Featured Projects
Elephants Without Borders
| Elephants Without Borders |
![]() The African elephant is an ambassador for conservation. The largest mammal that walks the earth is now leading the way to help save vast areas of wild lands and the biodiversity they support. The great paradox about elephant conservation is that while many African countries have experienced rapidly decreasing elephant populations, others have to cope with rising elephant numbers. Both declining and growing elephant numbers present certain problems and concerns.
Botswana has the largest elephant population remaining on the African
continent. The recovery of this country’s elephant population is one of
the greatest conservation achievements of the last half-century.
Ironically, this accomplishment has led to growing concern about how to
manage this large population. Some people are worried that elephants
have recovered in greater numbers than the environment can sustain,
turning fragile forests into open grasslands and intensifying
human-elephant conflict. |
- Limbe Wildlife Centre in SW Cameroon takes care of infant primates that are lucky enough to be rescued from the illegal pet trade. In November 2007, ACF, ERuDeF and Daniel Taylor organised an art workshop with 13 Cameroonian artists in the centre in order to raise awareness and funding for great apes conservation.


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