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Posts Tagged ‘ hunting ’

Starving residents turn to wildlife

Friday, March 27th, 2009

Starving Coast residents turn to wild animals

The Standard online Edition

By Joseph Masha and Patrick Muriungi

Starving residents of Ganze constituency in Kilifi District have resorted to eating bush meat.

The bush meat business is thriving in market centres in Bamba, Malindi and Kilifi. Mr Kipkelong Kikwai of Kenya Wildlife Service, Gede office, said the most affected areas are Muryachakwe, Ndigiria, Jila and Midiona in Bamba Division.

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Bushmeat hunting in Tanzania

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Bushmeat hunting in Tanzania

mongabay.com
March 23, 2009

Bushmeat hunting constitutes the most immediate threat to wildlife populations in the Udzungwa Mountains of the Eastern Afromontane biodiversity hotspot in Tanzania. A new study, published in Tropical Conservation Science assesses the impact of hunting by comparing densities of mammalian species between the little hunted West Kilombero Scarp Forest Reserve, the medium-hunted Udzungwa Scarp Forest Reserve and the intensively hunted New Dabaga Ulangambi Forest Reserve.

Conducting surveys of these conservation areas for the 22 species of mammal known to inhabit the region, Elmer Topp-Jørgensen and colleagues recorded 20 species in West Kilombero Scarp Forest Reserve, 17 in Udzungwa Scarp Forest Reserve, and 12 in New Dabaga Ulangambi Forest Reserve. They found large species — larger than 40 kg (90 pounds) — to be the most affected.

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Uganda: Poachers nabbed with Police guns

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

The New Vision

Publication date: Sunday, 22nd March, 2009. Uganda

By Gerald Tenywa

While policemen are meant to protect citizens and their property, Kasese policemen have been accused of hiring out their guns to poachers in Queen Elizabeth National Park.

Recently, authorities at the park arrested eight poachers and recovered a gun hired from a policeman attached to Bwera Police post in Kasese district. Read More

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Iregi Mwenja (Kenya)

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Mr. Iregi Mwenja (Kenya) is a conservation biologist with ten years field experience in East Africa. He has a Post-graduate Diploma in wildlife management (specialized on illegal wildlife trade), a Post-graduate Certificate  in Tropical Ecology and Conservation and a Bachelors Degree in NRM.

He started his career at Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) serving as a Park Warden in Mt Elgon National Park, Saiwa Swamp National Park and as the Warden in charge of Kiunga Marine and Dodori National Reserves on the Lamu archipelago.

Mwenja has also worked with the conservation NGOs Eden Wildlife Trust and East African Wildlife Society as a Project Manager and a Marine Coordinator respectively.

He is currently an Associate Research Scientist with the Institute of Primate Research of the National Museums of Kenya. He has six years experience in rare primates’ research in Kenya and was the first wildlife biologist to study the newly discovered population of de Brazza’s monkey in northern Kenya. The de Brazza’s monkey is a rare and highly threatened species in Kenya, the eastern limit of the species range.

Mwenja developed interest on the rapid decline in wildlife populations  outside protected areas in Kenya  and set out to investigate the link between the restrictive policy and the rise in bushmeat poaching. His bushmeat field assessment was on The effects of the Moratorium on Game Meat Cropping to bushmeat poaching and game ranching in Kenya.

Click here to see a Fact sheet of his findings.

Mwenja is currently managing two bushmeat Project  in the Tsavo Ecosystem, one on alternative protein and income and the other on Bushmeat education training in the same region.   Mwenja also continues with his work on bushmeat awareness raising through articles in popular media and through blogging on the internet.

Email: iregim[at]gmail.com Tel: +254 723713642

Skype: iregi.mwenja

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