SAMBURU, Kenya, Jul 4 — Before dawn breaks across the vast lava plains of northern Kenya, 25-year-old Samburu moran Feraiti Mogan is already deep in the wilderness.
Not long ago, young warriors like him were best known for protecting livestock and, in some cases, participating in dangerous cattle raids across Kenya’s arid north.
Today, Feraiti is on a very different mission.
Instead of tracking stolen animals, he follows zebra footprints. Instead of preparing for conflict, he collects scientific data.
Armed not with a spear but with a smartphone, he spends his days helping protect one of the world’s rarest mammals—the endangered Grevy’s zebra.
His work reflects a remarkable transformation unfolding across northern Kenya. Community-led conservation is not only helping pull the Grevy’s zebra back from the brink of extinction but is also creating jobs, reducing incentives for cattle rustling and redefining the role of a new generation of Samburu warriors.
A species fighting for survival
Few animals are as closely associated with Kenya’s northern rangelands as the Grevy’s zebra.
Recognisable by its narrow black-and-white stripes, large rounded ears and white underbelly, it is the world’s largest zebra species—and one of its most endangered.
More than 15,000 Grevy’s zebras roamed the Horn of Africa in the late 1970s. Decades of habitat degradation, prolonged drought, competition with livestock, poaching and expanding human settlement reduced their numbers by nearly 80 per cent.
Today, only about 3,000 remain worldwide, with nearly 95 per cent found in Kenya.
Unlike elephants, rhinos and lions that are largely protected inside national parks, most Grevy’s zebras live on community-owned rangelands, making local communities central to the species’ survival.
“The only mission we have is to ensure Grevy’s zebra numbers continue growing,” says Joshua Labarakwe, Regional Coordinator for the Grevy’s Zebra Trust in Laisamis.
“But conservation cannot succeed without the community. The zebras share the same pasture and water with livestock, so protecting them means working hand in hand with local people.”
From warriors to wildlife guardians
Recognising that conventional conservation approaches alone would not save the species, the Grevy’s Zebra Trust launched its Warriors Programme nearly two decades ago.
Rather than relying solely on scientists and wildlife rangers, the organisation recruited Samburu morans whose intimate knowledge of the landscape made them uniquely suited to monitor wildlife across vast, remote terrain.
Recruitment begins with community elders.
“We don’t interview the warriors directly,” Labarakwe explains.
“The elders recommend young men they trust. Then we train them, beginning with discipline because we know the responsibilities they will carry.”
Today, the programme operates across five monitoring zones in Laisamis.
Every day, teams walk across rocky valleys, lava fields and thorn-covered plains where vehicles struggle to reach and aerial wildlife surveys are prohibitively expensive.
Their responsibilities include locating Grevy’s zebras, recording sightings, monitoring births and deaths, inspecting water sources, identifying injuries and disease, assessing habitat conditions and engaging local pastoralists.
Technology meets traditional knowledge
Each patrol begins with a smartphone.
Before leaving home, Feraiti activates a specially designed application that records his GPS location throughout the day’s patrol.
Using simple picture icons, he logs Grevy’s zebra sightings, livestock numbers, wildlife tracks, grazing conditions, water points and signs of habitat degradation.
The application was deliberately designed around visual symbols rather than written commands, making it accessible regardless of literacy level.
Every observation feeds into one of Kenya’s most important wildlife monitoring databases, helping scientists track population trends across northern Kenya.
“Our work begins very early,” says fellow warrior scout Lmangesian Leaderi.
“The first thing I do is make sure yesterday’s data has been saved. Then I begin walking. Sometimes community members tell me where they’ve seen Grevy’s zebras. Other days I find them myself.”
Patrols rarely look the same.
“Sometimes we record ten zebras, sometimes twenty, and sometimes none,” he says.
“But every day’s information becomes part of the bigger picture.”
Conservation creating opportunity
For many of the young men involved, conservation has become something far greater than wildlife protection.
It has become a source of stable employment and hope.
Leaderi, now 27, once spent his days herding camels.
Like many young morans, he faced limited economic opportunities, while cattle rustling remained an option for some despite its deadly consequences.
“This job changed our lives,” he says.
“Before, people associated morans with cattle rustling. Many young men lost their lives. Today we have employment. We have income. We are helping the community instead of fighting.”
The programme has quietly evolved into a peace-building initiative.
By providing reliable employment and a renewed sense of purpose, it has helped reduce incentives for livestock raids that have fuelled conflict across pastoral communities for generations.
“We are bringing peace,” Leaderi says simply.
Ancient knowledge meets modern conservation
Long before modern conservation programmes existed, the Samburu and Rendille communities recognised the Grevy’s zebra as an important guide across the harsh northern landscape.
Unlike many other wild animals, it was never traditionally hunted for food.
Instead, pastoralists relied on the zebra’s movements to locate fresh grazing land and water.
“The Grevy’s zebra showed our people where to find water and fresh pasture,” Feraiti explains through a translator.
“They usually came to drink late at night after livestock had left. By following them, our people knew where to take their own animals.”
Today, that traditional ecological knowledge complements GPS technology, satellite mapping and scientific monitoring, creating a conservation model built on both indigenous experience and modern science.
Climate change brings new challenges
While poaching remains a concern, conservationists say climate change now poses the greatest long-term threat.
Northern Kenya has experienced increasingly severe droughts in recent years.
Leaderi vividly recalls the devastating drought of 2023.
“Everything suffered,” he says.
“The foals became so weak they could barely walk.”
To help wildlife survive, the Grevy’s Zebra Trust transported hay to critical wildlife corridors, supported supplementary feeding programmes and helped maintain water sources.
For another warrior scout, Keno Galhaile, conservation has opened opportunities he never imagined.
Once responsible only for herding family livestock, he now earns a regular income, supports his family, travels beyond his village and visits schools to educate children about wildlife conservation.
“I never expected this,” he says.
“I earn my own income and have learned so much.”
As warriors transition out of the traditional moran stage of life, many become Grassland Champions, helping communities restore degraded rangelands that sustain both wildlife and livestock.
The programme demonstrates that conservation and economic development can strengthen one another rather than compete.
A marathon funding conservation
An unlikely partnership has helped sustain the initiative.
Since 2017, the Lewa Safari Marathon, organised by Lewa Wildlife Conservancy and conservation charity Tusk, has channelled nearly Sh14 million into the Warriors Programme.
The funding has supported smartphones, patrol equipment, field logistics, training and community outreach while providing the long-term stability many conservation initiatives struggle to secure.
The investment is producing measurable results.
According to the Grevy’s Zebra Trust, one of the clearest indicators of recovery—the proportion of foals and juveniles within the population—has increased from about 18 per cent to more than 30 per cent, signalling a healthier and growing population.
Recent surveys recorded 289 Grevy’s zebras in Laisamis, while the broader Westgate landscape now supports around 500 animals.
“The trend is encouraging,” says John Lekishe, Samburu Regional Coordinator and Head of Scouts.
“When we see many foals in the herds, we know the population is growing.”
As the afternoon sun settles over northern Kenya’s rugged plains, Feraiti completes another patrol.
His smartphone now contains another day’s worth of information that will help scientists understand where Grevy’s zebras travelled, how they used the landscape and how they are adapting to an increasingly unpredictable climate.
Tomorrow, before sunrise, he will begin again.
Across northern Kenya, the young warriors once known primarily for defending cattle have become guardians of one of Africa’s rarest mammals.
In protecting the Grevy’s zebra, they are also restoring fragile rangelands, strengthening community livelihoods, fostering peace and demonstrating that the most enduring conservation success begins with the people who call the landscape home.