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Kavango–Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA) is the second-largest nature and landscape conservation area in the world, spanning the international borders of five countries in Southern Africa.
The Bengal tiger and the Indian elephant are endangered species which are protected by Project Tiger and Project Elephant programmes run by Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India. [1] [2] [3] Indian Leopards are vulnerable and protected species. [4] The Indian wolf is an endangered subspecies of gray wolf. [5]
The combined Kaziranga - Karbi Anglong Elephant Reserve has as many as 1940 elephants according to the 2005 survey. [5] The eastern race of the swamp deer also had 468 individuals existing as noted in the 2002 census, [7] down from 756 individuals noted in the 1984 census. [2]
The southern African nation is home to the largest global elephant population, estimated at 130,000 Botswana lauded for its elephant conservation at global wildlife trade conference Skip to main ...
Iain Douglas-Hamilton CBE (born 16 August 1942) is a Scottish zoologist from Oxford University and one of the world's foremost authorities on the African elephant. In 1993, he founded Save the Elephants, which is dedicated to securing a future for elephants and their habitats.
Her father went to Africa as a young man to study and conserve elephant populations. Her white African ancestry comes from her mother who is the daughter of Italians who settled in Kenya in the 1920s. Her mother still farms at Lake Naivasha in the Great Rift Valley. [3] She is a great-granddaughter of Alfred Douglas-Hamilton, the 13th Duke of ...
Project Elephant is a wildlife conservation movement initiated in India to protect the endangered Indian elephant.The project was initiated in 1992 by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change of the Government of India to provide financial and technical support to the states for wildlife management of free-ranging elephant populations.
Bwabwata National Park is a protected area in northeastern Namibia that was established in 2007 and covers 6,274 km 2 (2,422 sq mi). It was created by merging Namibia's Caprivi Game Park and Mahango Game Park. [2]