KENYA SPECIES CONSERVATION PROGRAMME

Similar documents
Wildlife poaching and trafficking Case of Kenya

Effective community engagement and partnerships - key to combatting illegal killing and wildlife trade in eastern and southern Africa?

Combatting Illegal. Wildlife. Trade

Healthy Planet. legacy circle

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service International Affairs Program

Presentation Eunice Robai. The Endangered Species

COMMUNITY BASED WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AREAS. Creating and Marketing Your Somewhere By Munira Bashir

WILDLIFE CONSERVATION IN MALAWI

THE DEPUTY SECRETARY-GENERAL REMARKS AT GENERAL ASSEMBLY EVENT ON WORLD WILDLIFE DAY AS DELIVERED. New York, 3 March 2017

PROTECTING WILDLIFE FOR A HEALTHY PLANET

Managing rhino, even in the absence of poaching

Biodiversity Conservation at Al Ain Zoo

Summary of Preliminary Results of Transboundary Diagnostic Analysis, 2018

Silencing The Uproar

Endangered Wildlife Trust Position Statement on Legalising the International Trade In Rhino Horn

LEWA WILDLIFE CONSERVANCY KENYA. Project Location. Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, Kenya (latitude ; longitude )

Tags big cats, Drew T. Cronin, Global Wildlife Conservation, Jaguars, lions, SMART, SMART Connect, SMART Partnership,

Animal Welfare in Wildlife Conservation

CHAPTER 8 UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF TRADE IN RHINO HORN ON RHINO RANGE STATES: A KENYAN PERSPECTIVE AUTHOR BENSON OKITA, KENYA WILDLIFE SERVICE

Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs) District Councils (DCs) 27,924 km 2 (3.0% of Tanzania) 148 villages inhabited by 480,000 people. 21 registered WMAs

THE WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT ACT. (No. 47 of 2013)

Large Carnivore Conflict Management in Kenya Implementing National Carnivore Conservation Strategies. Charles Musyoki, PhD. Kenya Wildlife Service

The Zero Poaching approach and it s applicability in Central Africa. Alain Bernard ONONINO WWF

MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT AND TOURISM

Salmon Five Point Approach restoring salmon in England

Total Black rhinos in Africa 2,410. Northern white rhino. Only 31 left.

INDEPENDENT EVALUATION GROUP - IFC APPROACH PAPER

We have the tools to start. saving our oceans... now all we need is. action

Illegal Ivory Trade. Ivory, the material that composes the tusks of elephants, is considered a highly desirable

Commitments by Friends of Target 12

SUSTAINABILITY F.A.Q

Management advisory for the Bay of Bengal hilsa fishery June 2012

Reducing the amount of poaching in Asia

Building a Better World for Animals and People

11/8. Pick Up. Submit. Agenda. Human Impact Homework. Warm Up #8 Conservation Island. Conservation Island Work Sheet

Regional workshop on the implementation of the CITES shark and ray listings, Dakar, August 2014 Page 1

CLOSING TIME SHUTTING DOWN THE GREATER MEKONG S ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE MARKETS REPORT GMPO 2016

Conservation of Polar Bear: Implementation of the Agreement. THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals

University of Leeds Travel Plan

Section 3: The Future of Biodiversity

Sustainable use of wildlife in the context of the GIZ Regional Programme in Central Asia

OCEAN2012 Transforming European Fisheries

Wildlife Trade and CITES: Global Trend and Global Cooperation

Breaking The Brand. Conservation - A New Approach. International Zoo News Vol. 62. No. 3 (2015), pp

Section 2 Strategic Alignment. Contents

Proposal for cooperation between GRASP and the CMS Gorilla Agreement

5 DECEMBER Cycling In London. Andrew Summers, Transport for London Strategy and Policy Manager Active Travel and Health.

CORPORATE PARTNERSHIPS FOR CONSERVATION

TIGER TALES OVERVIEW. English and literacy taster resource for primary schools THREE OF THE NINE TIGER SUBSPECIES ARE ALREADY EXTINCT SPECIES

REQUEST FOR TENDERS. 1. Background

Preserving Biodiversity

CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT STRATEGY FOR THE BLACK RHINO (Diceros bicornis michaeli) IN KENYA

Sustaining Wild Species

STANDARD CHARTERED S GREATEST RACE ON EARTH 2007/08 KICKS OFF IN NAIROBI

USFWS CARPE Meeting. Structure & Programs. Species, Geography, Themes (Funding Priorities) Performance Measures

How conservation NGOs decide what to do & measure whether it works

World Environment Day. June 05, 2016

A Forest Without Elephants: Can We Save One of Earth s Iconic Species?

Professor Rosaleen Duffy Dr Francis Masse

Update on Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force

Ministers uphold their support for snow leopard conservation

DEVELOPING THE GAME GLOBALLY

Mana Pools National Park, Sapi and Chewore Safari Areas World Heritage Site

Marker, L. (2005). Aspects of ecology, biology and conservation strategies of Namibian farmland cheetahs. Animal Keeper's Forum 7/8.

Management advisory for the Bay of Bengal Indian mackerel fishery

2 No PROVINCIAL GAZETTE EXTRAORDINARY, 11 APRIL 2012 IMPORTANT NOTICE The Government Printing Works will not be held responsible for faxed docum

KENYA BIG 5 & CONSERVATION 8 DAYS: KENYA BIG 5 & CONSERVATION NAIROBI, OL PEJETA CONSERVANCY, MARA NABOISHO CONSERVANCY

Wild caught sustainable seafood

A Discussion on Conservation Strategies for Endangered Charismatic Megafauna

USING TECHNOLOGY TO COMBAT WILDLIFE CRIME WORDS & PICTURES BY JAMES MORGAN

As It Is, information you can use to help you learn English is coming your way.

SB194 3/13/2017 EXHIBIT C Senate Committee oncommerce Labor and Energy Date: Total pages: 18 Exhibit begins with: C1 thru C18

Beyond Enforcement: Communities, governance, incentives and sustainable use in combating wildlife crime

JOIN US IN RUNNING WILD WITH THE DAVID SHEPHERD WILDLIFE FOUNDATION! Image Credit: Russell MacLaughlin

Appendix Template for Submission of Scientific Information To Describe Ecologically or Biologically Significant Marine Areas

SPRING WILDLIFE CONSERVATION EXPO

Wednesday 5 February 2014, 1:15-2:45 pm

marine protected areas

Monday, December 3, 12

MODULE 2. Conservation needs of cheetah and wild dogs and related threats to their survival. Notes:

African Conservation Experience

Megafauna. Mega-Moves of. Meet and help monitor some of Rwanda s newest residents: the Critically Endangered eastern black rhino.

Shelly Cotterman Nashville Zoo

Eastern Brook Trout. Roadmap to

Friends Beyond Species- Society for the Advancement of Animal and Environmental Welfare, National Law University Odisha

Chapter 9: Sustaining Biodiversity

Darwin Initiative for the Survival of Species

Blue Economy Forum November, Bangkok

The Selous-Niassa Wildlife Corridor

INFORMATION DOCUMENT

How vulnerable are wild tigers to poaching in the sites critical for their survival?

Wildlife Enforcement in China LEGISLATION, ORGANIZATION, ENFORCEMENT MEASURE, SUCCESS, CHALLENGE, PROBLEM& LESSON LEARNT

UNEP/CMS Convention on Migratory Species (CMS)

WWF s Earth Hour Quiz. wwf.org.uk/earthhour #EarthHourUK

Dallas Safari Club Auction of a Permit to Hunt a Namibian Black Rhino

Complete Streets Policy Framework

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Proposal to the African Elephant Fund

Sustainable fisheries and aquaculture in the Mediterranean Pêcheries et aquaculture soutenables en Méditerranée

Transcription:

KENYA SPECIES CONSERVATION PROGRAMME

About WWF-Kenya WWF is one of the world s largest and most experienced independent conservation organizations, with over 5 million supporters and a global network active in more than 100 countries. WWF s mission is to stop the degradation of the planet s natural environment and to build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, by conserving the world s biological diversity, ensuring that the use of renewable natural resources is sustainable, and promoting the reduction of pollution and wasteful consumption. Martin Harvey / WWF WWF Kenya Locally, we are ensuring a healthy natural environment supporting below and growth in Kenya. Brent Stirton / Getty Images / WWF

WWF Kenya s species conservation programme is the pioneer Programme dating back to 1962 which lead to the establishment of the first rhino sanctuary in the country in 1987. Since then, the programme has contributed to the establishment of species conservation areas, policy formulation, species protection and conservation. The programme works very closely with the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), which is the legally mandated national institution in wildlife conservation and management in the country. Species This well-established partnership has seen WWF s investment in wildlife conservation and management in the country grow across various areas including (but not limited to) technical and human resource capacity building, biological species management, support in policy development and implementation and habitat management. With the escalating global poaching crisis, investments have also been made in new areas including judicial and prosecutorial training on the scope and intricacy of wildlife crime, including scene of crime management. WWF-Kenya has also worked closely with local communities in mitigating against human-wildlife conflict, and in habitat management. The programme focuses on WWF global flagship species: African elephant (Loxodonta Africana), black rhino (Diceros bicornis michaeli) and marine turtles (Chelonia mydas, Eretmochelys imbricate and Lepidochelys olivacea), as well as the WWF global footprint impacted species tuna.

The species conservation programme s areas of focus are further detailed below: African elephant: This runs at the Mau-Mara-Serengeti and Kwale landscapes as well as Lamu landscape (Lamu-Ijara). Elephant conservation work is informed by the WWF Africa Elephant Conservation Action Plan and KWS Elephant Conservation Strategy. Elephant conservation support aims to strengthen the conservation and management of elephants through landuse planning to secure the elephant range, policy review and formulation at county and national government levels, conflict mitigation, illegal killings of elephants, capacity building, research and monitoring, climate change adaptation, and livelihoods and benefits from conservation of natural resources. Black rhino: This will support rhino conservation in all rhino conservation sites in Kenya found in state, county, community and private lands. The black rhino conservation project is designed to deliver WWF s African Rhino Action Plan and the KWS Black Rhino Conservation and Management Strategy. Rhino conservation will deliver through application of up to date technology in curbing poaching and monitoring, policy framework and capacity building. Lion: Our focus will be the Masaai Mara, both the National Game Reserve and Community Conservancies. Tuna: Marine turtle: This will focus on Kiunga Marine National Reserve. This will focus on sustainable fisheries and will address consumption markets.

OPPORTUNITIES IN THE SPECIES PROGRAMME WWF-Kenya s species conservation work will continuing to aim at securing space for species conservation (protected areas, corridors and wildlife dispersal areas) as well as ensuring that species populations are viable and benefit land owners living alongside wildlife. The programme will focus on addressing threats to species populations, which include habitat loss and degradation; overexploitation and trade; human-wildlife conflict; climate change; and weak governance and capacity of relevant institutions. This will ensure achievement of the longterm goal of a secure, free ranging and growing/stable elephant population. In addition to global flagship species, the programme will also focus on conservation of national priority species i.e. lion (Panthera leo), hirola (Beatragus hunteri), sable antelope (Hippotragus niger) and Grevy s zebra (Equus grevyi), which are locally endangered and/or critically endangered.

The programme will focus on addressing threats to species populations, which include habitat loss and degradation; overexploitation and trade; human-wildlife conflict; climate change; and weak governance and capacity of relevant institutions. While the programme s areas of work will be guided by Network Species Action Plans (SAPs) and initiatives, and national government conservation strategies, WWF Kenya will develop a Species Conservation Action Plan, which will domesticate the Network SAPs and initiatives, in line with national conservation strategies. WWF Kenya continues to implement the programme through strategic partnerships with the Kenyan government, private sector and local communities through long-term actions to stabilise/increase species populations in Kenya through: 1. Working in Kenya and in partnership with other WWF offices species conservation programmes, including cross border and landscape conservation initiatives. 2. Creating an enabling environment to build synergies and allies for effective and efficient species conservation delivery. 3. Initiating income-generating species conservation initiatives to benefit communities living alongside wildlife.

OUR VISION A HEALTHY NATURAL ENVIRONMENT SUPPORTING PEOPLE AND GROWTH IN KENYA Why we are here. To stop the degradation of the planet s natural environment and to build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature. www.panda.org/kenya WWF Kenya.: :. 5th Floor, ACS Plaza, Lenana Road, Nairobi, Kenya.P.O. Box 62440-00200, Tel +254 20 387 7355.: :. Kenya.info@wwfkenya.org.: :. wwf.panda.org/kenya BLACK RHINO PROGRAM WWF KENYA