Conservation in Uganda

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WCS began conservation work in Uganda through conducting biological surveys of savanna parks in 1957 . Since then WCS has continued to provide funds for conservation almost every year up to the present despite the era of Idi Amin and the civil wars that followed.

During the 1970s and 80s, they supported conservation of Kibale Forest, which became a national park in 1993 . WCS has supported the building of research and management capacities of Ugandans through aiding student research projects, helping to develop the Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation (ITFC), and more recently providing training to the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) and National Forest Authority (NWA) staff.

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[edit] Inhibitions

The major threats to protected areas include poaching for bushmeat, illegal timber harvesting, charcoal burning and encroachment for farmland. Each of these has degraded protected areas over the past 40 years and led to reduced numbers of wildlife. Better protection in the 1990s has led to a slow but steady increase in many large mammal numbers, but some continue to decline.

[edit] WCS Activities

WCS is currently supporting projects that build the capacity of Ugandan protected area managers. Working with the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) they have developed a monitoring and research plan for every national park and wildlife reserve in Uganda. Wardens assess the effectiveness of their actions and how they can adapt to changes as they appear.

A census of the mountain gorilla populations over the last two years have shown increases in the numbers both in Bwindi (320) and the Virungas (380), bringing the total world population to just 700. Zoning of the forests is necessary so that fewer valuable areas can be accessed by local people for firewood, medicinal plants and other non-timber forest products. WCS also supports the Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation (ITFC) to undertake applied research on mountain gorilla conservation challenges, the effects of hard edges on long-term viability of forest islands, and the effectiveness of conservation strategies involving local people.

[edit] National parks

[edit] External links and sources