Eco Kids
Eco Kids
Eco Kids
natural environment. The project is supporting environmental clubs in primary schools, involving 4,100 schoolchildren between 6-13 years of age.
Through a travelling education programme, using the power of games, drama, film and school based action projects, EcoKids aims to reach and inspire many Tanzanian children and enhance their understanding of how they are personally linked to the natural environment.
Project Needs
Poverty is seen to be both the cause and consequence of environmental problems in northern Tanzania. The people are facing a variety of environmental problems such as erosion, loss of soil fertility, overgrazing, deforestation, vegetation changes, water pollution, rainfall changes and floods, resulting in low productivity and poverty among the rural communities. We believe that one should begin by educating the younger generations, showing them that the cycle of poverty and environmental degradation can be broken by sustainable management of natural resources.
Activities
EcoKids Unlimited aims to tackle the 'big' environmental issues, but in a fun and engaging way. The concept of this project is to let Tanzanian children play an active role in a grassroots network. The participants in turn will impart the knowledge they have acquired to their fellow youngsters and parents. The school visits are currently covering three environmental themes: Living Forests (deforestation), Living Grasslands (overgrazing) and Living Wildlife (human-wildlife conflicts). Activities include film showings, creative arts, games, outdoor and hands-on educational activities such as identifying wildlife, tree planting and establishment and maintenance of school tree nurseries. Educational materials are produced in the local languages (Swahili and English) and delivered by a team of Tanzanian teachers to primary schools, also the most rural schools, with the help of a mobile video set up and educational resource packs.
Beneficiaries
The direct beneficiaries of the project in Karatu District include 11 headmasters, 46 teachers, 11 environmental teachers and more than 4500 schoolchildren in this area. The children in the target group are between 7-13 years of age.
assisting in the recovery of depleted or threatened wildlife populations contributing to the social, economic and cultural vitality of local/aboriginal communities improving cooperation between wildlife managers, local residents, landowners, hunters and outfitters enhancing use of TEK/ local knowledge in research and management activities allowing local communities to decide the appropriate degree to which wildlife values can be transformed into economic values providing economic benefits that increase local/public attitudes supporting sustainable use and improved wildlife conservation improving hunters' respect for local peoples' cultural and social rights and needs protecting habitat against detrimental land use activities enhancing hunters' awareness of conservation and research needs improving legal protection of a vulnerable/threatened wildlife species improving wildlife monitoring and/or research
Symposia
Symposia provide experts in a given topic the space and time to orally present recent research findings or unique insights on particular subjects, oftentimes with a view to making recommendations concerning the problems under discussion. A wide range of topics that are interesting and relevant to tropical biologists, conservation researchers and practitioners today will be addressed by the symposia for the 2011 ATBC & SCB Africa Meeting. To date, organised symposia have been identified. They are categorised as Closed and Open symposia. Closed symposia consist of a complete list of invited presenters (6 for mini-symposia; 12 for full-symposia). Open symposia have some invited speakers but are open to receiving more abstracts from the larger abstract pool. If you think your abstract is suitable for an open symposium, please indicate this when you submit an abstract. Additional symposia -- formed from the pool of abstracts we receive -- will be identified at a later date. We will continue updating this page with additional symposia as they are identified.
International dialogue and pilot projects: Testing climate change and carbon financing mechanisms
Organisers: Christina Ellis (University of Melbourne) & Thierry Lusenge (WWF Democratic Republic of Congo) Description: This symposium will provide a bridge between a) academic or theoretical discussions on climate change and carbon financing mechanisms; lessons learned from the field; distribution of funding, and; monitoring results in the physical and social/political/economic realms. Presentations will engage both idealists and practitioners in a two-way debate to inform perspectives, outline challenges and improve both conception and implementation of mechanisms within development and conservation agendas.
Description: FORTHCOMING
Multiple forest use and its potential for tropical forest conservation
Organisers: Manuel Guariguata (Centre for International Forestry Research), Robert Nasi (Centre for International Foretry Research) Description: There is emerging evidence that forests managed for multiple uses can be more robust to conversion than protected forests. Ecosystem service markets and biodiversity conservation goals are also providing new impetus for designing innovative approaches to tropical forest management. This symposium will identify constraints as well as enabling ecological, social and policy drivers for potential implementation of multi-use management systems in natural tropical forests. The symposium aims at addressing: 1.What are key ecological knowledge gaps for promoting multifunctionality? 2.What are the main factors promoting multiple use and maintenance of forest cover? 3.What is the potential for REDD and other payment schemes for environmental services in becoming inserted into tropical forest management?
fulfill the MDGs rather than allow an outright onslaught of natural habitat. The symposium aims at exploring the pros and cons of large scale plantation development by drawing from experiences from the Worlds largest palm oil producers, Indonesia and Malaysia. The RSPO was formed 8 years ago to curb the rapid destruction of tropical rainforests and to install a measure of environmental self-control within the industry.
Description: Diverse agroforestry systems can be more resilient than other agricultural systems that occur on deficient soils and in a changing climate. This symposium will provide a platform for discussion on the role of tropical agroforestry systems in the persistence of yields and the development of ecosystem services to enhance rural livelihoods. Presenters from a range of disciplines will be invited to participate. Talks will bring together experts from the field of agroforestry and agroecology and present innovative work on designing systems that address multispecies managed landscapes as a means to achieve conservation and production simultaneously. Specifically, the use of agroforestry will be explored to promote ecosystem services, increase production and sustain systems to avoid land conversion.
What works and what does not in protected area management: Moving the people-park debate forward
Organisers: Priya Davidar (Pondicherry University), Abiud Kaswamila (University of Dodoma), Lance W Robinson (Protected Areas and Poverty Reduction) & Navjot S. Sodhi (National University of Singapore) Description: In the long-standing people-parks debate, the rhetoric has been at times fierce, frequently calling for a choice between either preserving nature or protecting the rights of people. While some protected areas (Pas) are fortresses where local community involvement in conservation is minimal, except for the provision of services, other PAs are more porous. The symposium includes presentations on how the Protected Areas and Poverty Reduction (PAPR) alliance is advancing the debate by involving community members as genuine partners in research into PAs in Canada, Ghana and Tanzania and by directing conscious attention to processes of cross-sectoral, multi-stakeholder knowledge mobilization.
Organised Symposia Open (Additional presenters will be identified from the pool of abstracts)
Organisers: Timothy Tear (The Nature Conservancy) and Matthew A Brown (TNC Africa) Description: There are some successful community-based efforts beginning to emerge in Africa, and it is important to understand what is working and why if we are going to reduce the rate of biodiversity loss. The theme for this symposium is local, communitybased conservation efforts, and sharing of experiences. Talks will feature practical, onthe-ground conservation projects in order to share lesson-learned for solving biodiversity conservation problems.
Disturbance and resilience in tropical forests: linking recovery dynamics, knowledge and management.
Organisers: Alejandro A. Royo (USDA Forest Services), Tamara Heartsill-Scalley (USDAFS International Institute of Tropical Foresty) Description: Understanding patterns of forest recovery following disturbance will allow managers to plan, monitor, and respond to future threats in an informed and adaptive fashion. This symposium will explore the resiliency of tropical forests; namely, the ability of these systems to either recover pre-disturbance species composition and structure or reorganize into a novel forest. The talks examine the impact of and recovery from various types, scales, and intensities of disturbance on forest biodiversity. Examples will range from land-margin to upland forests in mainland and insular systems. Talks will draw upon long-term datasets to provide unique perspectives and will discuss the role of science-based management in mitigating diversity losses.