeda monoica. Grasses include
needlegrass Aristida, fingergrass Digitaria, dropseed Sporobolus
sp., stargrass Cynodon dactylon, and Phragmites mauritianus. Balanites
aegyptiaca is important as a source of edible fruits, while the
pods of Acacia tortilis are eaten by livestock.
There has been a tremendous loss of woody vegetation that has
been attributed to various factors including the rise of water
table, increase in salinity, off road driving by tour vehicles
and destruction of vegetation by elephants.