Richard Turere, 13, doesn't like lions. In fact, he hates them. Yet this bright Maasai boy has devised an innovative solution that's helping the survival of these magnificent beasts -- by keeping them away from humans.
Living on the edge of
Nairobi National Park, in Kenya, Turere first became responsible for
herding and safeguarding his family's cattle when he was just nine. But
often, his valuable livestock would be raided by the lions roaming the
park's sweet savannah grasses, leaving him to count the losses.
"I grew up hating lions
very much," says Turere, who is from Kitengela, just south of the
capital Nairobi. "They used to come at night and feed on our cattle when
we were sleeping."
So, at the age of 11,
Turere decided it was time to find a way of protecting his family's
cows, goats and sheep from falling prey to hungry lions.
I had to look after my dad's cows and make sure that they were safe.
Richard Turere
Richard Turere
His light bulb moment came with one small observation.
"One day, when I was walking around," he says, "I discovered that the lions were scared of the moving light."
Turere realized that
lions were afraid of venturing near the farm's stockade when someone was
walking around with a flashlight. He put his young mind to work and a
few weeks later he'd come up with an innovative, simple and low-cost
system to scare the predators away.
He fitted a series of
flashing LED bulbs onto poles around the livestock enclosure, facing
outward. The lights were wired to a box with switches and to an old car
battery powered by a solar panel. They were designed to flicker on and
off intermittently, thus tricking the lions into believing that someone
was moving around carrying a flashlight.
And it worked. Since
Turere rigged up his "Lion Lights," his family has not lost any
livestock to the wild beasts, to the great delight of his father and
astonishment of his neighbors.
What's even more
impressive is that Turere devised and installed the whole system by
himself, without ever receiving any training in electronics or
engineering.
The 13-year-old's remarkable ingenuity has been recognized with an invitation to the TED 2013 conference,
being held this week in California, where he'll share the stage with
some of the world's greatest thinkers, innovators and scientists.
"I did it myself, no one
taught me, I just came up with it," says Turere. "I had to look after
my dad's cows and make sure that they were safe."
Human-wildlife conflict
Nairobi is the world's
only capital with a national park, where wild lions, rhinos and other
beasts roam free against the urban backdrop of skyscrapers rising from
the nearby bustling city center.
Each year, thousands of
camera-toting tourists visit the park -- which is fenced along its
northern boundary but open in the south -- hoping to catch a glimpse of
the lions inhabiting its rolling plains and valleys.
But for the pastoralists
and Maasai tribes around the park, a lion sighting is usually bad news;
valuable livestock are often lost to lions looking for easy prey,
prompting rural communities to take matters into their own hands.
If you give him a problem, he'll keep working at it until he can fix it.
Paula Kahumbu, conservationist
Paula Kahumbu, conservationist
In some cases they've
killed whole prides that they perceived as threat, or as retaliation for
lost livestock. The use of pesticides such as Furadan -- a tablespoon
of which costs less than a dollar and is enough to kill a lion -- has
become a particularly ruthless way of doing so.
The rising
human-wildlife conflict, coupled with a fast-growing urban encroachment,
means that Kenya is now home to less than 2,000 lions, a massive drop
compared to the 15,000 that lived there just a decade ago.
Large sums have been
spent in recent years by officials in a bid to protect the lions and
strengthen Kenya's tourism industry. Yet conservationists say that many
of these top-down initiatives fail to gain traction with local
populations. And this is why inventions like Turere's -- home grown,
simple, affordable and effective -- can make a big difference.
Indeed, several
neighbors of the Turere family in Kitengela have sought Turere's help,
asking him to install the system in their enclosures. In total, around
75 "Lion Light" systems have so far been rigged up around Kenya.
"This is a solution that was invented by somebody in the community," explains Paula Kahumbu,
executive director of the Kenya Land Conservation Trust and chairman of
the Friends of Nairobi National Park. "Therefore the support for it is
very high."
Bright ideas, bright future
Kahumbu and her
colleagues first came across Turere's innovation some two years ago in
the course of their fieldwork. Stunned by the boy's achievements, they
helped him get a scholarship at Brookhouse International School, one of
Kenya's top educational institutions, where he started last April.
"Richard is quite an
extraordinary boy," says Kahumbu. She describes him as a "very smart,
curious and surprisingly confident [boy] for his age and background,"
who's integrated smoothly among his new classmates, most of whom are
from wealthy families.
"One thing that's unique
about Richard is that if you give him a problem, he'll keep working at
it until he can fix it," she adds. "He doesn't give up; he doesn't find
things too difficult; he's not afraid of being unable to do something
and I think this is why he is such a good innovator -- because he's not
worried that it might not work, he's going to try and do it anyway."
Turere says his dream is to work in aviation when he grows up.
"Three years ago when I
was in the savannah herding my father's cattle I used to see the planes
flying over and landing at the airport and I was like, one day I'll be a
pilot and an aircraft engineer," he says.
For this remarkable boy, it's clear that the sky is the limit.
By Teo Kermeliotis, for CNN
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