2006 Annual Report Birdlife International Pacific Partnership
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Transcript of 2006 Annual Report Birdlife International Pacific Partnership
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ANNUALREPORT2006A
jointinitiative
ofC
onservation
Intern
ational,th
eG
lobal
Environ
men
tFacility,th
eG
overnm
entofJap
an,th
eM
acArth
urFou
ndation
,andth
eW
orldBan
k
rotectingN
atures
HotspotsforPeople
andP
rosp
erit
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The Partership
CONsERvATiON iNTERNATiONAL isa leader and catalyst in biodiversityconservation, engaging partners in morethan 40 countries on our continents topreserve threatened ecosystems. Theorganization administers CEPF.www.conservation.org
ThE GLObAL ENviRONmENT FACiLiTyis the largest source o unding orthe global environment. It brings 177member governments together withleading development institutions andothers in support o a common global
environmental agenda. www.thege.org
ThE GOvERNmENT OF JAPAN is one othe worlds largest providers o develop-ment assistance or the environment.Japan seeks constructive measures andconcrete programs to preserve uniqueecosystems that provide people withimportant benets and help reducepoverty. www.env.go.jp/en/
ThE JOhN D. AND CAThERiNE T.
mACARThUR FOUNDATiON is a private,independent grant-making institution
dedicated to helping groups and individu-als oster lasting improvement in thehuman condition. www.macound.org
ThE WORLD bANk is the worlds largestsource o development assistance. Itworks in more than 100 developingeconomies to ght poverty and tohelp people help themselves and theirenvironment. www.worldbank.org
CONTENTs
Message rom the Partners . . . . . . . . . 1
Our Strategic Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Arica and Madagascar . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Asia and Pacifc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Latin America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Financial Summary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
The CEPF Community . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
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Our Strategic Approach
CEPF brings together globalleaders in a united eortto help conserve Earthsbiologically richest and mostthreatened places.
Combined, these biodiversity hotspots harbor hal thediversity o lie, yet they have already lost 86 percent otheir original habitat.
The convergence o critical areas or conservationwith millions o people who are impoverished and highlydependent on healthy ecosystems or their survival is alsomore evident in the hotspots than anywhere else.
The hotspots approach to the conservation o criticalecosystems is a highly targeted strategy or tackling thechallenge o biodiversity loss at the global level. As manyhotspots cross national borders, the approach transcendspolitical boundaries and osters coordination and joint eortsacross large landscapes or local and global benets.
CEPF is a global grant-making program that enablesconservation action and builds capacity or sustainability inthe hotspots. Its investments enable nongovernmentalorganizations (NGOs), community groups, and other privatesector partners to conserve their environment and infuencedecisions that aect lives, livelihoods, and ultimately
the global environment.In each hotspot where
it invests, CEPF rst workswith experts and stakehold-ers to create an ecosystem
prole. The goal is to identiy the highest priorities orconservation and a CEPF investment strategy that canprovide the greatest incremental value.
Every grant awarded helps meet the objective o astrategic direction in the investment strategy.
CEPF relies on regional teams o civil society groups tolead implementation. These teams help identiy potential
partners, provide hands-on assistance in designing projects,and convert the plans in the proles into powerul portolios.Their local expertise helps broaden CEPFs reach as well asits ability to make sound investment decisions.
The people we support are at the heart o the programsresults. They lead innovative projects and engage others tomaximize conservation impact per dollar spent and ostersustainability or the uture. CEPF grant recipients rangerom arming cooperatives, community associations, andthe private sector to local and international NGOs,all working toward one common goal: conserving ourglobal environment.
Every grant helps meet the
objective of a strategic direction ina regional investment strategy.
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Prtecti West Aricas Wil Chipaees
The Wild Chimpanzee Foundation(WCF) helped 20 communitiesaround Cte dIvoires Ta National Parkimprove the protection o EndangeredWest Arican chimpanzees (Pan troglo-dytes verus) and their orest habitat.
More than 100 peoplenearly halo the areas hunterspledged tostop illegally hunting the animals or
bushmeat as part o
WCFs environ-
mental education program thatextends to ve critical areas inthe Guinean Forests o WestArica Hotspot.
WCFs program uses lm,cartoon newsletters, and com-munity theater perormed bylocal villagers to demonstratethe habits and characteristicso these primates.
Our impact surveysshow that the majority olocal people reached by theprogrammore than 90,000to dateare also changingtheir behavior, said IlkaHerbinger, director o WCFsArican oce.
In Guinea, or example, villagers whosaw the plays are more likely to chasechimpanzees away rom their elds thankill them. In Cte dIvoire, in another
signicant step orward or
chimpanzee conservation, a villagechie proclaimed the chimpanzee as atotem, making chimpanzee killing tabooor any o the more than 3,000 memberso his village.
Perorer portra te eaor o Endangered Wet
Arcan cpanzee, let, durng a count pla.
Cape Floristic Region
Coastal Forests o Eastern Arica
Eastern Aromontane
Guinean Forests o West Arica
Madagascar and Indian Ocean Islands
Succulent Karoo
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4
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diversity guidelines into South AricasIntegrated Production o Wine system.
BWI also recently expanded into theneighboring Succulent Karoo Hotspot,where it has already attracted a coopera-
tive to the scheme that has 43 endemicplant species on just one o its arms.
makira Frest Helps maaascar meet 2005 Taret
T he Malagasy government cre-ated the 370,000-hectare MakiraForest Conservation Area in northeastMadagascar, securing the countrys
largest remaining intact humid rain or-est and a vital watershed or more than150,000 people.
The Wildlie Conservation Society(WCS) worked closely with the govern-ment and more than 100 local communi-
ties to map the region and create aneective management plan or the newprotected area in the Madagascar andIndian Ocean Islands Hotspot.
Together with the new Ankeniheny-Zahamena corridor reserves (425,000hectares) and Loky-Manambato ForestStation (72,000 hectares), the declara-tion o Makira Forest played a vital role
A vitae Year r Sth Arica Biiersity
T he South Arican Wine and BrandyCompany helped winegrowersin the Cape Floristic Region Hotspotincorporate biodiversity into their busi-ness practices and set aside more than20,000 hectares o threatened habitator conservation.
A pioneering partnership between
the wine industry and the conservationsector, the Biodiversity and WineInitiative (BWI) aims to minimize theloss o threatened natural habitat andcontribute to sustainable wine produc-tion. Expected benets or participatingwinegrowers include increased protsrom discerning buyers.
As award-winning winegrowerand ruit armer Paul Clver explained,I consumers are willing to pay ahigher price or the product, we arehappy to cultivate less and conservemore hectares.
With 80 percent o the land inthis region under private ownership,
in helping the government hit its 2005target o bringing 1 million hectaresunder protection.
As a result, Madagascar is on track tohit President Marc Ravalomananas pledgeo tripling the countrys protected area
network to 6 million hectares by 2008.CEPF unding has enabled us tomake sure our eorts are integrated withother key partners in research, education,and communications, said ChristopherHolmes, WCS principal technical adviseron the Makira project.
One important outcome o the projectis 10 community-based resource man-agement contracts that now help morethan 10,000 villagers living within thereserve to directly manage their naturalresources in a more sustainable way.
landowner participation in conservationis crucial. So is engaging South Aricaswine industry, which is now the worldseighth largest producer o wine.
BWIs support to individual wine-
growers ollowed earlier success in theproject when it helped incorporate bio-
bocendal
vneard, a
eer o te
bodert and
Wne intate,
a cotted
,000 ectare to
coneraton.
mara oe to pece o
leur, ncludng te Endangered ndr
(Idi idi).
6
sUCCULENT visiTOR CENTER
The Namibia Nature Foundation
helped build a visitor center in Aus,
Namibia, to raise awareness about
the Succulent Karoo Hotspot. Eleven
local people completed training and
are now employed there as tourist
guides. This training, the rst phase
o a nature-based livelihood scheme,
is particularly important in Aus, which
has one o Namibias lowest rates o
employment despite its ecological wealth.
GUiDELiNEs GO NATiONAL
The South Arican National Biodiversity
Institute implemented national biodiversity
guidelines or developers and planning
ocers in the Cape Floristic Region
Hotspot. Drated by the Botanical
Society o South Arica, these tools
or systematic conservation planning
were originally intended solely or
use in the Western Cape, but are
now guiding conservation across
the entire country.
COmmUNiTiEs PROTECT WETLANDs
BirdLie International set up 24 legally rec-
ognized community organizations in ve
important wetland areas in Madagascar.
These organizations established sus-
tainable natural resource management
plans or the Mahavavy-Kinkony wet-
lands in the Madagascar and Indian
Ocean Islands Hotspot, which will
help protect globally threatened
species and provide an important
base or education and outreach.
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natre-Base Lielihs Reliee Threatee Frest Habitats
T he International Centre o InsectPhysiology and Ecology (ICIPE) pro-vided training to more than 200 peoplein a sustainable livelihoods program orcommunities that neighbor importantorests in the Eastern Arc Mountainsand Coastal Forests o Tanzania andKenya region.
The new skills have already helpedgenerate economic returns or thecommunities through silk production,butterfy arming, and honey harvestingand rening, as well as essential oil pro-duction rom the neem tree (Azadirachtaindica) and other local plants.
Within six months o completing thetraining, the Chawia Forest communityin the Taita Hills earned $270 rom itsrst butterfy pupae exported to butterfyhouses in the United States.
The project ocuses on conservingthe orest in Kenyas Taita Hills and
Lower Tana River Forest and the DeremaCorridor in Tanzanias East Usambara
Mountains, where ragmentationthreatens a range o species such asthe Critically Endangered Tana River redcolobus (Procolobus ruomitratus).
The program is applying methods and
lessons learned rom butterfy armingprograms that have generated more
than $1 million in revenue in the region.Nature-based businesses that benet
local populations can build signicantconstituencies or conservation, said IanGordon, the head o ICIPEs environment-
al health division, who also leads theCEPF implementation team in the region.
FY 06 Approved Grants
CAPE FLoRISTIC REgIonHoTSPoT
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:
Support civil society involvementin the establishment o protectedareas and management plans in
CFR biodiversity corridors
Prodng Gudelne orGae Fencng n te Gourtzintate Rooerg-Gaaergto Outenqua Nature ReereCorrdor$4,000Conservation ManagementServices
salt Rer macro inerteratesanctuar: staeolder
Engageent Proce$4,776Natures Valley Trust
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:Promote innovative private sec-tor and community involvementin conservation in landscapes sur-
rounding CFR biodiversity corridors
baaanloo Eat ConerancLand-ue Coneron strateg$20,000Landmark Foundation
Conerng bodertand Enancng Lelood
n te sall-scale RoooTea Producton Area o teNortern and Wetern Cape,sout Arca$70,000Environmental Monitoring Group
Equator venture$11,109Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project
covering eight hotspots; the
total grant amount is $99,986.
Let: A ta eer o
te Aan Nature
Reere n te Eat
Uaara mountan
explan te utter
le ccle. below: Te
pupae o chxs
buusuttere ell
or $2 eac, prodngan portant ncoe
or ale engaged n
utter arng.
REPLiCATiON ACROss ThE NATiON
Three new groups joined a successul pilot
scheme to gather data on threatened plant
species in South Arica, signicantly con-
tributing to updating the IUCN Red List
o Threatened Species. The Custodians
o Rare and Endangered Wildfowers,
now expanding nationally, comprises
more than 100 volunteers in the
Cape Floristic Region Hotspot who
recorded more than 1,000 endemic
and threatened species.
POsT-WAR RECOvERy
The Environmental Foundation or Arica
worked with two chiedoms to create a
natural resource management plan to
protect the rich biodiversity o Tiwai
Island in the Guinean Forests o West
Arica Hotspot and restore its wildlie
sanctuary to use ater it had been
shuttered during Sierra Leones civil
war. The communities reopened the
Tiwai Island Wildlie Sanctuary to
visitors in April 2006.
hUNTiNG sTEWARDshiP
In the Guinean Forests o West
Arica Hotspot, Fauna and Flora
International worked with more
than 70 bushmeat hunters rom three
villages around the Nimba Mountains
Biosphere Reserve to develop and
implement a community management
plan or wild auna. The communities
removed snares and traps and set up
hunting quotas to reduce their impact on
Endangered primates in the area.
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Greater Cedererg bodertCorrdor sall Grant Fund$32,000
Western Cape NatureConservation BoardThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering two hotspots; the total grant
amount is $108,000.
ipleentaton o te CapeWet Coat bopere Reerestrategc Plan and bunePlan$100,000Cape West Coast BiosphereReserve Company
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:Support civil society eorts to cre-
ate an institutional environment
that enables eective conserva-tion action
Te Gatoo valle CollecteLand manageent ProjectPae : Aeng te valto Collecte Land manageenta a model or Coneratonn te baaanloo mega-Reere Coatal Corrdor$14,990Wildlie and Environment Societyo South Arica
EASTERn ARC
mounTAInS AndCoASTAL FoRESTS oFTAnzAnIA And KEnYA
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:Increase the ability o local popula-tions to beneft rom and contribute
to biodiversity conservation
Te Aan butter Project$9,880Tanzania Forest ConservationGroup
Aeent o Tuatu Floraand Fauna spece$7,000
Jongowe EnvironmentalManagement Association
Count bodertConeraton mcro-Grant nte Eatern Arc and CoatalForet o kena and Tanzana$400,000World Wide Fund or Nature
Coneraton o ZanzarUnque Flora and Faunaa Count-baed
Foret manageent andsocoeconoc DeelopentAround Jozan-Cwaa baNatonal Par$174,985CARE International ($91,908) andWildlie Conservation Society($83,077)
Equator venture$11,110Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering eight hotspots; the total grant
amount is $99,986.
inetgatng te beneft
o Partcpator Foretmanageent n Uluguru ForetReere$19,933Wildlie Conservation Society oTanzania
Prootng Countinoleent n ReourceProtecton n and around tebon-Dodor-kunga ProtectedArea Coplex$19,930Arica Conservation Fund
socoeconoc stud o teUdzungwa scarp Area: A
Potental Wldle Corrdor$20,000World Wide Fund or Nature
TALk (Tranng, Awarene,Learnng, and knowledge)aout te Eatern Arc andCoatal Foret o kena andTanzana$143,600Tanzania Forest ConservationGroup
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:Restore and increase connectivityamong ragmented orest patches
Aeng te Potentalor Retorng Connecttand Ealuatng Opton oriproed manageent ote Udzungwa scarp, iondo,matundu, and Nanganje ForetReere n te Udzungwamountan o Tanzana$79,035Museo Tridentino di ScienzeNaturali
Coneraton bolog oEcologcal indcator toEnance Connectt n te
Eat Uaara mountan,Tanzana$69,865William D. Newmark
Facltatng te CopenatonPaent or te DereaForet Reere, Eat Uaaramountan$154,810World Wide Fund or Nature
mang Aalale Free Copeo Coatal Foret boo$5,375World Wide Fund or Nature
Tecncal AdorConeratonCorrdor: Eatern Arc andCoatal Foret o Tanzana andkena$119,900Conservation International
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:Improve biological knowledge in
the hotspot
Aeent o te Apanspece Dert, Populatonstatu and Trend wtn teForet Fragent o te Tatahll, kena$65,000
G. John Measey
bodert Reearc andAwarene n te Leerknown Eatern Arc mountan:maenge, Rueo, Uaguru,and Nguru$224,369The Society or EnvironmentalExploration
malundwe AroontaneForet and Rer Catcent:Dcoer and Capact buldng$30,000Anglia Ruskin University
StrategIc DIrectIon 4:Establish a small grants programin the hotspot (all 161 sites
eligible) that ocuses on CriticallyEndangered species and small-scale eorts to increase connect-
ivity o biologically importanthabitat patches
Aeent o te Dertand Coneraton statu oPrate n te Coatal Foreto kena$19,900Yvonne de Jong
bodert o a Landcape:Exanng Foret heterogenetand Ecologcal Cange n te
Eat Uaara snce 9$15,860University o Florida
mang Aalale Cope oWWF Ecoregon boo$19,000World Wide Fund or Nature
Populaton Dent Etateand Treat Ealuatono te hgl EndangeredUdzungwa Foret Partrdge nte Udzundwa mountan oTanzana$19,778University o Copenhagen
Populaton Etate oTreatened brd n te EatUaara mountan, Tanzana$19,960The Field Museum o NaturalHistory
sall Grant or GloalConeraton o ApanDert Wtn hotpot$30,000Arizona State UniversityThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering six hotspots; the total grant
amount is $200,000.
Taxono and ConeratonGenetc o te Treatenedmangae Taxa o te EaternArc mountan and CoatalForet o Tanzana and kena$19,925Carolyn L. Ehardt
guInEAn FoRESTS oFWEST AFRICA HoTSPoTUpper Guinean Forest
StrategIc DIrectIon 4:Collaborative public awareness,
education, and community out-
reach programs
Aeng Fe year o CEPFinetent n te GuneanForet o Wet Arca$129,353Environmental Foundation orAricaSierra Leone
FY 06 Approved GrantsArica a maaascar continued rom page 7
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StrategIc DIrectIon 5:
Biodiversity Action Fund
Te 200 stonanEnronental LeaderpCoure: Partcpaton saa T. Dallo$4,645Centre National des SciencesHalieutiques de Boussoura
buldng sutanaleLelood Around teWologz-Wonegz PropoedProtected Area$19,632Skills and Agriculture DevelopmentServices, Inc.
Te Great Ape Eergenc
Coneraton Fund$62,150Conservation International
inolng Local Populatonn te Protecton andsaeguardng o All TropcalZone spece o Fauna and Floran te Daola and DnguraePreecture o Gunea$18,450COLUFIFA-GUINEE
Recontructon o GaonReearc staton at sapoNatonal Par$19,971
Society or the Conservation oNature o Liberia
sall Grant or GloalConeraton o ApanDert Wtn hotpot$34,000Arizona State UniversityThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering six hotspots; the total grant
amount is $200,000.
Tang bodertConeraton to te PropoedLae Po Nature Reere$19,992Farmers Associated to Conserve
the Environment
mAdAgASCAR AndIndIAn oCEAn ISLAndSHoTSPoTMadagascar
StrategIc DIrectIon 5:Biodiversity Action Fund
Aeng Fe year o CEPFinetent n madagacar$60,467Conservation International
Eergenc interenton toPreent sla and burn andto Enure te sutanalt
o te incoe Generatng orConeraton Progra$10,000LHomme et lEnvironnement
Produce and Denate teProceedng o te EleentPan-Arcan OrntologcalCongre$10,000BirdLie International
SuCCuLEnT KARooHoTSPoT
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:Expand protected area corridorsthrough public-private-communal
partnerships in the priority areas oBushmanland Inselbergs, CentralNamaqualand Coast, Namaqualand
Uplands, Knersvlakte, Hantam-Roggeveld, Central Little Karoo,and Sperrgebiet
buldng stewardp Capactn te boeeld$274,827Botanical Society o South Arica
Etalng te knerlateProncal Nature Reere
$310,000Western Cape NatureConservation Board
Greater Cedererg bodertCorrdor sall Grant Fund$76,000Western Cape NatureConservation BoardThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering two hotspots; the total grant
amount is $108,000.
inorng te Deelopento an integrated Land Uemanageent Plan For teCoon o te Naaqualand
Upland$94,204Agricultural Research Council-Range & Forage Institute
identng, mappng, andvalung socoeconocallsgnfcant bodert At te
muncpal Leel: A Plot stud nOudtoorn, sout Arca$29,651Wildlie and Environment Societyo South Arica
skEEPsoutern karooEnronental EducatonProject$91,286Wildlie and Environment Societyo South Arica
StrategIc DIrectIon 6:Create the capacity to catalyzethe SKEP program
Te skEP Coordnaton Unt:Enurng strategc and EecteConeraton Acton n tesucculent karoo hotpot$1,071,028South Arican National BiodiversityInstitute
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:
Engage key industrial sectors inmeeting conservation objectives
identifed by SKEP
Te bodert & Wneintate succulent karooExpanon$20,000The South Arican Wine & BrandyCompany
Equator venture$11,110Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering eight hotspots; the total grant
amount is $99,986.
Etalent o hng Route
n suterland n te hanta-Tanqua-Roggeeld Prort Area$14,925Sutherland Unemployment Forum
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:Retain and restore critical biodiver-sity in areas under greatest land-use pressure
skEPPiEs Fund (skEPPartnerng in ourEnronent)A Fundor Coneraton andDeelopent n tesucculent karoo$56,100
Development Bank oSouthern Arica Limited
sall Grant orGloal Coneraton oApan DertWtn hotpot$17,000Arizona State UniversityThis is a multiregional project
covering six hotspots; the total
grant amount is $200,000.
StrategIc DIrectIon 4:Mainstream conservationpriorities into land-use
planning and policymaking
Coneraton Prorteor inect o tekaeerg Upland$11,102Jonathan Colville
Deograp o brown henan te Larger kaua andklngardt mountan Area nte sperrgeet, Naa$5,000Brown Hyena ResearchProject
99
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authorities to drat regulations or use atthe provincial level and hopes to extendthe land managed under the scheme to250,000 hectares.
Resrrecti Traitial La Tere i Aceh
yayasan Rumpun Bambu Indonesia(YRBI) helped communities inthe Sundaland Hotspot take advan-tage o recent legislative changes tointroduce a community-based natu-ral resource scheme or 25,000 hect-ares o lowland orest that are hometo the Critically Endangered Sumatrantiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae).
In 2003, Acehs provincial
government gave villagers the rightto manage natural resources oncommunally held land but ew in ruralareas were aware o the change orhow they might benet rom it.
YRBI helped the people oLampanah map their communal areaand develop a participatory manage-ment plan based on traditional landtenure practices. The plan was thenintegrated into a wider social codebased on the teachings o Islam.
CEPF unds enabled us to attend
training on mapping, documentationprocesses, and acilitating communitydiscussions which made the taskmuch easier, YRBI Program OcerMuhamad Irwan said.
YRBI also helpedestablish an agroorestrybusiness that employsnearly 50 people to date.The business provides
some income but,perhaps more impor-tantly, demonstratesthe benets o usingresources sustainably.
YRBI is now workingwith government
A llager pra or te
ucce o Lapana
count-aed natural
reource anageent
progra.
5
2
1
3
4
7
6
Caucasus
Himalaya
Indo-Burma
Mountains o Southwest China
Philippines
Polynesia-Micronesia
Sundaland
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
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Leal Iitiatie Secres vice r Rral Cities i Chia
T he Center or Biodiversity andIndigenous Knowledge (CBIK)helped communities positively infu-ence plans or large-scale tourism inra-structure in a key area o Chinas ThreeParallel Rivers World Heritage site.
CBIKs assistance to the communi-ties was instrumental in preventingconstruction o a cable car, road, andhotel on the summit o Mt. Qianhu,which would have threatened thehabitat o the Critically EndangeredChinese giant salamander (Andriasdavidianus) and other species.
The goal o the project is to mitigatethreats to alpine orests and wetlandsby bringing unsustainable develop-ment activities, such as uncheckedtourism, under control. The project also
complements a larger CBIKinitiative to promote strongerdiscourse and public participa-tion in development projects.
Three hundred residentso Jisha village attended
workshops hosted by CBIK toequip the communities withknowledge about their basiclegal rights regarding resourceplanning and commercialdevelopment procedure.
CBIK also encourageddiscussion o sustainabletourism alternatives or thearea, and engaged a legalrepresentative to assist in inorminggovernment ocials dealing withthe interrelated issues o resource
new F r Prtecte Areas i the Cacass
T he German government throughthe KW Development Bank,World Wide Fund or Nature, andConservation International (CI) launcheda und to provide urgent, long-termnancial sustainability or protected
basic annual operating costs or protec-ted areas with the highest biodiversityin Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia. Thenational governments will provide theother 50 percent.
The initial commitment o $10 mil-lion, including $3 million rom CIsGlobal Conservation Fund and support
rom CEPF or the rst two years ooperations, will provide a strong basisor the und to achieve its goal o a coreendowment o $50 million.
Claudia Loy, vice president Europe oKW Development Bank, said the undwill serve as a model or developingsimilar sustainable nancing mecha-nisms in the uture.
Since 2004, CEPFs investments inthe Caucasus Hotspot have supportedthe creation and expansion o protectedareas, such as the Arevik SpecialProtected Area and Zangezur Protected
Area in Armenia and the BorjomiNational Park in Georgia.
areas in the Caucasus Hotspot.The Caucasus eatures the greatest
biological diversity o any temperateorest region in the world, yet aces acritical unding shortage. The new undwill provide up to 50 percent o the
governance, community livelihoods,and biodiversity conservation at district,provincial, and national levels.
T area tretcng ro bagdad to te Great Caucau ountan or a uer
zone o Georga borjo-karagaul Natonal Par.
Te delcate wetland around Ja llage are rc
n odert.
2
GREATER kNOWLEDGE,
bETTER mANAGEmENT
The Sichuan Academy o Forestry
carried out surveys to establish
a database on mammals and birds
across 28 nature reserves in Sichuan
province in the Mountains o Southwest
China Hotspot. Inormation rom the
surveys, which revealed 19 new species,
was used to populate a database or the
region and to advise policy and protected
area management across the hotspot.
hOPE FOR ELEPhANTs
WWF Indonesia helped secure an additional
60,000 hectares or the recently declared
38,576-hectare Tesso Nilo National Park
on the island o Sumatra in the Sundaland
Hotspot. The expansion to the park will
provide greater protection or the
remaining population o Endangered
Sumatran elephants (Elephas maximus
sumatranus). Tesso Nilo protects the
largest remaining block o lowland
orest in Sumatra.
FARmERs sECURE FOREsT
Perkumpulan Uma Mentawai, a Sumatran
NGO, helped armers on the island o
Siberut conserve 15,000 hectares o orest
through cultivating rattan instead o sell-
ing land or orest concessions. Local
armers are now not only preserving
biodiversity and the social stability o
the island, located in the Sundaland
Hotspot, but are also beneting eco-
nomically through the ormation o
a cooperative.
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Iasie Alie Species Prra Sws Sees r Isla Restrati
C EPF pioneered a one-year programin partnership with the PacicInvasives Initiative to support demon-stration projects ocused on preventing,controlling, and eradicating invasivealien species in the Polynesia-Micronesia Hotspot.
The program made possible 16 proj-
ects in nine Pacic countries and territor-ies, where invasive species representthe single greatest threat to biodiversity.
The projects addressed threatsposed by Pacic rats (Rattus exulans)and yellow crazy ants (Anoplolepis gra-cilipes), as well as avian malaria and theinvasive plant Merremia peltata, whilealso raising civil society capacity toimplement similar projects in the uture.
On the Fijian island o Viwa, aUniversity o the South Pacic teamemployed and trained local peoplein an awareness, eradication, and
monitoring program that removederal rats and other invasive mammals
that were threateningthe survival o one othe last populationso the EndangeredFijian ground rog(Platymantis vitiana).
The activities alsoresulted in improved
poultry husbandryand local water qualityand reduced theincidence o water-borne diseases.
Craig Morley, theuniversitys projectmanager, characterizedthe Fijian island projectas critical. SaidMorley, Not only isit securing a utureor the Fijian ground rog but it alsosignicantly improves the livelihoods
o the people living on Viwa Island.The Invasive Alien Species Program,
supported by the Australian governmentsRegional Natural Heritage Program, is
the rst phase o the ull CEPF invest-ment strategy or the hotspot.
FY 06 Approved Grants
CAuCASuS HoTSPoT
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:Support civil society eorts to
promote transboundary coopera-tion and improve protected areasystems in fve target corridors
Atance to Etalent oNew Protected Area Zangezurn soutern Arena$174,769Khustup Nature Protection NGO
Atance to Etalento New specall Protected
Natural Area Are nsoutern Arena$156,237Ecotourism Association PublicOrganization
Creaton o te ste oProtected Area o te NortCaucau (Green Corrdor o teNort Caucau)$250,000World Wide Fund or NatureRussia
Deelopent o te Econetscee o te Nort Caucau
on te bae o Analo satellte iage andTopograpcal map$94,950World Wide Fund or NatureRussia
Enancng Coneraton n teWet Leer Caucau TrougTranoundar Cooperaton andEtalng a Tranng Prograon kbA Coneraton$254,705Doga Dernegi
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:Strengthen mechanisms to con-
serve biodiversity o the Caucasushotspot with emphasis on species,
site, and corridor outcomes
Coordnaton and Deelopento Plant Red Lt Aeentor te Caucau boderthotpot$355,350IUCNThe World ConservationUnion
vwa redent prepare to dtrute rat at taton to
elp rd te land o nae pece.
sPECiEs, siTEs, AND CORRiDORs
Working through partner organizations in
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey,
BirdLie International recruited 31 local
conservation heroes to extend its care-
taker network in sites critical or the
conservation o globally threatened
species in the Caucasus Hotspot.
The caretakers provided support or
planning and conservation activities
while also serving as liaisons with
international partners.
ALTERNATivE ENERGy iNiTiATivE
The Nature Conservancy worked with loca
ocials in the Yunnan province o China
to help villagers install 2,000 biogas units
and 200 energy-ecient stoves and
replace wood shingles with cement
ones. Reducing the impact o uel
wood collection in this region o
the Mountains o Southwest China
Hotspot helps to protect the Endang-
ered Yunnan snub-nosed monkey
(Rhinopithecus bieti).
iNDiGENOUs sUsTAiNAbLE
DEvELOPmENT
The Livelihood Enhancement in
Agro-orestry Foundation helped a
small Indigenous Peoples organiza-
tion work with government ocials in
the Philippines Hotspot to develop a co-
management plan based on traditional
practices o land tenure. The plan, which
will promote watershed management as a
means o conserving lowland orest, covers
1,600 hectares o Manobo ancestral lands.
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Deelopent o an ibACaretaer Networ n tePrort Corrdor
$720,433BirdLie International
Gloal maal AeentWder Caucau RegonalWorop$19,910IUCNThe World ConservationUnion
Gloal Reptle AeentWder Caucau RegonalWorop$19,870IUCNThe World ConservationUnion
Reducton o illegal Catc osturgeon te slowdowno te Deand or Caar andsturgeon Fla on te Doetcmaret$39,980World Wide Fund or NatureRussiaThis grant is fnancially admin-
istered by World Wide Fund orNature on behal o TRAFFICEuropeRussia.
ste Networ or brd andWetland: inentor, Protecton,and Count manageent$144,000
World Wide Fund or NatureRussiaThis grant is fnancially admin-istered by World Wide Fund or
Nature on behal o the RussianBird Conservation Union.
sall Grant or GloalConeraton o ApanDert Wtn hotpot$17,000Arizona State UniversityThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering six hotspots; the total grant
amount is $200,000.
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:
Implement models demonstratingsustainable resource use in fvetarget corridors
Equator venture$11,110Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering eight hotspots; the total grant
amount is $99,986.
model Project on sutanaleForetr and introducton oAlternate Energ source or
sang hatat o CEPF Prortspece$45,000Sumgayit Center or EnvironmentalRehabilitation
StrategIc DIrectIon 4:
Increase the awareness and com-mitment o decisionmakers to bio-diversity conservation in fve target
corridors
Pulc Capagn or WeternGreater Caucau bodertProtecton ro Plannngo Olpc Gae n socRegon / Rua
$9,305Environmental Watch on the NorthWest Caucasus
EASTERn HImALAYASREgIon
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:Leverage partnerships amongdonor agencies, civil society, and
government institutions to achievepriority biodiversity conservationoutcomes over the long term
CEPF Coordnaton n te
Eatern halaa$843,360World Wildlie Fund, Inc.
mounTAInS oFSouTHWEST CHInAHoTSPoT
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:Develop and operationalizehotspot-wide monitoring and
evaluation projects
mappng te bodert o tehengduan mountan Ung
htorc Plant Collecton$120,000Arnold Arboretum o HarvardUniversity
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:
Support site-related projectsled by civil society to mitigate
key threats to natural areas andspecies populations
Equator venture$11,110Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering eight hotspots; the total grant
amount is $99,986.
Tradtonal Cnee PantngArt a an Efcent Wa orAdocatng Cna soutwetsnow mountan ConeratonEort$20,000Yunnan Academy o Arts
StrategIc DIrectIon 5:Develop and operationalize a
small grants program ocusingon conservation capacity-buildingand research projects
mtgatng Enronentaland socal Conequence oDeelopent n soutwetCna$107,000Center or Biodiversity andIndigenous Knowledge
sall Grant or GloalConeraton o Apan
Dert Wtn hotpot$33,000Arizona State UniversityThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering six hotspots; the total grant
amount is $200,000.
sall Grant n supportngintegraton o scence andCulture: Tetan sacred LandProtecton and meaurngEecte Coneraton$200,000Conservation International
PHILIPPInES HoTSPoT
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:
Improve linkage between con-servation investments to multiplyand scale up benefts on a corri-
dor scale in Sierra Madre, EasternMindanao, and Palawan
Etalng te Ln etweenbodert and huan Well-beng: Deelopng a sutaleFraewor under PlppneCondton$100,000Conservation International
Natonal Prortzaton steor GEF and Oter Donorbodert Coneraton
inetent n te Plppne$7,500Foundation or Integrative andDevelopment Studies, Inc.
strengtenng ConeratonEort and Land Ue onte Nortern serra madreCorrdor troug te RegonalGeograpc inoratonNetwor$19,662Integrated and SustainableUpland Community DevelopmentFoundation
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:
Build civil societys awareness othe myriad benefts o conservingcorridors o biodiversity
Equator venture$11,109Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering eight hotspots; the total grant
amount is $99,986.
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:Build
capacity o civil society to advocateor better corridor and protectedarea management and against de-
velopment harmul to conservation
Coneraton o te Del CarenWatered and te Forulatono te Watered manageent& Deelopent Plan$10,000Livelihood Enhancement in Agro-orestry Foundation, Inc.
Coneraton o te TaguoWatered Foret Reere andForulaton o te Wateredmanageent and DeelopentPlan$20,000Livelihood Enhancement in Agro-orestry Foundation, Inc.
Expanon o te Aurorameoral Natonal Par$30,000Aurora Resource DevelopmentInitiatives Association, Inc.
Expanon o te mt. hlong-hlong Range ProtectedLandcape$130,000Surigao Economic DevelopmentFoundation, Inc.
FY 06 Approved GrantsAsia a Pacifc continued rom page 13
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iEC and Awarene Capagnor te sutanale Reourcemanageent at te CrtcalWatered o te serramadre Palal-maparangmountan Range$30,000
Friends o the Environment orDevelopment and Sustainability, Inc.
mt. ird-Anglo New ProtectedArea Etalent: AnExaple o Pulc-PratePartnerp$85,151Yakap Kalikasan Tungo saKaunlaran ng Pilipinas, Inc.
socoeconoc andEnronent Deelopent obuca Grande Watered$10,000Socorro Empowered PeoplesCooperative
StrategIc DIrectIon 4:Establish an emergency responsemechanism to help save Critically
Endangered species
integrated Coneraton andProtecton o te PlppneCrocodle (cdylusmidsis) n bg Renamercede (blo) and Aplaa,maconacon, iaela$20,000Northern Sierra Madre NaturalParkDevelopment Foundation, Inc.
statu and Dnac o Trade o
Hsmys Lysis$20,000Western Philippines University,Puerto Princesa Campus
PoLYnESIA-mICRonESIAHoTSPoTAll grants in this hotspot are sup-ported by the Australian govern-ments Regional Natural HeritageProgram through CEPF as part o atargeted invasive species program.
The program is the primary nicheo the CEPF ecosystem prole orthe Polynesia-Micronesia Hotspotexpected to be implemented in ullin FY 07.
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:Prevent, control, and eradicateinvasive species in key biodiver-
sity areas
Aeent o inaePatogen n Relaton to teDtruton o introducedmoqutoe n Tonga: PotentalTreat to bodert$19,900
EcoCare Pacic Trust
Callengng te yellow CrazAnt (apllpis ilips)on Toelau: Deelopent andipleentaton o ControlOpton or inae Ant$16,000Victoria Link Limited
Fealt stud and ProjectPlan to Eradcate Rat roAnt Atoll, Federated state omcronea$20,000Conservation Society o Pohnpei
Fealt stud or temanageent o inae Alenspece on kaangel Atoll, Palau$20,000Palau Conservation Society
Launcng te Pacfcinae Learnng Networ:strengtenng and Connectnginae spece manageentand Deontraton ProjectAcro te Pacfc iland$77,485Secretariat o the Pacic RegionalEnvironment Programme
mantan and Enance Pacfciland Focu o te Gloalinae spece Dataae
$90,781Auckland UniServices Limited
Nuutele and Nuulua iland(Alepata)Frt step to ilandRetoraton and a secureWldle sanctuar or teindependent state o saoa$20,000David Butler Associates Ltd
Pacfc Ant Preenton Progra:ipleentaton Pae i$86,895Secretariat o the PacicCommunity
Poenx iland Coneratonsure and Aeent oRetoraton Fealt: krat$80,000Pacic Expeditions Limited
PP-Cii Coordnaton andTecncal and scentfc supportor RNhP Project$143,697Auckland UniServices Limited
Propect or bologcal Controlo merrea Peltata$10,000Landcare Research New ZealandLTD
Protectng te internatonalliportant seard Colon ovatura iland, Fj$19,264BirdLie International PacicRegional Programme
Protecton o Faaoo romna brd inaon$13,000Taupulega Fakaoo
Protecton o Tangaeo, te en-dec mangaa kngfer(Hly ufllis) roCoon mna (aidhs
isis)$19,472Taporoporoanga Ipukarea Society
Retoraton o Nuutele andNuulua iland (AlepataGroup), saoa$70,235Secretariat o the Pacic RegionalEnvironment Programme
Retoraton o vaanga Atoll$19,800Societe dOrnithologie dePolynesie
Urgent, inter Eploento Coordnaton and Tecncalsupport Ofcer (PP-Cii)
$19,600Auckland UniServices Limited
Te vwa iland RetoratonProject, Fj$122,250University o the South Pacic
SundALAnd HoTSPoTSumatra
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:
Enhance stewardship o orest re-sources at district level and below
Cl socet support orLegalzng spatal PlannngDocuent to sae RauReanng Natural Foret$35,000Jaringan Kerja PenyelamatanHutan Riau
Clan-Leel ConeratonAgreeent, serut ilandindonea$40,000The Rose Foundation orCommunities and the Environment
Count-baedConeraton Acton troug
sutanale Ecotourbune Deelopent nProtected Area$73,000Indonesian Ecotourism Network
serut iland ConeratonProgra: buldng mult-LeelCotent to Coneraton$370,000Conservation International
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:Buildalliances among conservation-
minded groups in civil society andthe private sector
Equator venture$11,110Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering eight hotspots; the total grant
amount is $99,986.
Wet Coat Ecologcallsutanale Tour ProjectWEsT Project suatra$15,000ASEAN Focus Group Pty Ltd
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Local counte
ote or te new
00,000-ectare
reere n te
Atlantc Foret
hotpot.
Lcal Fishere gai Extractie Resere r Atlatic Frest
Acoastal conservation group workedwith government authorities andtraditional shing communities inBrazils northeastern state o Bahia tocreate a new 100,000-hectare reserve.
The Reserva Extrativista Marinhade Canavieiras will help secure asustainable uture or the areas globallythreatened species and the approxi-mately 2,300 amilies who live there.
Home to growing populationso Endangered loggerhead (Carettacaretta) and Olive Ridley (Lepidochelysolivacea) sea turtles, the reserve linksvital marine, mangrove, and coastalorest habitats, orming an important
part o the Atlantic Forest Hotspotsprotected area network.
The Instituto de Conservao deAmbientes
Litorneos daMata Atlntica(Ecotuba)
worked with the communities to helpthem retain access to shing and othernatural resources in the reserve, enab-ling them to preserve their livelihoodswhile also conserving their habitat.
Ecotuba previously received twosmall grants rom the CEPF-supportedInstitutional Strengthening Program inthe Brazilian Atlantic Forest, which is
managed in the Central biodiversityconservation corridor by the Instituto deEstudos Scioambientais do Sul da Bahia.
Support rom CEPF over the lastve years helped us grow as an organi-zation and contributed to solving thesecomplex and interrelated problems orthe benet o the whole ecosystem andthe people who live here, said Anders
Schmidt, a marine
biologist workingwith Ecotuba.
3
Atlantic Forest
Mesoamerica
Tropical Andes
Tumbes-Choc-Magdalena
1
2
3
4
2
1
4
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new City grps Prtect Critical Frest
T he Nicaraguan NGO Asociacin deDesarrollo y Promocin Humana dela Costa Atlntica (ADEPHCA) helped
establish community-based conserva-tion organizations and prepare consen-sus-driven sustainable developmentplans in eight villages in the buer zoneo the Indio-Maz Biological Reserve.
Although the reserve contains one
o the largest tracts o intact lowlandtropical orest in the southern regiono the Mesoamerica Hotspot, the areais immensely poor. Unsustainablenatural resource use has seriouslydegraded the environment, and rapidpopulation growth, colonization, anda lack o government presence havecompounded the problem.
The newly established communitygroups are overcoming these dicul-ties, however, with help rom CEPF aspart o its strategy o supporting
Leal Pieers Establish new Frs Prtecti r Per
E nvironmental law group SociedadPeruana de Derecho Ambiental(SPDA) helped establish a new set olegal instruments or protecting bio-logically important lands in the TropicalAndes Hotspot.
With this new orm o protectedarea, known as a servidumbre,
Peruvian landowners can establishreserves on their own without obtaininggovernment approval. SPDA workedwith 40 ocials rom local and regionalgovernment to drat a total o 10 lawsthat will oer landowners and othersectors o civil society a variety o waysto participate in natural resource andhabitat management.
SPDA helped 15 community groupsand private landowners take advantageo these new laws to create protectedareas in the buer zone o the ReservaNacional Tambopata. They publicized the
laws to more than 5,000 local people
through workshops, eld trips, andmedia campaigns.
We help civil society groups as theywork with local people to complete the
procedures required or private reserve
registration, SPDA Director Pedro Solanosaid. This includes creating manage-ment plans and biodiversity inventories,clariying land rights, and building the
capacity or sustainable arming.
improved management o key protectedareas in the region.
More than 500 people participated inconservation training and environmentaleducation workshops.
As they put their new management
plans into practice, they are makinga better living, said Luciano Garcia,ADEPHCAs technical coordinator on theproject. Theyre also helping to restorethe area by arming sustainably andreplanting thousands o trees.
The community groups also collabor-ated with key stakeholders in the region,including ocials rom NicaraguasMinistry o the Environment and NaturalResources, to ensure their plans areintegrated with land-use planning at theregional and national level.
Te Ara de malaga pa le n a uer zone o te Reera Naconal Taopata n Peru.
more tan 0 local cldren attended
enronental educaton progra near
te indo-maz bologcal Reere.
PROTECTiNG WATERshEDs
Instituto Rede Brasileira Agrofor-
estal established eight stream bank
restoration pilot projects and three
nurseries around Brazils Trs Picos
State Park. The project engaged pri-
vate landowners and community groups
in restoring landscape connectivity in
the Atlantic Forest Hotspot. Trs Picos,
which contains key watersheds, lies in an
area that provides critical ecosystem ser-
vices to major urban centers.
GREEN GOLDTm PiLOT UNDER WAy
Conservation NGO Corporacin Oro Verde
established 14 pilot orest gardens to
generate sustainable income and restore
areas degraded by mechanized mining
in critical areas o the Colombian por-
tion o the Choc-Manab biodiversity
conservation corridor in the Tumbes-
Choc-Magdalena Hotspot. Almost
200 Aro-Colombian mining amilies
signed up under the initiative to
produce sustainably mined gold.
CONsERvATiON: ThEORy AND PRACTiCE
Fundacin Agro Ecolgica Cotobrusea ran
a combined reorestation and environmen-
tal education program to oster connectiv-
ity along the Costa RicaPanam border
region o La Amistad International Park.
The program helped local armers plant
more than 50,000 trees o 67 native
species and reached at least 300
students in 12 schools across both
countries in the southern region o
the Mesoamerica Hotspot.
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Aw City Secres Sstaiable Ftre r Threatee Reseres
T he Unidad Indgena del PuebloAw (UNIPA) helped the AwIndigenous Peoples develop a man-agement plan or 220,000 hect-ares o their territory in Colombia.
UNIPA, an umbrella organizationor Aw Indigenous Peoples in thecountry, also assisted in getting
municipal authorities to adopt the planand incorporate it into regional land-usestrategies. The new plan, covering24 indigenous reserves, is based ontraditional practices o land tenure.
The Aw territory is located in theheart o the Choc-Manabi biodiversityconservation corridor, the priority areaor CEPF investments in the Tumbes-Choc-Magdalena Hotspot.
Civil confict and human migra-tion pressures have degraded thehotspot, where only 24 percent othe original vegetation remains in
pristine condition. Compounding the
sustainable, we can help them toconserve their lands by helping themconserve their culture, said EduardoAriza, UNIPAs project manager andanthropological adviser.
UNIPAs project included a compre-hensive cultural andhistorical survey o the
reserves and the rstscientic survey othe region, combiningdetailed mapping, abiological assessment,and ecosystem analysis.
problem, the 15,000 Aw peopleare gradually losing their traditionalknowledge and skills as they integratemore closely with modern society.
As many o the Aws traditionalbelies and practices are inherently
A new anageent plan
wll elp Aw people le
utanal n Coloan
llage le saallo.
FY 06 Approved Grants
ATLAnTIC FoRESTHoTSPoT
Brazil
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:Stimulate landscape managementinitiatives led by civil society in
Central and Serra do Mar corridors
bodert Coneraton oForet Fragent n te FernoDa APA$100,000Fundao de Desenvolvimentoda Pesquisa, Departamento deBiologia Geral
bolog and Coneraton obroela o te Atlantc Foret
$182,847Fundao Botnica Margaret Mee
Deene o Water andProtecton o Le: Tre Pcostate Par$119,990Tereviva Associao De FomentoTurstico E DesenvolvimentoSustentvel
Te Golden-headed LonTaarn Connecton$60,000Smithsonian Institution
hug te Paripleentaton o
te buer Zone oDcoer NatonalPar$35,000Terra Viva Centro deDesenvolvimentoAgroecolgico do ExtremoSul da Bahia
ipleentaton o te Ncleode Gentca Aplcada Conerao da boderdadeda mata Atlntca$200,000Fundao Ceciliano Abel deAlmeida
9
imPROvED PARk mANAGEmENT
ParksWatch, an NGO that monitors pro-
tected areas, created park proles on
the basis o thorough evaluations o the
seven Bolivian protected areas o the
Vilcabamba-Ambor biodiversity con-
servation corridor in the Tropical Andes
Hotspot. IUCN and other national and
international stakeholders in the reg-
ion are using the results o the pro-
les to help improve management
o these under-resourced reserves.
CONNECTiNG PRivATE REsERvEs
Corporacin Serraniagua helped create
a 2,500-hectare network o 60 private
reserves, improving connectivity between
the key ecosystems o the Parque Nacio-
nal Natural Tatam and the Serrana de
los Paraguas. Participating landowners
introduced sustainable agricultural
practices that will preserve threat-
ened populations o endemic species
in this part o the Tumbes-Choc-
Magdalena Hotspot.
PROTECTiNG ThE PARk
The Wildlie Conservation Society
worked with local groups and
Guatemalas National Council or
Protected Areas to improve the man-
agement plan or the 42,000-hectare
Laguna del Tigre National Park in the
northern region o the Mesoamerica
Hotspot. As a result, illegal settlements
and wildlie trade dropped signicantly
and no orest res swept through the park
in the dry season.
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FY 06 Approved GrantsLati Aerica continued rom page 19
Plannng Our Landcape:Enronental EducatonProgra or te serra Do mar
Corrdor$149,991Associao Super Eco deIntegrao Ambiental eDesenvolvimento da Criana
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:
Improve management o existingand uture public protected areasthrough targeted civil society eorts
brazlan World hertagebodert Progra (DcoerCoat Atlantc Foret Reere)$421,012United Nations Foundation
Coatal Enronent o teAtlantc ForetPae $31,998Instituto de Conservao deAmbientes Litorneos da MataAtlntica
Count Awarene oTreatened Aquatc speceAong te Rer iland o teParaa do sul Rer$20,000Associao dos Pescadores eAmigos do Rio Paraiba do Sul
Creaton and ipleentaton oProtected Area n te Central
Corrdor o te Atlantc Foret,wt Epa on te serra doConduru state Par$30,000Instituto Floresta Viva
huntng Eect on brd andmaal Populaton n teReera bolgca do Tngu$8,766Grupo de Deesa da Naturaleza
strengtenng Enorceento Enronental Law n teAtlantc Foret o te CentralCorrdor, brazl$75,000
Instituto de Estudos Scio-Ambientais do Sul da Bahia
supportng te ipleentatono moac n Protected Area nte serra do mar Corrdor$100,000Instituto Amigos da Reserva daBiosera da Mata Atlantica
vacular Plant Ende n teAtlantc Foret boe$149,924Fundao de Desenvolvimentoda Pesquisa, Departamento deBiologia Geral
mESoAmERICA HoTSPoTNorthern Mesoamerica
StrategIc DIrectIon 1:Fostercivil society participation in regionaldecisionmaking on select poli-cies and investments to promote
the conservation and sustainabledevelopment o the Selva Mayaand the Selva Zoque and Chiapas/
Guatemala Highlands corridors
Defnng and montorngConeraton Outcoen Nortern and souternmeoaerca$162,323Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering both Northern and Southern
Mesoamerica; the total grant amountis $324,647.
Degn o Coneratonincente mecan orGuateala$50,380Fundacin para la Conservacin delos Recursos Naturales y Ambienteen Guatemala
Equator venture$11,109Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering eight hotspots; the total grant
amount is $99,986.
strategc Leaderp orOutcoe Aceeent nNortern meoaerca$608,140Conservation International
Trd internatonal meetng onEnronental Goernance orsutanale Deelopent n tePetn$19,900Facultad Latino Americana deCiencias Sociales
StrategIc DIrectIon 2:
Collaborate with other donor-
unded projects to acilitate andoperationalize successul con-servation activities in Northern
Mesoamericas eight most impor-tant key biodiversity areas
bard Tapr ConeratonWorop$5,000The Houston Zoo, Inc.This is a multiregional grant covering
Northern and Southern Mesoamerica;
the total grant amount is $10,000.
Conoldaton o CEPFProtected Area andConeraton Corrdor Portolo
n meoaerca$162,360Conservation InternationalThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering Northern and Southern
Mesoamerica; the total grant amount
is $237,360.
Etalent and intalmanageent support orTree New Protected Area nCucuatane ke bodertArea n Guateala$90,500Fundacin para el Ecodesarrollo yla Conservacin
Excangng CEPF GranteeExperence and LeonLearned n Protected Areamanageent n Norternmeoaerca at temeoaercan Protected AreaCongre ii$19,600Conservation International
Foterng staeolderCoordnaton n te sela maatroug Ecoregonal Plannngand Allance buldng$106,600The Nature Conservancy
identng iportant brdArea n belze and Guateala$19,900BirdLie International
StrategIc DIrectIon 3:Support priority conservation ac-
tions in three priority key biodiver-sity areas
bladen Nature ReereProtecton Progra$19,932Belize Foundation or Research andEnvironmental Education
Deelopng an integratedstrateg and Project Plan toConere te Cquul/maa
mountan ke bodert Arean belze$10,321Friends or Conservation andDevelopment
sutanale Fnancng obodert Coneratonn serra de la mnabopere Reere troug teEtalent o motagua/Polocc Water Fund$364,618Fundacin Deensores de laNaturaleza
StrategIc DIrectIon 4:
Support eorts to prevent the ex-tinction o Northern Mesoamericas106 Critically Endangered species
Conoldaton o a strategto Protect Gloall CrtcallEndangered spece nNortern meoaerca$197,664Conservation International
Preparaton o a strateg toConere Crtcall Endangeredspece n Norternmeoaerca$42,902Escuela Agrcola Panamericana,
Zamorano
sall Grant or GloalConeraton o ApanDert Wtn hotpot$36,000Arizona State UniversityThis is a multiregional project cov-
ering six hotspots; the total grant
amount is $200,000.
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REvEnuE
Funds received $16,808,537
Pledges receivable due as o June 30, 2006 (4,308,537)Interest earned 445,296
Total reenue 2,9,296
EXPEnSES And CommITTEd FundIng
Grants by unding region
Arica
Cape Floristic Region $428,790
Eastern Arc Mountains & Coastal Forests o Tanzania & Kenya 1,799,022
Guinean Forests o West Arica 491,365
Madagascar and Indian Ocean Islands 350,712
Succulent Karoo 2,123,019
Asia
Caucasus 2,312,619
Eastern Himalayas Region 843,360
Mountains o Southwest China 503,361
Philippines 587,971
Sundaland 363,403
Latin America
Atlantic Forest 1,684,528
Mesoamerica (Northern) 1,201,630
Mesoamerica (Southern) 807,299
Tropical Andes 1,274,654
Tumbes-Choc-Magdalena 460,341
Total grant ,22,0
Ecosystem profle preparation 168,932
External evaluation 344,653
Business development, grantmaking, monitoring and evaluation, and
knowledge management 3,067,474
Total ,,09
Total expene ,,*
Excess o revenue over expenses (5,867,837)
Fund balance as o June 30, 2005 15,096,111
FUND bALANCE AT ThE END OF ThE PERiOD 9,22,2
FUND bALANCE AT ThE END OF ThE PERiOD CONsisTED OF
Cash 10,885,700
Pledges receivable 18,913,283
Grants payable (balance due on awarded grants) (20,570,710)
Fund balance as o June 30, 2006 9,228,273
Stateet Actiities, FY 06
* The tota l grantexpenses include newgrants approved inFY 06 as well asnancial amendmentsto grants committed inprevious years.
* CEPF also committed$1 million in thePolynesia-MicronesiaHotspot with supportrom the Australian gov-ernments RegionalNatural HeritageProgram.
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Reial
Ipleetati
Tea Fcal Pits
ATLANTIC FORESTiana Laa
Conservao Internacional do Brasil
CAPE FLORISTIC REGIONTreor sandwt
Cape Coordination Unit, South AricanNational Biodiversity Institute
CAUCASUSNugzar Zazanal
WWF Caucasus Programme Oce
EASTERN ARC MOUNTAINS ANDCOASTAL FORESTS OF TANZANIAAND KENYAian Gordon
International Centre o Insect
Physiology and Ecology
EASTERN HIMALAYASsarala kalng
WWF Nepal Program
MESOAMERICA (Northern)Carlo Rodrguez
Conservation International, Mexico andCentral America Center or BiodiversityConservation
MESOAMERICA (Southern)manuel Rarez
Conservation International, Mexico and
Central America Center or BiodiversityConservation
MOUNTAINS OF SOUTHWESTCHINAXue Wang
Conservation InternationalChinaProgram
THE PHILIPPINESmcael Atrgeno
Conservation InternationalPhilippines
SUCCULENT KAROODapne hartne
Succulent Karoo EcosystemProgramme, South Arican NationalBiodiversity Institute
SUNDALANDPuraar surjad
Conservation InternationalIndonesia
TUMBES-CHOC-MAGDALENAColombiaAngela Andrade
Conservation InternationalColombia
EcuadorJae Ceallo
Conservation InternationalEcuador
Grantee Partners (as o June 30, 2006)
AriBugs CCArica Conservation FundArica Environmental News ServiceArican Butterfy Research InstituteArique Nature InternationalAGORO Centre or Intercultural Learning
and Talent DevelopmentAgricultural Research Council, Range &
Forage InstituteAlianza para la Conservacin y elDesarrollo
Amazon Conservation AssociationAmerican Bird ConservancyAmigos del Museo de Historia Natural
Noel Kemp MercadoAnglia Ruskin UniversityAngweng Reincarnated BuddhaArizona State UniversityArnold Arboretum o Harvard UniversityASEAN Focus Group Pty LtdAsociacin Comercial y Agropecuaria de
Chiriqu GrandeAsociacin de Amigos y Vecinos de la
Costa y la NaturalezaAsociacin de Desarrollo y Promocin
Humana de la Costa AtlnticaAsociacin de Organizaciones del
Corredor Biolgico Talamanca CaribeAsociacin de Practicantes de Medicina
Tradicional NasoAsociacin de Proesionales y Tcnicos
Ngbe BugleAsociacin de Turismo de Tres ColinasAsociacin Ecuatoriana de EcoturismoAsociacin IXACAVAA de Desarrollo e
Inormacin IndgenaAsociacin Meralvis
Asociacin Nacional para la Conservacinde la NaturalezaAsociacin para la Conservacin,
Investigacin de la Biodiversidad yel Desarrollo Sustentable
Asociacin Peruana para la Conservacinde la Naturaleza
Asociacin Red Colombiana de ReservasNaturales de la Sociedad Civil
Asociacin Trpico Verde/ParksWatchGuatemala
Associao Dos Pescadores E Amigos DoRio Paraiba Do Sul
Associao dos Proprietrios de ReservasParticulares do Estado da Bahia
Associao Flora BrasilAssociao Mico-Leo-DouradoAssociao Super Eco de Integrao
Ambiental e Desenvolvimentoda Criana
Association FanambyAssociation o Environmental Lawyers
o LiberiaAssociation pour la Gestion Intgre et
Durable de lEnvironnementAuckland UniServices LimitedAurora Resource Development Initiatives
Association, Inc.Baimaxueshan National Nature Reserve
Management Oce
Baviaans ConservancyBeijing Shanmo InvestmentConsultancy Co.
Belize Foundation or Research andEnvironmental Education
BirdLie InternationalBirdLie International Pacic Regional
ProgrammeBlueelds Indian & Caribbean UniversityBotanical Society o South AricaBrown Hyena Research ProjectCagayan Valley Partners in People
DevelopmentCape West Coast Biosphere Reserve
Company
CapeNature (ormerly Western CapeNature Conservation Board)
CARE BoliviaCARE InternationalCecchi, Susie LeeCenter or Biodiversity and Indigenous
KnowledgeCenter or Russian Nature ConservationCentral de Pueblos Indigenas de La PazCentral Mindanao UniversityCentre Ecologique de LibanonaCentre National des Sciences Halieutiques
de BoussouraCentro Agronmico Tropical de
Investigacin y EnseanzaCentro Cientco TropicalCentro de Estudios y Accin Social
PanameoCentro para la Investigacin en
Sistemas Sostenibles de ProduccinAgropecuaria
Chen, YoupingChengdu Research Base o Giant Panda
Breeding CenterChina Youth DailyGreen IslandThe Chinese Academy o SciencesCOLUFIFA-GUINEEColville, Jonathan
As o June 30, 2006, CEPF has supportedmore than 900 NGOs, community groups,and other civil society partners in eortsto conserve the hotspots. Among thegrantees are individuals and organizationsthat received unding directly through tar-geted regranting programs and initiativessupported by CEPF.
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Comitato Internazionale per lo Sviluppodei Popoli
Concerned Environmentalists or theEnhancement o Biodiversity
Conservao Internacional do BrasilConservation InternationalConservation Management Ltd.Conservation Management ServicesConservation Society o PohnpeiConservation Strategy FundConserve Arica FoundationConstruction Planning Oce o Shangri-la
Alpine Botanic GardenCooperativa do Produtores Orgnicos do
Sul da BahiaCornell UniversityCorporacin Oro Verde
Corporacin para la Investigacin,Capacitacin y Apoyo Tcnico parael Manejo Sustentable de losEcosistemas Tropicales
Corporacin SerraniaguaCounterpart InternationalCowling, Shirley PierceCrescente FrtilProjetos Ambientais
Culturais e de ComunicaoDavid Butler Associates LtdDesmet, PhilipDeutsches PrimatenzentrumDevelopment Bank o Southern Arica
LimitedDjogo, AntoniusDoga DernegiDuineveld Coastal AssociationDurban Botanic GardensEast Arica Natural History SocietyEast Arican Wild Lie SocietyEcoArica Environmental ConsultantsEcoCare Pacic TrustEco-Security Task Force o China Council
or International Cooperation onEnvironment and Development
Ecotourism Association PublicOrganization
Ehardt, Carolyn L.Environmental Foundation or Arica
Environmental Foundation or AricaSierra LeoneEnvironmental Law InstituteEnvironmental Legal Assistance
Center, Inc.Environmental Monitoring GroupEnvironmental Volunteer Association o
Sichuan UniversityEnvironmental Watch on the North West
CaucasusEnviroScienceEquals Three CommunicationsEscuela Agrcola Panamericana, Zamorano
Facultad Latino Americana de CienciasSociales
Fan, EnyuanFarmers Associated to Conserve the
EnvironmentFauna & Flora InternationalFederacin de Centros Aw del EcuadorFederacin Nacional de Caeteros de
Colombia, Comit Departamental deCaeteros del Valle del Cauca
The Field Museum o Natural HistoryFirst Philippine Conservation, Inc.Flower Valley Conservation TrustFondo Ambiental NacionalFondo de las Americas del PerFopspeen Live ArtFoundation or Integrative and
Development Studies, IncFriends or Conservation andDevelopment
Friends o Die OogFriends o Nature, ChinaFriends o the Environment or
Development and Sustainability, Inc.Friends o Tokai ForestFundao Biodiversitas para Conservao
da Diversidade BiolgicaFundao Botnica Margaret MeeFundao Ceciliano Abel de AlmeidaFundao de Desenvolvimento da
Pesquisa, Departamento deBiologia Geral
Fundacin Agro Ecolgica CotobruseaCosta Rica
Fundacin AltropicoFundacin Amigos de la NaturalezaFundacin Amigos del Ro San JuanFundacin Centro de Investigaciones del
PacicoFundacin Corcovado Lon Willing
Ramsey Jr.Fundacin de Deensa EcolgicaFundacin de Parques NacionalesFundacin Deensores de la NaturalezaFundacin Ecotrpico ColombiaFundacin Ecuatoriana de Estudios
EcolgicosFundacin Jatun SachaFundacin NeotropicaFundacin para el Desarrollo Acadmico
de la Universidad NacionalFundacin para el Desarrollo AgrarioFundacin para el Desarrollo de la
EcologaFundacin para el Desarrollo Integral del
Corregimiento de Cerro PuntaFundacin para el Desarrollo SostenibleFundacin Para el Desarrollo Sostenible
de Panam
Fundacin para el Ecodesarrollo y laConservacin
Fundacin para la Conservacin de losRecursos Naturales y Ambiente enGuatemala
Fundacin para la Investigacin yConservacin ProAves
Fundacin Proteccin y Uso Sostenibledel Medio Ambiente
Fundacin Rainorest RescueFundacin San Marcos para el Desarrollo
de la Ciencia y la CulturaFundacin Universidad NacionalFynbos ForumGarden Route Botanical Garden TrustGarden Route Enviro ServicesGeo Terra Image (Pty) LtdGhana Heritage Conservation TrustGhana Wildlie SocietyGhent UniversityGlobal Environmental InstituteGlobal Village BeijingGrand Gedeh Community Servant
AssociationGreen Earth Volunteers
Green Law Institute or ActionGreen Student Organizations SocietyGreen WatershedGreenomics IndonesiaGrupo de Deesa da NaturalezaGrupo de Trabajo sobre Certicacin
Forestal Voluntaria en EcuadorGrupo Social Fondo Ecuatoriano
Populorum ProgressioGuinee-EcologieHaribon Foundation or the Conservation
o Natural ResourcesHelme, NickLHomme et lEnvironnement
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The Houston Zoo, Inc.The Human FootprintIndigo Development and ChangeIndonesian Ecotourism NetworkInstitute or Tropical Ecology and
ConservationInstituto Amigos da Reserva da Biosera
da Mata AtlanticaInstituto BioAtlnticaInstituto CidadeInstituto de Conservao de Ambientes
Litorneos da Mata AtlnticaInstituto de Estudos Scio-Ambientais do
Sul da BahiaInstituto de Pesquisa da Mata AtlnticaInstituto de Pesquisas e Conservao da
Biodiversidade dos Biomas BrasileirosInstituto Floresta VivaInstituto Machu PicchuInstituto Nacional de BiodiversidadInstituto para la Conservacin y la
Investigacin de la BiodiversidadInstituto Rede Brasileira AgroforestalInstituto TerraIntegrated and Sustainable Upland
Community Development FoundationInternational Center or JournalistsInternational Centre o Insect Physiology
and EcologyInternational Fund or Animal WelareInternational Fund or Chinas EnvironmentInternational Rhino FoundationIUCN-The World Conservation UnionJaringan Kerja Penyelamatan Hutan RiauJones, Trevor P.de Jong, YvonneJongowe Environmental Management
AssociationJordaan, L. H.
JPFirstKasigau Conservation TrustKatala Foundation, Inc.Kawagebo Culture SocietyKaya Kinondo Conservation and
Development Group and Coastal ForestConservation Unit
Kaya Muhaka Forest ConservationOrganization
Khustup Nature Protection NGOKomunitas Konservasi Indonesia WARSIKuapa Kokoo Farmers UnionLandcare Research New Zealand LTDLandmark FoundationThe Leatherback TrustLembaga Swadaya Masyarakat Gerakan
Masyarakat Madina Pemantau Apatur
NegaraLembaga Swadaya MasyarakatHarapan Madina
Li, XiaohongLivelihood Enhancement in
Agro-orestry Foundation, Inc.Living Earth FoundationMabuwani Women GroupMabuwaya Foundation, Inc.Masibambane Multi-Purpose Community
CentreMATEZAMeasey, G. JohnMiami UniversityMindanao Environment Forum
MiriamPublic Education and AwarenessCampaign or the Environment
Missouri Botanical GardenModelo de Comunidad Ecolgica
Los VallesMlleriana: Sociedade Fritz Mller de
Cincias NaturaisMuseo Tridentino di Scienze NaturaliNACLONamib Desert Environmental
Education TrustNamibia Nature FoundationNamprocon CCNational Fish and Wildlie Foundation
National Museums o KenyaThe Nature ConservancyNatures Valley TrustNewmark, William D.NGO Arboretum dAntsokayNorthern Sierra Madre Natural Park
Development Foundation, Inc.Organizacin para el Desarrollo Sostenible
del Pueblo NasoPacic Expeditions LimitedPalau Conservation SocietyPalawan Conservation CorpsParksWatchParren, Marcus
PeaceWorkPeng, JitaiThe Peregrine FundPerkumpulan Uma MentawaiPhilippine Business or Social ProgressPhilippine Eagle Conservation Program
Foundation, Inc.ProbiomaProcess Luzon Association, Inc.Rainorest AllianceThe Rainorest Foundation, UKRareRawsonville Wine & TourismRede Nacional de Combate ao Trco de
Animais SilvestresRegalis Environmental Services CCRiau Mandiri
The Rose Foundation or Communitiesand the EnvironmentRoyal Botanic Gardens KewSanbona Game Reserve Pty LtdSano y SalvoSave My Future FoundationSchning, CasparSecretariat o the Pacic CommunitySecretariat o the Pacic Regional
Environment ProgrammeSekretariat Kerjasama Pelestarian Hutan
IndonesiaSeleksi Penerimaan Mahasiswa BaruSelva Reps S.A.C.Sichuan Academy o Forestry
Liu ShaoyingSichuan Alpine Ecology Study CentreSichuan Greenriver Environmental
AssociationSichuan Normal UniversitySichuan Wildlie Resource Survey and
Conservation Management StationSkills and Agriculture Development
Services, Inc.Smithsonian InstitutionSnowland Great River Environmental
Protection AssociationSociedad Peruana de Derecho AmbientalSociedade de Estudos dos Ecossistemas
e Desenvolvimento Sustentvel da BahiaSociete dOrnithologie de PolynesieThe Society or Environmental ExplorationSociety or the Conservation o Nature
o LiberiaSocorro Empowered Peoples CooperativeSOS Pro Mata AtlnticaSOS-FORETSSouth Arican National Biodiversity
InstituteSouth Arican National ParksSouth Arican Protea Producers and
Exporters Association
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The South Arican Wine & BrandyCompany
Southwest Forestry CollegeSumgayit Center or Environmental
RehabilitationSurigao Economic Development
Foundation, Inc.Sutherland Unemployment ForumTanzania Forest Conservation GroupTaporoporoanga Ipukarea SocietyTaupulega FakaooTereviva Associao De Fomento Turstico
E Desenvolvimento SustentvelTerra Viva Centro de Desenvolvimento
Agroecolgico do Extremo Sul da BahiaTRAFFIC InternationalTRPICO
Unidad Indgena del Pueblo AwUnited Nations FoundationUniversidad de las Regiones Autnomas
de la Costa Caribe NicaragenseUniversidad de las Regiones Autnomas
de la Costa Caribe Nicaragense,Recinto de BlueeldsRaas
Universitas Syiah KualaUniversity o CalgaryUniversity o Cape TownUniversity o CopenhagenUniversity o Dar es SalaamUniversity o FloridaUniversity o Louisiana at MonroeUniversity o PretoriaUniversity o StellenboschUniversity o the South PacicUniversity o VermontUniversity o Western Ontario
University o YorkValor NaturalVictoria Link LimitedWakuluzu: Friends o the Colobus
Trust Ltd.Wang, NanWanglang Nature ReserveWest Chester UniversityWestern Baviaanskloo InitiativeWestern Cape Animal Production
Research TrustWestern Cape International Youth FestivalWestern Philippines University Puerto
Princesa CampusWild Chimpanzee FoundationWildAidWilderness Action Group
Wilderness FoundationWildlie and Environment Society oSouth Arica
Wildlie Conservation SocietyWildlie Conservation Society o TanzaniaWorld Pheasant AssociationWorld Wide Fund or NatureWorld Wide Fund or NatureIndonesiaWorld Wide Fund or NatureRussiaWorld Wide Fund or Nature
South AricaWorld Wildlie Fund, Inc.The Wupperthal ConservancyYakap Kalikasan Tungo sa Kaunlaran ng
Pilipinas, Inc.Yayasan Alam SumateraYayasan Bina Ketrampilan DesaYayasan Biota LestariYayasan Cipta Citra Lestari Indonesia
Yayasan Citra MandiriYayasan Ekologi Konservasi
Nanggroe AcehYayasan Ekowisata AcehYayasan KaliptraYayasan Perlindungan Lingkungan Hidup
dan Pelestarian AlamYayasan Rumpun Bambu IndonesiaYayasan Sikap Tulus Untuk SesamaYele Nature Reserve Management Oce,
SichuanYouth Volunteers Association o Yunnan
UniversityYunnan Academy o ArtsYunnan Normal UniversityZeren, PingcuoZhao, Yao
Zoological Society o Philadelphia
Parters Spprte byRerati Prras
Adams, AgnesAdams, RobinAdams, TrevorAdonis, AndriesArica, HenryAgoo, Esperanza Maribel G.Alas IndonesiaAlianza para las reas Silvestres (ALAS)Allan, TamrynAlmeida, Arnio SilvaAmerican College o Traditional Chinese
MedicineAmorim, ValmorAno & Vano Union NGOThe Antique Outdoors, Inc.Appel, AllistonAppel, BeverlyAppels, AndrewAquamedia FundArmenian National Academy o Sciences,
Institute o ZoologyArmenian Tourism AssociationAshoka Trust or Research in Ecology and
the EnvironmentAssis, DarncioAssociao Baiana para Conservao dos
Recursos NaturaisAssociao Civil Muriqui de
Desenvolvimento SustentvelAssociao Comunitria AlternativaAssociao de Apoio Escola Jos
Martins da CostaAssociao de Certicao de Produtos
Orgnicos do Esprito SantoAssociao de Cultura e Educao
Ambiental
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Associao de Deesa da Lagoa deAraruama
Associao de Deesa do Meio AmbienteAssociao de Estudos Costeiros e
Marinhos dos AbrolhosAssociao de Fomento Turstico e
Desenvolvimento SustentvelAssociao de Moradores do Marimbu,
Santo Antnio e Rio NegroAssociao de Programas em Tecnologias
AlternativasAssociao de Proprietrios de Reservas
Particulares da BahiaAssociao de Proprietrios em Reserva
IbirapitangaAssociao de Proteo Ambiental do
Vale e da Serra das Garcias
Associao de RPPNs e outras ReservasPrivadas de Minas GeraisAssociao dos Agricultores Familiares de
Alto Santa Maria, Rio Lamego e Barrado Rio Claro
Associao dos Amigos do Rio Piraqu-Au em Deesa da Natureza e do MeioAmbiente
Associao dos Pequenos ProdutoresRurais de Aruanda
Associao para a Conservao das Avesdo Brasil
Associao Pedaggica Dend da SerraAssociao pelo Meio Ambiente de Juiz
de ForaAssociao Plantas do NordesteAssociao pr-Melhoramento Ambiental
da regio do CaparaAssociao Protetora da Inncia Provncia
ParanAssociao Vila-velhense de Proteo
AmbientalAssociation Club Vintsy AnkombaAssociation des ootballeurs
dAntsahampanoAssociation Fikambananny Tantsaha
Miara-Mizotra AntsahampanoAssociation Fikambanana Miaro Kijaha sy
AlanI Bobankora
Association o Friends o NatureTskhratskharoAssociation o Journalists and the SocietyAssociation o Natural Reserves and
National Parks o the CaucasusAssociation o Social Economic ResearchAugustus, DelriciaAus Community Conservation TrustAutonomous Noncommercial Organization
Institute o Environmental Economicsand Nature Resources Account (Cadastr)
Azerbaijan Center or BiodiversityAzerbaijan Society o Zoologists
Badan Perencanaan PembangunanDaerah, Lampung Barat
Badar, Marama de MelloBailey, RogerBaima Snow Mountain Nature ReserveBaiposhan Nature ReserveBarboza, Enoc dos ReisBarnett, MandyBarodien, GlynnisBecker, Vitor OsmarBehr, WalterBekker, KarinBenetti, AmilcarBenny, JohnBerbert, HenriqueBesten, SheilaThe Bigger Picture TV Production CC
Binhi Sang Kauswagan Foundation, Inc.Biodiversity and Landscape ConservationUnion
BioResource Conservation Trust orthe Philippines, Inc.
Blanchard, RyanBlumeris, HiltonBooth, PamBooyse, Pieter EricBooysen, DennisBotha, PierreBoyana, Nondumiso FaithBrink, WilliamBurger, ElzanneBurrows, Hendrik Jakobus
Burrows, JannieButhelezi, SiyabongaCanongia, Paulo Marcio GoulartCape Leopard TrustCardoso, Luis Nelson FariaCarlse, Alberto FrederickCarlse, Carol LeighCarolus, BereniceCaspian Institute o Biological Resources,
Dagestan Scientic Centre, RussianAcademy o Sciences
Castro, Aristides de OliveiraCaucasian Eco-house Association o
Scientists and Ecologists
Caucasian Endemics Research CentreCaucasus Center or Ethological ResearchCaucasus Wild Plants Certication CentreCebu Biodiversity Conservation
Foundation, Inc.Centre or Environmental EducationCentre or Protection o Natural and
Cultural HeritageCentro Comunitrio Rural da ColinaCentro de Desenvolvimento
Agroecolgico do Extremo Sul da BahiaTerra Viva
Centro de Desenvolvimento SustentvelGuau-Vir
Centro de Estudos e Pesquisas parao Desenvolvimento do Extremo Sulda Bahia
Centro de Estudos Ecolgicos e EducaoAmbiental
Centro de Estudos para Conservaoda Natureza
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars othe University o Oxord
Charitable Fund or Protection o Naturaland Cultural Value in the NatureReserves o Armenia
Chengdu Bird Watching SocietyChengdu Insititute o BiologyChina Society o Territory EconomicsChina West Normal UniversityCity o Cape Town
Clanwilliam News AgencyCleaver, GailCoelho, Joo LopesCollge dEnseignement Gnral DarainaColler, TerenceCommunity Aid or Rehabilitation and
DevelopmentCommunity Development Resource
AssociationConrado, Maria da Conceio CarvalhoCorrea, Angelo Pio Mendes Jr.Crouse, AnnelizeCumming, TraceyCupido, ChristopherDaengding Nature ReserveDamons, MoniqueDaries, JoanDAUNDavids, DeonDavids, JohnDavies, SianDe Jaar, JanDe Kock, GaryDe Leon, Josena L.Delahunt, Kerry JoDeyang Association o Wildlie
ConservationDimalibot-Concepcion, Judeline M.Dimas, Jennier C.
Dingani, JulyDriver, AmandaDu Toit, DominiqueEbrahim, IsmailEcology and Conservation o Birds NGOEcolur NGOEcopulse AssociationEden MunicipalityEdu VenturesEduarte, Medaro Medel P.Egan, LorraineEland, SamuelEldridge, Anne ClaireEllman, Roleen
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Environmental Foundation InternationalErnstzen, RoyEsau, Jacobus Phillipus (Phillip)Escola Superior So Francisco de AssisEspanola, Carmela P.Euro Caucasian Ecological Initiative
Public UnionEuropean Herpetological SocietyFloris, MorrisFollmann, Eugnio VictorFono-Rozani, Thisiwe GloryFontes, Flavio DinizFoot, EricaFortuin, AdrianFoster, JodieFray, JustineFredericks, Marthinus
Friends o NatureFullard, DonovanFund or Biodiversity Conservation o
Armenian HighlandFundao Cearense de Pesquisa e CulturaFundao de Amparo a Pesquisa e
Extenso UniversitriaFundao de Apoio ao Desenvolvimento
da Universidade Federal dePernambuco
Fundao de Apoio da UniversidadeFederal do Rio Grande do Sul
Fundao de Apoio e desenvolvimento doEnsino, Pesquisa e Extenso
Fundao de Apoio Institucionalao Desenvolvimento Cientco eTecnolgico
Fundao de Desenvolvimento daPesquisa
Fundao MatutuFundao ZooBotnica do Rio Grande do
SulGansu Forestry Technological CollegeGarcia, Harvey John D.Garman, JoyGaruda SylvaGeland, ChristabelGeng, DongGeorgian Center or the Conservation o
Wildlie, GCCWGexigou Nature ReserveGobierno Municipal del Cantn San
Lorenzo del PailnGoethe-Institute TbilisiGoldman, TanyaGomes, Fernando LessaGomes, Joo Batista de OliveiraGordon, Peter JuanGovender, MishelleGreen KhampaGrootbos Green Futures FoundationGrootendorst, PetronellaGrupo Ambiental Natureza Bela
Grupo Brasil VerdeGrupo de Agricultura Ecolgica KapixawaGrupo de Educao e Preservao
Ambiental de PiracaiaGrupo de Proteo Ambiental da Serra da
ConcrdiaGrupo Ecolgico Rio de ContasGu, XiaodongGwele, ZwelithiniHan, LianxianHanekom, NiklaasHarrington, JayneHartmann, NtombizaneleHathorn, PaulaHendricks, LuzannHenn, EdithHess, Harmut Herbert
Hillers, AnnikaHlatywayo, TsoloeloHlulani, MawetuHorniman, WentzelHotele, NcamileHoward, EstherHugo, CorlieImperial, Marco Antonio GracieInstitute o Bio-resources at Nakhchivan
Division o National Academy oSciences o Azerbaijan
Institute o Social Sciences, WesternDevelopment Research Center
Instituto AltervitaInstituto Ambiental de Desenvolvimento
Social Sustentvel BiocntricaInstituto Ambiental Litoral NorteInstituto Ambiental Ponto AzulInstituto Baa de GuanabaraInstituto de BiocinciasRio Claro, SPInstituto de Biologia da ConservaoInstituto de Permacultura e Ecovilas da
Mata AtlnticaInstituto de Pesquisa e Conservao da
NaturezaInstituto de Pesquisas e Conservao
da Biodiversidade dos EcossistemasBrasileiros
Instituto de Pesquisas e Educao para o
Desenvolvimento SustentvelInstituto de Pesquisas EcolgicasInstituto de Vivncia AmbientalInstituto Drades de Pesquisa e
Conservao da BiodiversidadeInstituto Eco-SolidrioInstituto IBA de Desenvolvimento
Ambiental e SocialInstituto Pau Brasil de Histria NaturalInstituto SeivaAdvogados pela NaturezaInstituto Sul Mineiro de Estudos e
Conservao da NaturezaInstituto Terra BrasilisInstituto Terra de Preservao Ambiental
Instituto TijupeInstituto UirauInternational Association o Ecology and
TourismJabur, CamilaJack, TimothyJackson, ChumisaJacobs, StephanusJansen, Malton AlroyJansen, Neville IvanJanuarie, RolandJasson, ReneJatob, LuciaJini, AntoinetteJobe, Sizwe XolaniJohnson, NormanJonas, Zuziwe
Joumat, WendyJulio and Florentina LedesmaFoundation, Inc.
Jullies, MeyerKackar Rating and Climbing ClubKalloch, Horst ErhardKamer, ChristopherKashahu Nature ReserveKayster, GlendaKelly, RalphKhan, AsieKhunou, AngelineKhustup NGOKivedo, MaryKoali, Nneheleng
Kragh, VibekeKubayi, RhulaniLauge, Jean ClaudeLaubser, MarykeLe Roux, Elton RowlandLean Nature ReserveLembaga Studi Pelayanan dan Penyuluhan
MasyarakatLembethe, ZithobeleLewis, GrahamLiangshan Preecture Wildlie
Conservation Associationde Lima, Luci Ramosde Lima, Srgio
Lindani, SabeloLivesey-Goldblatt, RuthLolwana, GoodwillLombo, AmosLondon Zoological SocietyLore Eco Club NGOLorica, Renee Ma. P.Loureiro, Eduardo LuisLourens, John EbenLouw, RhodaLuoxu White-lipped Deer Nature ReserveMaarman, RichardMaciel, Gilda ArantesMadureira, Joo Luiz Jr.
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Magasela, BongiweMagubane, SaneleMairie de NosibeMakhado, AzwianewiMalassele, KgalaleloMalepe, MadireMamabolo, TshepoMamize Nature ReserveMandlake, JerretMangala, Nonthuthuzelo VeronicaManuel, JereyMao County Association o Friends
o WildlieMao, TianxueMapukata, Sivuyile OscarMarilele, TinyikoMarini, Claudia Chaves GaudinoMarinus, EugeneMarsh, CarolMartin, MarilynMashologu, NoluvuyoMatillano, Joie D.Matjuda, DonaldMatoti, AyandaMatsha, ThembaMay, DanielMbambazeli, Ntsikelelo GilesMcGregor, Eleanor
McKeith, DonovanMcKie, CharlineMdala, MandisaMdalase, NtombizikhonaMdlazi, ThumekaMello, RenataMellville, HestelleMentoor, JoelMevanarivo, Zo EliaMeyer, PatrickMhlongo, BonganiMianyang Normal UniversityMichael Succow Foundation or the
Protection o Nature
Micheals, Stacey-AnneMiles, MelvynMinaar, CharlesMinnaar, ElanaMinnesota Zoo FoundationMitchell, PetrusMkee, ThanduxolaMkhulise, Sizwe StevensonMkosana, JoramMnisi, BonganiMolobi, CorneliusMonte, Nietta LinderbergMonteiro, Carlos AlbertoMorkel, AugustineMorris, CliveMovimento Ambiental Pingo DguaMovimento Ecolgico de Rio das OstrasMpambani, AyandaMsengi, BulelwaMta-Bari Association or Environment
Protection and SustainableDevelopment
Mthiyane, KhethokuhleMuller, ErnaMunsamey, BelindaMuseu NacionalNACRES Foundation or Biodiversity
Conservation
Nagan, Marx-LeninNamibian Biodi