Abstract:
Climate change poses critical threats to plant biodiversity and pastoral livelihoods in
sub-Saharan Africa, yet knowledge gaps persist regarding gender-differentiated
impacts of climate-biodiversity interactions on women's livelihood vulnerability. This
study assessed climate change impacts on plant species diversity and implications for
Maasai women's livelihoods in Narok County, Kenya. A mixed-methods convergent
design was employed, integrating quantitative climate data analysis (1990-2020),
systematic botanical surveys, structured questionnaires (n=100 Maasai women), and
qualitative assessments through focus group discussions (n=24 groups) and key
informant interviews (n=15 traditional experts). Climate data from Kenya
Meteorological Department and NASA POWER database were analyzed using Mann-
Kendall trend tests and Sen's slope estimators. Ethnobotanical surveys utilized
systematic transect-quadrat sampling across eight locations. Vulnerability assessment
employed Hahn's Livelihood Vulnerability Index framework. Results revealed
statistically significant warming of 0.35°C per decade (Mann-Kendall τ=0.312, p<0.01)
with extreme temperature events reaching 2.35°C above baseline. Precipitation showed
high inter-annual variability (coefficient of variation=31.2%) with significant seasonal
shifts including September increases (τ=0.338, p=0.009) and February decreases
approaching significance (τ=-0.251, p=0.054). Botanical surveys documented 89 plant
species across 33 families, with medicinal uses dominating (36% of species), followed
by construction materials (13%) and fodder (11%). Diversity indices indicated
moderate levels (Shannon-Weiner H'=1.335; Simpson's D=0.421). Critical
conservation concerns emerged with 31 species (35%) occurring in single locations and
25 species at critically low densities, indicating high extinction risk. The Climate
Vulnerability Index (4.4) demonstrated moderate vulnerability, with strong adaptive
capacity (10.4) buffering high plant-based sensitivity (3.8) and moderate climate
exposure (2.2). Climate awareness was exceptionally high (91% of respondents), with
strong correspondence between women's perceptions and meteorological data
validating traditional ecological knowledge systems. The study conclusively
demonstrates that climate change significantly impacts plant biodiversity with direct
implications for Maasai women's livelihoods. Despite strong traditional knowledge and
social capital through cooperatives, communities face climate risks and biodiversity
loss that threaten healthcare access, food security, and cultural practices. Key
recommendations include establishing community conservancies with women as
primary managers, implementing climate-smart plant management integrating
traditional and scientific knowledge, strengthening women's cooperatives for economic
resilience, developing integrated climate information systems, and creating
intergenerational knowledge transfer programs. These findings advance understanding
of the climate-biodiversity-gender nexus and inform evidence-based policy
interventions for pastoral communities navigating climate uncertainty.