Community Based Wildlife Management - Its Role in Conservation and Development
Community Based Wildlife Management - Its Role in Conservation and Development
Community Based Wildlife Management - Its Role in Conservation and Development
Wildlife Management
- its Role in
Conservation and
Development
Tanzania has exceptional wildlife, environment
and natural resources. Situated on the crossroads
of many of the extensive biomes that cover Africa,
it is also where the highest and lowest points on
the continent are located, the top of Mt.
Kilimanjaro and the bottom of Lake Tanganyika.
Recognized for its large concentrations of large
herbivores, it is also home of a vide variety of
habitats, from coral reefs to mountainous forests,
which all combine to make Tanzania a “mega
diversity” country
The traditional way of conserving nature and wildlife
has been through parks and reserves, which has been
approached on the premise that the only way to save
nature, and especially endangered species, is to
forcefully exclude people from areas that are
designated as wilderness. This is known as the fences-
and-fines approach. In the 1980’s community based
conservation emerged as a resource management
paradigm. Its premise was that giving local people a
stake in wildlife would increase their incentive to
conserve it. This would therefore make wildlife an
important engine of local economic development.
Community-based conservation seeks to create a
synthesis between conservation and development.
The Wildlife Management Area in Burunge is
located in Babati District, in a migration corridor
between Tarangire and Lake Manyara National
Parks. It is approximately 40.000 ha in size and is
crucial in maintaining the Tarangire-Manyara
ecosystem, which is famous for its biodiversity.
However, there has been much controversy
surrounding community based management
projects. I will look at the development of the
project, focusing on the period after it was
officially inaugurated in 2006.
Objectives
The objective of this study is to review the
Community Based Wildlife Management in
Tanzania, which has emerged as the new way for
conservation to move into the future. The core
elements in community based conservation projects
concern development, conservation and sustainable
land use. Its ambition both to improve conditions for
the local communities and conserve wildlife seems
like a win-win situation, but has this really been
working that well when applied in the field?
Community Based Conservation in
Tanzania
Wildlife in Tanzania
The wildlife resources in Tanzania are diverse and plentiful, and the
country is considered to be the home of some of the wildest and
most untouched African protected areas. The network of protected
areas is supports an abundant and diverse plant and animal life,
such as a broad variety of endemic species of antelopes, primates,
fish, birds, amphibians, reptiles, invertebrates and vascular plants.
The country also contains some of the largest remaining
populations of terrestrial large mammals, including the two million
migratory wildebeest, and the zebras and gazelles of the greater
Serengeti Ecosystems
The uniqueness of Tanzania’s species composition
and the mosaic of different habitats makes the
country one of the most important “mega diversity”
nations on the African continent.
The Serengeti ecosystem and the Maasai Steppe
cover the northwest and northeast of Tanzania with
grasslands and open woodlands. The western part of
the country is mostly covered by Miombo woodland,
and the northern and southern highlands are
dominated by forests. In the eastern arc mountains
there still stand remains of old growth forests, which
are considered to be biodiversity hotspots of global
importance, as are the low lying coastal forests
Natural Landscape
Mount Kilimanjaro
Mount Meru
Rift Valley
Lake Victoria
The largely pristine Indian Ocean coastline
In Tanzania there are also significant populations of species that are considered
as endangered or threatened worldwide, such as:
Chimpanzee,
Black rhinoceros
African elephant
Wild dog
Cheetah
Wattled Crane
The animal species which are classified as globally
threatened include around 33 mammalian species, 30
bird species, 19 fish species and 46 invertebrate
species.