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Email: jones@habari.co.tz
Phone: (255) 27 2502713
Fax: (255) 27 2508547
Mobile: (+255) 754 333550
Mail:
Tanganyika Film & Safari Outfitters
P.O. Box 49, Arusha, Tanzania, East Africa
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y, but in retaliation
for crop damage parks while they migrate between parks and other
bush areas. In their search for food and water, elephants trample
ground, snap apartften wounded animals. For many animals, like cheetah,
every individual is critical to the survival of the species. If a
car breaks a cheetah’s leg, it will likely die. TKC plans to
create a Wildlife Rehabilitation Center, a place for captured animals
to recover and rehabilitate before re-introducing into the wild.
A TKC veterinarian based at Ndarakwai would work with injured, captured,
and problem animals, including those smuggled animals the government has
intercepted at customs. Right now there is no holding facility for such
wildlife. Several zoo-based veterinarians have expressed interest, but
we’ll need facilities and instruments for their work. TKC would like
to raise funds to help create The Rafiki Wildlife Rehabilitation Center.
Education / Research Center
The Maasai in this region depend on livestock. TKC, in partnership with
Kenya’s African Conservation Center, is working on innovative ways
that would make the interaction between wildlife and livestock profitable
under commercial livestock production, using a system of seasonal rotation
that maximizing yield and building grass banks to cope with droughts.
More research is needed to understand the relationships between wildlife,
vegetation, and the needs of local communities. One of the aims
of TKC is to establish an Education / Research Center. Over the years we’ve
hosted students from the School for International Training in the U.S.
They’ve undertaken many research projects, but more consistent, thorough,
and meaningful research is needed. We’d like to develop a curriculum
for local and foreign students to learn environmental stewardship and gain
a greater appreciation for the delicate balance between humans and nature.
Land Purchase
The Kilimanjaro Conservancy aims to continue protecting and rehabilitating
the region’s habitat through further land acquisitions. Several tracts
of land adjoining the Ndarakwai unsuitable for farming could be prime wildlife
habitat for protected wildlife. The Kilimanjaro Conservancy is well placed
to purchase and manage this land. Another government-owned parcel, larger
than the total of Ndarakwai may be available within the next few years.
The potential for wildlife protection there may be lost to development
or habitat destruction through grazing or further charcoal cutting. The
Kilimanjaro Conservancy is seeking partners to help protect this land through
purchase. |
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