Cape Times

Landowners help vultures reclaim their home

- STAFF WRITER

THE Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT) has announced the declaratio­n of the first official vulture safe zone (VSZ) in the Karoo.

A VSZ is an area in which landowners and communitie­s work collaborat­ively to implement targeted conservati­on measures to address critical local threats to vultures, such as poisoning.

Through extensive engagement and collaborat­ion with the EWT, the Rupert Nature Foundation, South African National Parks (SANParks), the Mountain Zebra Camdeboo Protected Environmen­t (MZCPE), SANParks Honorary Rangers, Karoo farmers and other landowners have created an extensive VSZ in the Great Karoo that spans about 23 000km², encapsulat­ing three major protected areas: the Camdeboo, Karoo and Mountain Zebra National Parks, as well as the MZCPE.

By linking these key protected areas through a VSZ, the long-term goal is to encourage Cape Vultures to return to their historical ranges throughout the Great Karoo and ultimately recover this population.

“The area represents an extremely dynamic threat landscape, where the risks to vultures are complex and challengin­g, and a committed, long-term conservati­on presence is required to address them. Hence, we have a 10-year strategy in place to work closely with this extraordin­ary group of farmers to have a sustained and meaningful impact on the future of this species,” the EWT said.

The initial phase of the project aimed to generate awareness of the plight of vultures in the area, particular­ly the Cape Vulture, and assess what changes were needed to make the area vulture safe.

“Now, with a landmark 90 landowners signed up and their collective properties amassing nearly 700 000 hectares of Karoo landscape committed to being vulture safe, we will now focus on addressing the threats to vultures on these properties.”

Tom and Ruth O’Sullivan, cattle farmers near Middelburg in the Eastern Cape, have managed their farm in a vulture-friendly manner since the day they set foot on the property several years ago.

“It was with great pleasure, enormous pride and a wide smile that the project team handed over their vulture safe zone signage this month and officially classified the property as the first to be completely vulture safe within the Karoo landscape,” the EWT said.

Separately, the EWT’s birds of prey programme has also establishe­d the presence of a Cape Vulture breeding colony close to the boundary of the project area.

“We strongly suspect that this population has been the source of the individual and small groups of birds sighted within the project area over the past year and may represent a vital link to Cape Vulture stronghold­s in the Eastern Cape.

“The Karoo vulture safe zone project is an enormously important initiative for the persistenc­e of this endangered species and has the additional benefit of providing a safe area in which immature birds looking for new roosts and breeding sites can thrive. By keeping a finger on the pulse of the colony that forages in this area, the team can take better conservati­on action to benefit the species.”

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