East African Wildlife Society - Say YES to Conservation Say NO to Extinction Choose conservation for life with the East African Wild Life Society
For the past forty years, the East African Wildlife Society has
been at the forefront of efforts to protect the region's endangered species and
habitats. Thanks to the generous support of our many members in East Africa and
throughout the world we have been able to help conserve the region's black rhinos
and elephants, contribute to current efforts to save the hirola and the roan
antelope and act to preserve East Africa's rapidly disappearing forests.
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In 1961 the members of the wildlife societies of Kenya and Tanzania-both
founded in 1956-joined with Ugandan conservationists to form the East
African Wild Life Society. The Society's mission is to promote the
conservation and wise use of East Africa's wildlife and environment
through:
- Influencing policy reform
through advocacy
- Helping support national park
infrastructure, anti-poaching measures and
wildlife sanctuaries
- Conservation education and
research
- Translocating endangered
species
- Community conservation
initiatives
Throughout the 1980s the East African Wild
Life Society's advocacy and publicity was an
effective weapon in the flight against the rampant
poaching then affecting the region. The Society also
provided rangers with vehicles, fuel, radio
equipment, firearms, uniforms and accommodation to
help them win the battle.
EAWLS also campaigned strongly for an
international ban on ivory trading. After the ban was
enforced in 1989, ivory prices dropped dramatically
and ivory poaching throughout Africa declined. Until
we are sure that a continued ivory trade will not
cause a resumption of the massive poaching we saw
during the 1970s and 1980s, EAWLS will
continue to support an ivory trade ban. |
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EAWLS has always been in the forefront of active conservation in the region.
With money donated by the many generous donors who support the Society, it has helped fund new
research centres, build firebreaks and fences and establish wildlife sanctuaries. For instance,
EAWLS donations helped fund the rhino sanctuaries in the Aberdares, at Lake Nakuru, and at
Ngulia in Tsavo West. Safe havens like these have helped rhino numbers in Kenya increase to
almost five hundred.
Practical conservation in action
The hirola is Africa's most endangered antelope. EAWLS is at the centre of a
web of concerned organizations dedicated to saving it from extinction. In 1996, several hirolas
were translocated to Tsavo East National Park to boost that park's existing small population.
Current emphasis, led by EAWLS, is to work to preserve the hirola antelope in its home
range.
Help us continue to play an active role in protecting the vital systems which cleanse
our water, enrich our soil, and create the air that we breath. Earth is our only home. The
survival of all life on our planet is dependent on YOU!
Tropical forest and watershed protection -- a high priority international concern.
Exposed mangrove roots. Mangroves protect the coastline from erosion and provide
essential breeding grounds for fish fry. At the coast and inland, our forests are fast
disappearing, with far reaching consequences. Forests are our planet's lungs. They also trap
moisture from the air and hold it in the ground.
Deforestation leads quickly to erosion and drought.
Forests hold over half the world's plant species. New drugs to cure diseases; new
strains of plant to bolster our essential food crops-all can be found in forests. Forests are
reservoirs of genetic diversity. Genetic diversity is the key to our survival.
EAWLS is the secretariat of the Kenya Forest Working Group,
an informal consortium of governmental, national and international non-governmental organizations
and individuals dedicated to protecting natural forests. The Kenya Forest Working Group
is a forum for ideas, fostering collaborations in forest management and utilization at all
levels.
Based at EAWLS headquarters, the Kenya Forest Working Group
is dedicated to raising public awareness about the current of Kenya's forests, their value and
the consequences of their destruction. Only when people understand their obligations to future
generations-economic, scientific, moral and aesthetic-will they be able to play a positive role
in sustaining our precious resources.
As well as supporting the work of the Kenya Forest Working Group, EAWLS
also runs its own forest conservation projects. Examples in Kenya include community conservation
initiatives to preserve the important cloud forests of the Taita Hills and the region's
widespread coastal mangroves.
Play a part in global conservation ... join the East African Wild Life
Society
EAWLS members are its main source of funds. Membership is for one year and
is open to both individuals and corporations. Over the past forty years EAWLS members
have invested more than US $2 million on over a thousand conservation projects throughout East
Africa.
Membership Services
As well as the satisfaction of knowing you are doing something positive for
your environment, as an EAWLS member you will receive one year's deliver of Swara,
the Society's authoritative, beautifully illustrated magazine. Each issue will bring you the
latest in-depth news of Africa's conservation issues, inform you about the Society's work and
amaze you with the region's best wildlife photographs.
Your membership card entitles you to a 10 percent discount on all purchases
at either of our EAWLS shops in Nairobi and to selected discounts with a variety of hotel
and tour companies. Members may also use the Society's library and are invited to attend Society
forums, lectures and film shows.
For membership and information please call or write to:
East African Wild Life Society
P.O. Box 20110
NAIROBI, KENYA
Telephone: 264 -2-574145
Fax: 254 - 2- 570335
email: EAWLS@elci.sasa.union.org
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