Skip to main content

Colorado State University

News & Media Relations

navigation menu
  • CSU News
  • News Releases
  • Our Team
  • Find An Expert
  • For CSU Faculty/Staff
  • Media Mentions
  • Subscribe

New study shows steep declines in populations of giraffes and other animals at Kenya’s Masai Mara reserve

Outlet:

29 Apr, 2009

Robin Reid, a co-author of the study and the director of Colorado State University’s Center for Collaborative Conservation, explained that grazing wildlife often gravitate to pastoral settlements for food during the wet season. Grass near such settlements is both nutritious and short, since it’s used as grazing land for pastoralists’ herds.

link

Colleges:

  • Agricultural Sciences
  • Business
  • Walter Scott, Jr. College of Engineering
  • Health and Human Sciences
  • Liberal Arts
  • Warner College of Natural Resources
  • Natural Sciences
  • Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

Schools & Programs:

  • Graduate School
  • International Programs
  • Online Degrees and Courses
  • School of Advanced Materials Discovery
  • School of Music, Theatre and Dance
  • School of Biomedical Engineering
  • School of Education
  • School of Global Environmental Sustainability
  • School of Social Work
  • School of Public Health
Support CSU
  • Apply to CSU
  • Contact CSU
  • Disclaimer
  • Equal Opportunity
  • Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility Statement

© 2025 Colorado State University

Colorado State University