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  • Los Angeles Zoo helps YoG fundraise

    The Los Angeles Zoo has created an online donations mechanism to help the YoG fundraise for select gorilla conservation projects. To see the details, go to http://www.lazoo.org/conservation/yog/.

    The Greater Los Angeles Zoo Association’s involvement in the YoG is part of the Los Angeles Zoo’s continuing efforts to educate the public about threatened species like gorillas through the Zoo’s Gorilla Campo Reserve where visitors can learn about these intelligent and powerful primates.

    Your contribution to this specific fund will support wild gorilla conservation in Africa. The YoG conservation projects funded through this international campaign encompass all gorilla species and subspecies and will include:

    – Promoting local African communities’ awareness, education, and participation in gorilla conservation,
    – Providing fuel-efficient stoves to local African communities to reduce firewood and charcoal harvesting in gorilla habitat,
    – Supporting conservation-relevant gorilla research,
    – Offering sanctuary for gorillas confiscated in the fight against illegal trafficking,
    – Rebuilding and strengthening protection and surveillance in key protected areas inhabited by gorillas, and
    – Increasing wildlife law enforcement in African countries where gorillas live.

    If you have specific questions about the Los Angeles Zoo’s participation in the YoG, please contact Laurel Colton: +1 323/256-8406 or lmcolton@hotmail.com.

  • New WAZA magazine focuses on gorilla conservation

    The new WAZA Magazine (11/2009) features a variety of essays on topics important for the conservation of gorillas, from ape trade to ecotourism and poverty alleviation, and more.

    It can be ordered (just send an envelope with appropriate postage) from

    WAZA Executive Office, Lindenrain 3, CH3012 Bern, Switzerland

    For enquiries phone: +41 31 300 2030

  • Ian Redmond: Gorilla Ambassador’s Visit to Rwanda

    Ian Redmond, Ambassador for the UN Year of the Gorilla, participated in the International Conference on Gorilla Conservation in Rwanda which preceded the annual Kwita Izina gorilla naming Ceremony. As well as being YoG Ambassador in 2009, he is also Chief Consultant for GRASP, the UNEP/UNESCO Great Ape Survival Partnership, aiming to conserve gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans – all of them endangered species.

    During his visit, The New Times’ Fred Oluoch-Ojiwah caught up with Ian Ambassador during the 5th Kwita Izina celebrations. This is a shortened version of the interview.

    FOO: Ambassador Ian Redmond, kindly share with readers the key focus areas of your ambassadorial duties.

    IR: It is 33 years this year since I first came to Rwanda to work with Nyiramatchabelli – the late Dr Dian Fossey – and I have spent much of my time since then talking about gorillas, writing about gorillas, studying and filming gorillas. Thus, my ambassadorial position has simply given more impetus to the work I already do, but on a higher level. The YoG is an international campaign in support of the new CMS Gorilla Agreement, a legally binding treaty agreed on by the 10 gorilla range states (most people don’t realise that out of nearly 200 countries in the world, only 10 have gorillas, and all of them are in Africa). It is fantastic how many people and organisations have joined in to make YoG2009 a success. All over the world governments, conservation organisations and zoos are organising conferences, fund-raising events, public lectures, gorilla film shows, etc.

    FOO: Do your efforts entail fundraising? If so, the global financial crisis has hit what could easily be your targeted sources. So what is your plan B if any?

    IR: Of course people all over the world are feeling the pinch financially, and this affects donations to charities, but many small donations can add up to significant amounts. The various partners are welcome to use the YoG to raise funds for gorilla projects, there is a list of priority projects for any donations to YoG itself – see www.YoG2009.org for details. As for Plan B – that should in fact be Plan A – there is a growing recognition that everyone on the planet benefits from the eco-system services provided by tropical forests – carbon storage, oxygen production, climate stability global rainfall and biodiversity – and yet none of us pay for them. More and more decision-makers agree this must change, and the UN Climate Conference to be held in Copenhagen this December will be where we hope the first steps will be taken by including tropical forests in the post-Kyoto climate agreement, which is currently being negotiated. If carbon finance is used to better manage and monitor tropical forests, it will not only reduce greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation and degradation, it should conserve endangered species such as gorillas so they continue to play their vital role in the ecology of their habitat.

    FOO: How do you intend to ensure a sustainable conservation for Gorillas is as far as creating a balance between tourism and conservation is concerned in Rwanda?

    IR: Rwanda seems to be striking that balance very well, with professional guides and calm, habituated gorillas giving an outstanding experience to every visitor who tracks what Dian Fossey used to call ‘the greatest of the great apes’. Our hope is that Rwanda, Uganda and Eastern DRC will be able to share their experiences with the other seven countries – perhaps by sending staff on secondment to work in, say, Gabon or Cameroon or Congo Brazzaville, or by inviting people trying to develop gorilla tourism in those countries to work here for a few weeks and see how you do it. Circumstances are different in each country, so methods will likely need to be adapted to fit, but the exchange of skills and experiences would be very valuable.

    FOO: Talk about the projects centred around giving back to the communities living close to gorillas in Rwanda.

    IR: The practice of revenue sharing is one of the keys to widespread acceptance by surrounding communities of the need for protecting the Virunga Volcanoes Conservation Area. We should remember, though, that it is not just about tourism dollars! Forests provide many services to everyone just by being there; water is a good example: The Volcanoes National Park is only about half of one per cent of Rwanda’s area, and yet it receives about 10 per cent of the country’s rainfall, and the forest stores that rain and releases it slowly during the dry season. Gorillas disperse the seeds of trees such as Pygeum Africana and so by protecting gorillas you also guarantee the next generation of trees and other plants that rely on them to spread their seeds.

    FOO: How would you rate gorilla tracking as a regional tourism attraction?

    IR: Over the years I have introduced hundreds of tourists to gorillas; some of them are wealthy people who have sailed up the Amazon, visited Antarctica and watched wildlife all over the world, and yet almost without exception they come down the mountain tired, wet, scratched and muddy saying that meeting gorillas is the best experience of their lives! At the same time, many of them say they were drawn to this region by the gorillas, but they fall in love with the people too – the friendly welcome and fabulous culture is just as important to visitors.

    FOO: You are just back from Akagera, I presume to see what Rwandan Tourism has to offer. What is your take about our destination?

    IR: It was wonderful to see the Akagera Lodge refurbished, and the views there are world-class. I was saddened a few years ago when Akagera was reduced in size, but from what I have heard of the government’s environmental policies today, the importance of rebuilding eco-systems outside of protected areas is well understood. Our challenge in the 21st Century is to help communities develop and improve their standard of living in a way that is compatible with a healthy planet, and that means adapting our farming methods to become more sustainable, and planting more trees (especially indigenous species, which also support bird and insect life). Tourists who fly increasingly want to offset the resulting carbon emissions; Rwanda is trying to reforest its denuded hillsides – why not put these two facts together and offer every visitor the chance to offset the greenhouse gas emissions from their travel by contributing to a community tree-planting project?

  • Do we have the energy to save the Gorillas?

    An omnipresent yet invisible threat to gorillas and their habitats, as well as to countless other species, is the ever-growing human demand for energy and its consequences.

    Charcoal production is a major threat to gorilla forests in many areas, not least the Mountain Gorilla habitat in Virunga National Park, Democratic Republic of Congo. To reduce this threat, solar cookers, tree-planting on farms and the spread of fuel-efficient stoves are needed. The Year of the Gorilla (YoG) is supporting a project in the Mountain Gorillas’ range which enables local residents to purchase highly fuel-efficient stoves for a low price, thereby enabling them to use less firewood, which is often taken from the very same forests that are home to the gorillas.

    This threat manifests itself also through fossil fuel extraction. Oil exploration in Petit Loango wetland, Gabon, put Western Lowland Gorillas in peril, but prospecting luckily did not yield results to justify further action. The search for nuclear fuel can have similar effects.

    Robert Hepworth, Executive Secretary of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of wild animals (UNEP/CMS), said: “Stopping the current overexploitation of natural resources is a key element of any strategy leading to a sustainable way of living. The forests and woodlands of Africa must play a central role in efforts to avoid dangerous climate change. There is a strong scientific case for carbon finance to make significant contributions to gorilla conservation, as gorilla range states would benefit financially from protecting their forests.”

    A further worrying development is the fact that many gorilla range states are signing land deals with foreign companies for agriculture, including bio-fuels. On top of destroying the habitat of numerous species, forest degradation also means palm oil, an edible oil found in one in ten supermarket products and also increasingly being seen as a profitable bio-fuel, has a higher carbon footprint than the fossil fuels it is supposed to replace.

    Beyond the immediate impact of these industries, the influx of relatively well-paid workers who can afford to frequently eat meat causes bushmeat trade to boom and gorillas to decline, as happened with the Coltan boom in Democratic Republic of Congo in 2000/2001.

    Apes and other large mammals are keystone species in their ecosystems, dispersing billions of seeds, which have higher germination and seedling survival rates than seeds that just fall to ground. Ian Redmond OBE, Ambassador for the YoG said, “I am proud to be an Ambassador for the YoG. Fascinating though gorillas are because of their similarities to humans, we also need to focus on their key ecological role. They are second only to elephants in the number of seeds dispersed per unit area, and symbolise the fate of the Congo Basin forests, which the planet needs for climate stability. Save the gorillas and you save the world!”

    Viewed globally, degradation and destruction of habitats not only threaten gorillas, they also worsen climate change overall. Tropical trees in undisturbed forest are absorbing nearly a fifth of the CO2 released by burning fossil fuels. The world’s remaining tropical forests remove 4.8 billion tonnes of CO2 emissions from the atmosphere each year. This includes a previously unknown carbon sink in Africa, mopping up 1.2 billion tonnes of CO2.

    Numerous threats endanger gorillas’ survival. Together with the other great apes, they are most severely threatened by: habitat loss and fragmentation; hunting and the bushmeat trade; diseases and epidemics; mining; and the effects of armed conflicts. This is why the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species (UNEP/CMS), the UNEP/UNESCO Great Apes Survival Partnership (GRASP) and the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA) have joined forces to declare 2009 the Year of the Gorilla.

    Angela Meder of the German gorilla conservation NGO Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe e.V. said: “This year, we celebrate our 25th anniversary. Our organization supports gorilla conservation projects through quick, unbureaucratic help. For example we are currently supporting the reforestation of a montane forest on the edge of Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo.“

    On May 21st, YoG Ambassador Ian Redmond and Dr. Angela Meder of German NGO and GRASP partner Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe e.V. gave a lecture entitled “Gorillas – Survival or Extinction” at the Zoological Museum König, Bonn, Germany.

    Dr. Angela Meder opened with an outlook on Germany’s role in gorilla studies and the current taxonomy, some research findings and how BRD was formed and which projects it supports.

    Ian Redmond then recapitulated the ‘Mountain Gorilla story’ from George Schaller and Dian Fossey (whom he knew personally) to current activities to save them from extinction through international cooperation and the Year of the Gorilla, contrasting the fragile recovery of Mountain Gorillas with the continuing decline of the other sub-species, and highlighting the importance of gorillas for intact forest ecosystems.

    This was followed by Q&A; and discussion with the audience. The book ‘Gorillas – the Gentle Giants’ by EMB Books (part of revenue goes to gorilla conservation) was offered for sale.

    A press conference on May 22nd at Langer Eugen Tower, UN Campus Bonn, again highlighted the need to view energy consumption patterns in light of the effects they have on ecosystems and the species therein.

  • YoG supports Congo Basin Film Project by filmmaker Steve Taylor

    Africa’s Green Heart. A personal journey through Africa’s great Equatorial Rainforests.

    The film clips you can view here are short examples of material filmed in late 2008 near Odzala National Park in the northwest of Congo Brazzaville. The gorillas were filmed at a location called Ebobobo. Steve Taylor is presently editing a documentary film entitled “Africa’s Green Heart – A personal journey Through Africa’s great Equatorial Rainforests”. His work is supported by the YoG, Conservation International and the Ape Alliance.

    The essential message of the film about the Congo Basin and its diverse and rich ecosystem is to encourage Africans themselves to see their region as an essential component in the wellbeing of mankind and global climate stability, creating awareness of the necessity to coexist with our planet’s fragile biodiversity. Africans are the guardians of this region and need to lead in the conservation and the protection of its wealth and ecological functions.

    Steve Taylor, besides recording the area’s unique and endangered wildlife, also met with and listened to the people of this region. Their views and input are of the utmost importance in helping to conserve the vast tracts of equatorial rain forests. Without their support and understanding conservation within this region will not succeed. Steve Taylor began his filming in Sierra Leone as a way of showcasing what happens when nations are subjected to resource conflicts and the long-term aftermath of losing ninety five per cent of the nation’s forests.

    We will inform on the progress of his project. For now, you can view several clips of Eastern Lowland Gorillas and Western Lowland Gorillas.

  • Campaign launched to save last Cross River Gorillas

    Buea, Cameroon – The African Conservation Foundation (ACF) and the Environment and Rural Development Foundation (ERuDeF) have launched a campaign aimed at raising awareness and funds for Cross River Gorilla conservation.

    The campaign assists the international efforts of the YoG Partners to secure a long-term viable future for gorillas in the wild. The elusive Cross River Gorillas are hard to spot deep in the rainforest. An expedition is planned to survey the entire range of the remaining gorilla family groups and identify suitable locations for a rescue and research facility. Currently there are less than 300 Cross River gorillas in the wild.

  • New Book on Gorillas Helps Save the Gentle Giants

    Today’s launch of a new publication on gorillas will support the survival of gorilla populations and mark the Year of the Gorilla 2009. “Gorillas – the Gentle Giants” by Martin Harvey, a wildlife photographer, and Letitia Farris-Toussaint, conservation writer, will support the educational objective of the Year of the Gorilla to raise awareness of these amazing creatures and the threats they face. Ian Redmond OBE, Ambassador of the Year of the Gorilla, has lent his scientific expertise to review the book.

    Evans Mitchell Books, the publisher, will donate part of the profits to YoG projects. The funds will be used to help fund expert-selected, high-priority projects to protect gorillas and their habitats. Robert Hepworth, CMS Executive Secretary said: “This nature book pursues a twofold aim: It allows us to access the mysterious world of these awe-inspiring giants of the forests that so desperately need our help. At the same time, this book will help us to support projects under the UN Year of the Gorilla to save the remaining populations of these great apes.”

  • How to Help Gorillas survive – even from a great distance

    James Brooks is 12 years old and lives in London, Ontario, Canada. He has loved apes all his life and ever since he was old enough to understand the threats they face he has tried to help them.

    When he was 11, he started a project called 1000classrooms in cooperation with the Canadian Ape Alliance. He hopes to get 1 000 Western classrooms to each donate $3 (only cents for each kid) to buy a dozen eggs for children at the Kahuzi-Biega Environmental school in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The eggs are sold by the widows of Park Rangers who were slain or died while protecting the endangered Eastern Lowland Gorillas living in Kahuzi-Biega National Park.

    Through the project, the widows are given an opportunity to earn an income, the children and the teachers are given nutritious food, and the gorillas are made safer because there is less demand to kill them for food or encroach on their habitat. The “Eggs for Kids” program (see www.great-apes.com/projects/eggs/eggsforkids.htm) ensures that each child and teacher at the school is given 1 egg per day.

    Any classroom or group (such as guides or scouts) can get involved in this great program, from preschool to University. When the program reaches its goal, 12 000 eggs will be donated and over 25 000 children will have been made more aware of issues facing children and animals in Africa. James will have helped kids, widows, Africa, and the environment. Most importantly, he will have proven that one can make a large difference even with very small donations.

    Please visit and consider encouraging all students, teachers and gorilla friends you know to get involved.

    James also gave us an explanation of how his projects helps to support the 8 U.N Millenium Goals:
    “1) End poverty and hunger–it gives the families both an income and nutritious food.
    2) Universal Education–it is for a school in Africa and also educates the kids who support it all over the world.
    3) Gender equality–this allows the widows to have an income and be self-sustaining.
    4) Child health–this ensures the kids get nutritious food and a safe environment.
    5) Maternal health–by empowering the women of the village this should help Mothers.
    6) Combat HIV/AIDS–the project does not do this directly but in educating the children in Africa where the epidemic is so horrible I hope it helps.
    7) Environmental Sustainability–the project directly helps gorillas and their habitat. The kids go to an “environmental school” and learn about protecting the environment.
    8) Global Partnership–we are getting kids from various countries all connected with each other to help people, gorillas, and our planet.”

    We are happy to see a young person becoming so proactively involved for gorilla conservation and sustainable development. We encourage many more ‘Eggs for kids’ campaigns.

    James has another website called www.apeaware.org, on which he raises awareness about apes. It is aimed especially at kids and features information and also some fun stuff.

    1000 classrooms was featured on a tv show and in a Canadian Press news story. Here is a link to the story
    http://green.sympatico.msn.ca/canadianpressarticle.aspx?cp-documentid=875158

  • Free Gorilla Edukit

    With this fun and educational WAZA-resource for kids and young adults, you can learn about gorillas, their features and habits as well as basics of gorilla communication and other exciting things.

    It’s full of nice pictures, schematic drawings and easily accessible explanations. It also features several interactive games and activities and is highly suitable for classroom activities or just plain fun. Enjoy!

  • Rebuilding Surveillance and Monitoring in Kahuzi-Biega National Park, DR Congo

    Introduction: The Eastern Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla beringei graueri) has probably suffered the greatest losses, in relation to its total population, of all gorilla species over the last 10-15 years. War and conflict in eastern DR Congo are to blame for this, as militias invade protected areas making long-term, steady conservation work practically impossible, and the civilian population is forced by hardship to turn to poaching and habitat destruction for firewood.

    Project summary: The main goals of this important project are to reinstate regular monitoring and effective surveillance of the remaining Eastern Lowland Gorilla population throughout the Kahuzi-Biega National Park in eastern DR Congo, which has been largely inaccessible to researchers and rangers due to instability and the presence of various armed factions in this region. The last reliable data on population size and distribution were recorded in 1995, and it is suspected that the population has plummeted since. New, precise information will be one outcome of this project, enabling intelligent and effective approaches to the conservation of this rare species.

    Implementing partners: Congolese Institute for the Conservation of Nature (ICCN), supported by its experienced international partners: GTZ (German Development Cooperation), WWF (Worldwide Fund for Nature), WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society) and MGVP (Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project).