|
Elephants Without Borders |
|
Featured Projects
|
|
Friday, 11 April 2008 19:22 |
 Elephant collaring
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.
Elephants Without Borders (EWB) works across Africa, addressing these
complex issues through education and research studies. Using
state-of-the-art technology, we monitor the movements, status and
behavior of elephants. Better understanding elephant ecology and
sharing this information with local communities, allows us to work
towards securing key habitats and migratory corridors. Helping to solve
the challenges elephants and people face also benefits other wildlife
species and supports communities who adopt sustainable conservation
enterprises. EWB also provides advisory services and undertakes
consultancies for governments, private sector, local communties,
researchers, journalists and filmakers.
At EWB, we believe elephants are one of Africa’s most valuable wildlife
species. Elephants are the flagships, directing and providing us with
an opportunity to reconsider the boundaries between conservation and
rural development.
Our vision, to open borders for Africa’s wildlife through education and
research will help enable future generations to share their lives with
these great giants.
http://www.elephantswithoutborders.org
|