| A toolkit produced by the FAO is designed to help resolve, prevent and mitigate the growing problem of conflict between humans and wild animals. With the world’s population growing at some 75... Full Story |
| At least 27 hippos have died of suspected anthrax in Queen Elizabeth National Park, the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) boss revealed yesterday.
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OverviewUCF has a comprehensive plan for the recovery of the Dura sector: 400km² of land north of Lake George, which builds on the success of the Waterways project. Dura - a Ramsar site and Biosphere Reserve - links QECA to Kibale Forest National Park. Wildlife has literally been wiped out over the past 40 years. There is no tourism in the area and Dura currently receives less than 1% of QECA’s patrol resources from UWA. Elephants from Kibale and QECA are both in need of the additional resources and habitat provided by Dura. In this area, once famous for elephant, the numbers have declined dramatically; evidence of illegal human activities and poaching is high. This area is extremely important as it sits between Kibale Forest National Park to the north and QEPA, to the south, locations where an abundance of elephant and other wildlife exist, Large populations of chimpanzees, leopards, hippopotamus and crocodiles also once thrived but heavy poaching, particularly during the unsettled years 1960-1986, has taken its toll.
Protection of KFNP and QEPA has steadily increased over the last decade in all areas of the National Parks, with the exception of the Dura sector and this must be corrected. Planned recovery is now strategically critical to the recovery of the region as a whole. The problemDura Sector currently has:
SolutionTwo aspects are critical to recovering Dura. Firstly, eliminating illegal activity and ensuring elephant and other wildlife have safe access into and out of the area. The area can then be recovered, and UCF is leading this by developing access and infrastructure in the area; community conservation, education and tourism then follows.
UCF’s work with UWA will provide a much needed foundation for wildlife recovery and will include:
Anticipated benefits
How can this be achieved? In 2010 UWA will have two ranger posts built by UCF across Dura to allow up to 14 rangers to be permanently accommodated in the region. Provision is also made to support and equip mobile ranger units, with tents, GPS and bicycles. On Lake George, the Waterways project has already helped with the building of the Kashaka and Kamulikwezi Marine Ranger stations, and the provision of speed boats and ranger training. Marine rangers can stop poachers smuggling meat out of Dura - anywhere along the shoreline - by boat. Better access will allow the rangers and UCF team to remove snares and carry out basic research to monitor wildlife dispersal through the area. These actions will provide the much-needed conditions for the recovery of the Dura region to its former wildlife-rich habitat. The Uganda Conservation Foundation does not underestimate the difficulty of this ambitious project. Support for this project has been generously provided by David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation, International Elephant Foundation, SeaWorld & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund, Tusk Trust and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.If you would like to help with a donation towards this project please click here. |