海角大神

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In Pictures: Making a living on the world鈥檚 largest desert lake

Making a living has become increasingly difficult around Kenya鈥檚 Lake Turkana. Adapting and sharing, these pastoralists hold on.聽

By Kang-Chun Cheng , Contributor
TURKANA COUNTY, KENYA

Colin Pili is up early. At dawn, he pushes his boat onto the misty surface of Lake Turkana to try his hand out on the water. He learned to fish from his father, he says, and moved to these shores 30 years ago after his cattle died from poor pasture conditions.聽

These arid parts of Kenya are unforgiving. Five rainy seasons have failed since 2020. And yet, several ethnicities of traditional pastoralists still build their livelihoods here around the world鈥檚 largest desert lake. Many, like Mr. Pili, have had to adapt.

Livestock are the traditional backbone of pastoral culture 鈥 those without animals are called ngikebotok, meaning 鈥渢hose who have nothing.鈥 But that share of the population is growing.聽

Fish are now the main source of protein. And weekly markets where vendors hawk everything from cellphone chargers to acacia pods for goat fodder are fueling a population rise along the Turkwel River, which flows into the lake.

Pastoralists have the capacity to adapt to alternate livelihoods, and boom and bust cycles have long dictated the pace of life. But encroaching human development also challenges these communities: A dam built in neighboring Ethiopia on Lake Turkana鈥檚 main tributary altered the seasonal pulses that signal breeding and migration season to the fish.聽

Mr. Pili does not expect all his children to follow in his footsteps. Some of them go to school, he says. A few may attend university, turning away from the unpredictability of a fisher鈥檚 life.

In Nangitony, a remote outcrop on the lake鈥檚 western shore, Paulina Asurut guts Nile perch on a sandbar. She鈥檚 an orphan and a single mother, she says, and has no one to give her livestock.聽

But in a small village like hers, resources are shared. She鈥檒l be supported by her neighbors 鈥 yet another reflection of the way of life endemic to this unique arid ecosystem, one born of survival.

The reporting for this story was supported by a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.聽