CONSERVATION IN TANZANIA, CONSERVATION IN THE ULUGURU MOUNTAINS, TANZANIA, EAST AFRICA.

Conservation in Tanzania, Africa - The Biodiversity and importance of the Uluguru Mountains in the Eastern Arc.

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ULUGURU MOUNTAINS OVERVIEW

The Uluguru Mountains in eastern Tanzania are one of the most important mountains in Africa for the conservation of biological diversity. They are also the source of the water supply for the largest city in Tanzania, Dar es Salaam, which has between 3 and 4 million people. In addition to these global and national values they are also home to over 100,000 people in the Luguru tribe who prefer to live on the mountains because of the favourable climate which allows them to grow crops through much of the year, including fruits and temperate vegetables which they can export to the townspeople of the lowlands.

Conservation of the Uluguru Mountains first started during the German colonial period, when several forest reserves were established for the protection of the water supply and to slow erosion from the steep mountain slopes. These efforts complemented those of the chiefs of the Luguru people, who protected forest areas for their ancestors to live in.

In the early 1950s the British colonial government tried to force 'improved' agriculture onto the Luguru people through a large authoritarian project. The Luguru people rejected the project and set fire to the mountains in protest. These actions sparked some of the first elements of revolt which culminated in the Independence of Tanzania from Britain in 1964.

Between the 1960s and until the early 1990s the Ulugurus was a sensitive area, with military importance and used for locating training bases as a part of Tanzanian support to the African National Congress of South Africa. At the end of the Apartheid regime in South Africa the South African ANC members returned home and the bases were closed. The Ulugurus were then opened up for external project support. A two year project supported by the European Union started conservation work on the Ulugurus, and this has been followed by three years of support by the Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA).

The current project started as a collaboration between the Danish Ornithological Society and the Wildlife Conservation Society of Tanzania, both partners in BirdLife International. The collaboration applied to DANIDA for funds in 1998 and these were granted from early 1999. In Tanzania the project operates in partnership with the Regional and District Natural Resources Offices of the Tanzania Government, the Catchment Forest Project of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, and the Uluguru Mountains Agriculture Development Project which is based at the University of Sokoine. Together these partners are trying to understand the biological and water catchment values of the Uluguru forests, protect the Forest Reserves which contain most of the remaining forests, and work with local populations to improve their livelihood without further impacting on the forest resources.

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Background Geographical Placement Biological Importance Species DOF Project Activities Other Conservation Values of the Ulugurus Some Findings of the First Year in the Uluguru Status of Uluguru Forests Status of Uluguru Biodiversity Eco-Tourism Tree Planting Agricultural Improvement Education Publications Emerging Issues Downloadable Papers & Articles Contact Details