Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Community-protection initiative

Program helps Congo families safeguard endangered gorillas

- CHRISTINA LARSON

WASHINGTON — Decades of conservati­on efforts have stabilized the population of endangered mountain gorillas in eastern Africa. But the number of Grauer’s gorillas — a less furry, lower elevation-dwelling animal — has declined, largely due to habitat loss and hunting.

On Friday, the nonprofit Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund announced that more land in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo where Grauer’s gorillas live will fall under a community-protection initiative.

The critically endangered species has lost an estimated 60% of its population in the past two decades, and an estimated 3,800 to 6,800 individual­s remain.

Most Grauer’s gorillas now live outside national parks, and protecting them will be difficult in a region facing sustained human conflicts. Their rain forest homes are being cleared for agricultur­e and mining, and the gorillas are sometimes hunted for food or trapped by snares intended to catch other animals.

A 2016 law allows communitie­s in Congo to apply for rights to manage their traditiona­l lands. The Fossey Fund has helped communitie­s in eastern Congo complete that paperwork and entered into agreements with families to provide assistance and training for the sustainabl­e management of their lands.

On Friday, it announced that 307 square miles had been added to the program. The addition means 919 square miles are now being watched over by about 20 families.

The community can decide what activities should be allowed on their lands and can try to enforce those choices. The Fossey Fund provides education and funding.

Community members are trained and then hired “to conduct the science needed to monitor the biodiversi­ty of the forest — biological inventorie­s, gorilla tracking, plant biomass for estimating carbon capture,” said Urbain Ngobobo, director of the nonprofit’s Congo programs.

This model differs from the approach used to protect the mountain gorillas.

They live almost exclusivel­y within the boundaries of national parks in Rwanda, Uganda and Congo, allowing researcher­s to cooperate with park managers to protect the species.

Most Grauer’s gorillas don’t live inside national parks — and it’s not feasible to expand the parks to fully cover their habitats.

“Grauer’s gorillas exist exclusivel­y in a country that has suffered really extreme degrees of instabilit­y for decades,” said Richard Bergl, a primatolog­ist and director of conservati­on at the North Carolina Zoo.

“When there is violence happening, it’s very challengin­g to maintain the infrastruc­ture of a national park,” he said. “But the communitie­s will be there regardless of political instabilit­y. If you have their support, you have a chance.”

Community interests vary, but in general there is an incentive to protect their lands from being pillaged by outsiders, whether they’re illegal mining operators or commercial hunters, said Dirck Byler, vice chairman of the great apes specialist group for the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature, the scientific body that designates species as endangered.

“Most of these communitie­s want to maintain their forests as they’ve been in the past,” used for subsistenc­e hunting and plant harvesting, said Byler, who has worked extensivel­y in Congo.

Community- based conservati­on schemes have been effective in slowing or reversing the decline of endangered species in other regions, such as the Nigerian mountains where Cross River gorillas live and the savanna of northweste­rn Namibia where endangered rhinos live, Bergl said.

“The wildlife there would be gone if it weren’t for community involvemen­t and management,” he said. “If we’re going to be successful, it’s going to be because of efforts to support the communitie­s to manage their forests.”

“The wildlife there would be gone if it weren’t for community involvemen­t and management. If we’re going to be successful, it’s going to be because of efforts to support the communitie­s to manage their forests.”

— Richard Bergl, primatolog­ist and director of conservati­on at the North Carolina Zoo

 ?? (AP/Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund) ?? A silverback and an infant Grauer’s gorilla are seen April 17, 2014, in Kahuzi Biega National Park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
(AP/Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund) A silverback and an infant Grauer’s gorilla are seen April 17, 2014, in Kahuzi Biega National Park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
 ?? ?? A Grauer’s gorilla peeks out from behind foliage Jan. 22, 2019.
A Grauer’s gorilla peeks out from behind foliage Jan. 22, 2019.
 ?? ?? A Grauer’s gorilla is seen July 11 in Kahuzi Biega National Park.
A Grauer’s gorilla is seen July 11 in Kahuzi Biega National Park.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States