infopack - EAZA Home
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infopack - EAZA Home
EAZA Madagascar Campaign AROVAKO i MADAGASIKARA (Conserve Madagascar) Contents Foreword Foreword Foreword Foreword Marc Ravalomanana, President of the Republic of Madagascar John Cleese, Patron of Campaign Leobert E. M. de Boer, Chairman of EAZA Lesley Dickie and Alex Rübel, Campaign Core Group Introduction to the Info Pack 3 4 5 6 7 Section 1: Campaign guidelines Participation and registration Registration form Use of images List of images and additional information on the CD-ROM Use of logos Fundraising money transfer details Sharing information and materials Awards and certificates Campaign contacts Thanks and acknowledgements 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 21 Section 2: Campaign targets Campaign targets Possibilities for long-term relationships with Madagascar 24 25 Awareness • Ten good reasons to get involved 26 Education • Photographs and logos • Exhibition panels • Flyer • Worksheets for schools • Madagascar postcards • Madagascar painting competition • Digital photography competition • "Madagascar-Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2007" • Other ideas • Promotion of eco-tourism 28 29 29 29 29 32 34 35 38 38 Fundraising • Suggested fundraising activities • How will my money be used? 39 40 1 Section 3: Merchandise Madagascar Campaign merchandise 44 Plant • • • 45 47 48 merchandise Malagasy succulents: Ambassadors for Madagascar Order form Illustrations of plants Merchandise product sheets • Ravensden • Something Different 49 51 Section 4: Madagascar information Madagascar - A fantasy island in the balance Madagascar's new system of protected areas Examples of protected areas around Madagascar and the projects ongoing • Sahamalaza • Betampona • Ranomafana • Baly Bay • Alaotra • Menabe • Masoala • Andringitra Bibliography 54 61 64 69 73 77 80 84 87 91 95 Section 5: Beneficiary projects Project selection process Overview of selected projects Selected first round projects Waiting list second round projects 100 101 102 133 2 Foreword - Part I Madagascar is a magnificent country and we are very proud of it, of its animals, plants landscapes and people. We know how unique and special they are, not only to us in Madagascar but to the whole world. We wish to conserve our precious biodiversity. For this reason, my government has been drafting and implementing plans to greatly increase the number of protected areas for conservation across the island in a process that has come to be known as the "Durban Vision". However, we face many challenges. Through conservation we need to create a sustainable future for the environment and humans alike and successfully balancing the needs of people and biodiversity is a major challenge in countries with high biodiversities. We hope our community-based approach to conservation across the island will bring great dividends to both people and wildlife. Many international conservation groups work in Madagascar in habitat protection projects, community projects, training projects and more. We are especially encouraged by the efforts of so many different groups assisting us in our task of ensuring a future for biodiversity in our country. Working in conjunction with government authorities and our universities we are also particularly pleased with the emergence of a new generation of Malagasy scientists and conservationists. We know that many European zoos already have projects in Madagascar and have committed much time, effort and funds to help us in achieving our goals. As President of Madagascar I am delighted that the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria (EAZA) has chosen Madagascar for its conservation campaign. This public show of support for Madagascar, its people and its biodiversity by zoos of Europe, and their visiting public, will be deeply appreciated throughout Madagascar, thank you. We welcome the emphasis put on the concept of "twinning", where local communities in protected areas establish long-term relationships with European zoos. We hope that this EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/2007 will be an ongoing one, increasing the European zoo interest in our country. We look forward to many years of fruitful cooperation. 3 Foreword - Part II Madagascar is a jewel! This island, and in particular the lemurs, has been a fascination of mine ever since I was fortunate enough to travel there while making a documentary about lemurs in Madagascar, each time seeing something new and exciting. The beautiful country, outstanding scenery, unique animals and plants, and the welcoming people, make Madagascar one of the great treasures of the world. However, I am fully aware of the countless challenges that Madagascar faces and so whenever possible I actively support conservation initiatives on the island. I hope I have done my bit to help, and I am delighted to be able to do so. Last year I was particularly touched when a recently discovered species of lemur was named after me; Avahi cleesei. Fame at last! I also support the work of responsible zoos, zoos that are using their facilities to improve the survival chances of threatened species in the wild through conservation breeding, fundraising, in situ projects and many more activities. These zoos also work with local peoples, ensuring those people a stake in the future of their wildlife. So, it should be no surprise that a project combining Madagascar and responsible zoos would be a cause to which I could lend my efforts. The EAZA Madagascar Campaign will bring this extraordinary island to millions of visitors throughout the EAZA network, stimulating, we hope, a positive surge of energy and interest that will generate funds for the vital projects featured. The EAZA Madagascar Campaign has my full support, it has the full support of the President of Madagascar, and it’s hoping for yours. I ask you to join the campaign. It fully supports the work of the government of Madagascar and we should all do our best to assist them in their great endeavour, the ‘Durban Vision’. The EAZA Madagascar Campaign will do its bit to help... but only if as many institutions as possible participate. So, Arovako i Madagasikara, Conserve Madagascar! John Cleese Patron, EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7 4 Foreword - Part III As a result of its special geological history Madagascar developed a spectacular flora and fauna, including thousands of endemics unique to this great island. No wonder that Madagascar was declared one of the most important biodiversity hot spots on earth. Many of Madagascar’s diverse ecosystems, however, are in great danger because of human developments, and it is to be feared that much of this island’s fabulous flora and fauna will disappear soon if we are unable to protect these effectively. EAZA Campaigns have proven to be able to create substantial awareness among European zoo visitors and politicians of the necessity of conservation. Additionally, previous Campaigns raised considerable amounts of money for concrete conservation projects. With the biodiversity hot spot Madagascar as the next EAZA Campaign’s subject, I sincerely hope that, once again, we will be very successful. For this we need the enthusiastic participation of as many as possible EAZA member institutions. So please, join the Madagascar Campaign. Madagascar’s flora, fauna, and people really deserve it. Leobert E.M. de Boer Chairman European Association of Zoos and Aquaria 5 Foreword - Part IV We are both fascinated by Madagascar, as are the rest of the Core Group consisting of Quentin Bloxam, Martin Bauert and Roger Graf. There is something about this amazing island that means that once you have been there you want to return again and again. More than that – you also want to help, in what ever way you can, to conserve the remarkable biodiversity that you find and that means helping the people of Madagascar conserve their own unique and wonderful contribution to the amazing planet we live on, their island home. To do so you will notice that this campaign is very much about relationships between communities and their environment, between EAZA institutions and protected areas in Madagascar and between the peoples of Madagascar and Europe. We believe that it is in the forging of these strong relationships that Madagascar will flourish. To this end the Education Section illustrates numerous ways to connect with the Malagasy people and to bring an understanding of their lives to the inhabitants of Europe, particularly schoolchildren. This information pack also gives examples of long-term relationships between EAZA institutions and projects in Madagascar and we include a section on the prospect of longitudinal relationships between EAZA institutions and the new protected areas. Madagascar, through the inspired leadership of President Ravalomanana, is finding new ways to conserve its wild places and wild life. We urge all EAZA members to give their support to this campaign, and in doing so send a strong message of support to the government and people of Madagascar – this is the world’s biodiversity and we are going to help save it, for Madagascar and for the world. Lesley Dickie Alex Rübel Co-Chairs, "Arovako i Madagasikara", the EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7 Core Group 6 Introduction to the Information Pack The information pack follows a very similar format to that employed by the previous campaigns – why change a winning recipe! We hope that this pack will provide you with all the information you need to participate successfully in the Madagascar Campaign, but if you need a more specialized piece of information or advice then please contact any one of the Core Group or your nearest country representative. We really hope that as many of you as possible join in what we hope will be a successful, informative and fun campaign. The information pack is divided into five sections in what is hopefully an accessible tool for your use. Section 1 – Campaign guidelines This is the technical bit, the campaign guidelines. Here you will find all the information about the practical aspects of joining the campaign: registration, use of images, banking details, awards and certificates, contact details for the Core Group and country representatives, and our thanks to the many people who have helped organise this campaign to date. Section 2 – Campaign targets Here we provide some very good reasons for joining the campaign – in fact 10 good reasons. Roger Graf, Head of Education of Zoo Zurich, brought together a fantastic group of European zoo educators who have developed an imaginative and user friendly education ‘mini-pack’ for your use. The activities they have developed will, we hope, form a sense of connection between the zoo visitors of Europe and the people of Madagascar and the island as whole. There are also fully developed interpretive boards that can be purchased for your zoo displays as well as information to help you develop your own graphics. Fun education activities are described. While awareness and education are key aspects of the campaign, we also want to raise as much money as possible. EAZA members have proved themselves to be highly original in their fundraising, but provided are a list of possible activities to get you started. Section 3 – Merchandise This section provides the details of the all the merchandise, from t-shirts to the amazing living plants provided through Zoo Zürich. Section 4 – Madagascar information As we began planning what information to put in this pack we thought about the many unique species found throughout the island. Which ones to include, which ones to exclude? How could we choose, between the remarkable lemurs, the exquisite amphibians, the fascinating carnivores and on and on………… We quickly came to realise that this approach was not possible. Instead we have provided a general overview of the natural history and anthropology of the island. A description of the new protected areas system is also provided and we hope that a lasting legacy of this campaign is the increasing collaboration between EAZA zoos and aquaria, other international conservation NGOs and ANGAP, the government agency of Madagascar that has previously overseen the national park system in the country. There then follows descriptions of some of the existing protected areas and the conservation activities within them, some carried out by EAZA member zoos in partnerships and consortiums, and some by non-EAZA groups. This is not exhaustive, but we hope provides a flavour of some of the inspiring conservation work that is undertaken on Madagascar. Madagascar is a huge island, with amazing scenery and wildlife, gregarious, friendly people, a complex cultural life and many challenges. In the bibliography, we have provided a tiny 7 snapshot of material for your use and to stimulate your interest. Here we provide a list of more detailed reference material for your use. Section 5 – Beneficiary projects This section describes how we chose the 20 projects (16 in round one, four in round two) that will hopefully benefit from funds raised by the campaign participants. We are delighted that 46 applications were made, though this made the job of choosing even more difficult. A cross section of high quality projects, from all around the island, were selected and we hope within this project diversity there is interest for everyone. There is also a short discussion item where we describe some of the options if we raise more monies than those allocated to the projects. Campaign CD-ROM In the back of this Info Pack, you will find a campaign CD-ROM with many useful campaign materials such as photo material, logo's and the Info Pack texts. A detailed description of the contents of the CD-ROM can be found in Section 1. In November 2006, a separate Education CD will be sent to all EAZA member institutions. This CD will contain various educational materials, such as digital data for campaign posters and flyers and detailed Madagascar species information sheets. In the Education Section (Section 2) of this Info Pack, many of these educational materials are already introduced. Arovy Madagasikara! (Protect Madagascar!) 8 Section 1 – Campaign guidelines Contents Participation and registration Registration form Use of images List of images and additional information on the CD-ROM Use of logos Fundraising money transfer details Sharing information and materials Awards and certificates Campaign contacts Thanks and acknowledgements 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 21 Participation and registration The EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7 "Arovako i Madagasikara" was officially launched on 4 October 2006, World Animal Day, at the 23rd EAZA Annual Conference in Madrid. All EAZA members are invited to join EAZA's sixth conservation campaign. A registration form for participation is available in this Info Pack. The form should preferably be completed and returned when collecting the Info Pack at the EAZA Annual Conference in Madrid, but it is also possible to register throughout the year by sending the form to the EAZA Executive Office. Participation In principle, participation in the EAZA Madagascar Campaign is exclusive to EAZA members as part of their membership services. However, when a zoo / aquarium is member of a national zoo association, which is an associate member of EAZA, participation is also allowed. In this case, the regional association will be responsible for the distribution of Campaign information (e.g. Info Pack and CD-ROM). As Madagascar is a versatile island with a unique flora and fauna, many non-EAZA institutions and NGOs might be interested in participation as well. Therefore, every nonEAZA institution will be given the opportunity to participate. These organisations should submit a motivated application for an Info Pack to the EAZA Executive Office (corinne.bos@eaza.net). Campaign Info Pack and CD-ROM This Info Pack and the included CD-ROM contain information that participating institutions can use for Campaign activities throughout the year. The Info Pack contains information on the rules and guidelines of the Campaign, but also useful information on the unique ecosystems of Madagascar and the in situ conservation projects that will benefit from the Campaign. Images can be found on the Campaign CD-ROM. Information updates Throughout the year, all EAZA member institutions will be kept updated on the developments of the EAZA Madagascar Campaign on the EAZA website (www.eaza.net) and through the EAZA News magazine. The main focus will be successful fundraising and awareness activities in participating institutions as well as information on the progress of the selected projects. Please send your Campaign updates to Corinne Bos, the EAZA Conservation Campaign Coordinator (corinne.bos@eaza.net) at the EAZA Executive Office, for inclusion on the EAZA website and/or EAZA News. Contact For additional information and questions you can contact your regional coordinator, the Campaign Core Group and, in particular, Lesley Dickie, Campaign Core Group Chair or the EAZA Executive Office. Contact details for these people can be found in the "Campaign Contacts" later in this section of the Info Pack and on the EAZA website. 10 Registration form EAZA members that would like to participate in the EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7 should complete this form and return it to the EAZA Executive Office as soon as possible. By signing this form your institution declares that: • • All photographs and other publicity material contained in the Info Pack and CD-ROM will only be used to support the EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7, following the relevant copyright details (see "Use of images" - Section 1). Full credits must be given when using the photographs. When raising funds for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign, these must be transferred to the Campaign’s account (see "Fundraising money transfer details" - Section 1). The Campaign Core Group will divide the funds between the selected campaign beneficiary projects in Madagascar (see Section 5). Institution: Date: ___________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Name & Signature: _______________________________________ We also request the following information: Contact person for the Madagascar Campaign: Email address of this person: Fundraising goal (in euros): ________________________ ________________________________ ____________________________________ Estimated start date of the Campaign at your institution: ____________________ Estimated closing date of the Campaign in your institution: ________________ Is your institution interested in a partnership with a Malagasy radio station (see Section 2 Education for details): 9 Yes 9 No Please return the completed Registration Form to: Corinne Bos EAZA Executive Office C/o Amsterdam Zoo PO Box 20164 1000 HD Amsterdam The Netherlands Fax: + 31 20 520 0754 11 Use of images EAZA has been incredibly fortunate to have been supplied with a generous number of images for the Madagascar Campaign by a number of photographers across the world. The Campaign core group is particularly grateful to Nick Garbutt, who has allowed extensive use of images from his world-class collection (www.nickgarbutt.com). All of the images are available for use in the Campaign, free of charge, by all participating institutions as part of their Campaign activities within their institution. The images are available on the Madagascar Campaign CD-ROM that is enclosed in this Info Pack. Due to the limited space, they may not all be in the highest resolution possible. However, they should be large enough for most of your work. If you would like a higher resolution still, please contact Roger Graf, who will then ask you to send him a blank CDROM. He may also be able to help if you need a particular type of image that has not been included in the selection provided. Please take note of the following restrictions regarding all images supplied in connection with the Madagascar Campaign: • • • • • • The use of the images is restricted to registered EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7 participants. Use of images is only allowed during the period of the Campaign (October 2006 – September 2007). Any signs, brochures etc. produced for your EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7, containing the images and produced before September 2007, may be used after the end of the Campaign. Images are to be used only for educational and fundraising purposes and only in material relating directly to the EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7. They are not available to EAZA members for general use. If you want to supply any image to an external agency such as a newspaper or magazine, to make any commercial use of a picture (e.g. to print on a T-shirt), to put a picture on a website (other than at low resolution), or to use any picture after the Campaign has ended (September 2007), you must contact Roger Graf or the EAZA Executive Office to request permission. They will then contact the owner of the image or will have a pre-arranged process. Images are only allowed for use on websites of participating institutions in lowresolution format. When using any of the images, it is essential that full credit is given to the photographer. The correct credit line is given as the name of each subfolder of images on the CD-ROM. If you have any questions, please contact Roger Graf (roger.graf@zoo.ch) of the EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group. 12 List of images and additional information on the CD-ROM Enclosed in this Info Pack is a CD-ROM containing various campaign materials. Additional educational materials (e.g. data for flyers, education panels etc) will be sent on a separate CD in November 2006. The following information is available on the CD-ROM that is enclosed in this Info Pack: • • • • The contents of the entire Info pack are included in word and pdf format; EAZA logo; EAZA Madagascar Campaign logo; Madagascar postcards to colour in. Images Furthermore the enclosed CD-ROM contains many images that can be used for your campaign activities. Various photographers have generously allowed use of their pictures for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. The images are grouped in the following categories: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Land and people Life habitat Fauna Amphibians Birds Invertebrates Mammals Reptiles Flora and fungus Fungus Trees Other plants Environmental problems Solutions EAZA projects Images of the majority of the selected conservation projects (see Section 5) Plants sale Please use the correct copyright when using the images from the Campaign CD-ROM: All image files on the CD-ROM have been named to include a brief description of its subject and the credits that should accompany the image. Education CD A separate Education CD will be sent to all EAZA member institutions in November 2006. This CD will contain various educational materials, such as digital data for campaign posters and flyers and detailed Madagascar species information sheets. In the Education Section (Section 2) of this Info Pack, many of these educational materials are already introduced. 13 Use of logos The EAZA Madagascar Campaign core group has prepared a series of Campaign exhibition boards and flyers that can be used to promote the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. Please see the Education Section of this Info Pack for more information and ordering details. Of course, you are more than welcome to create and produce your own materials, possibly using the templates for the posters and leaflets provided on the Education CD-ROM. Our regional representatives will be happy to help you with this. Please observe the following guidelines when developing your own campaign promotion materials. Logos All printed material associated with the Campaign must include two logos: the EAZA logo and the Campaign logo. The EAZA logo and the EAZA Madagascar Campaign logo are available on the Campaign CDROM in colour and in black-and-white. Examples of each are shown below: The correct wording of the Campaign for all printed materials is as follows: EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7 Arovako i Madagasikara The sixth conservation campaign organised by the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria Exception for non-EAZA participants: Non-EAZA organisations participating in the EAZA Madagascar Campaign should remove the EAZA logo from their Campaign materials. However, the Madagascar Campaign logo must be included. This logo should be accompanied by the following text: "The European Association of Zoos and Aquaria (EAZA) has provided this organisation a special exception to participate in its 2006/7 Madagascar Campaign." 14 Fundraising money transfer details One of the EAZA accounts will be used to receive funds collected for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign 2006/7. Preferably, funds should be transferred bank-to-bank, but if necessary sending a cheque is possible as well. Please also send an email to Corinne Bos (corinne.bos@eaza.net) when (a part of) the fundraising money is transferred to the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. Indicate in this email the amount of money that has been transferred and the name of your institution. If the funds are sent by cheque, please sent the cheque together with a message stating the name of your institution and amount. This will enable easy labelling once the money arrives on the account. Account details Account number Bank BIC IBAN Address EAZA : : : : : 80.66.04.409 Fortis Bank, Amsterdam FTSB-NL-2R NL-77-FTSB-0806604409 EAZA Executive Office c/o Amsterdam Zoo PO Box 20164 1000 HD Amsterdam The Netherlands : : EAZA Executive Office EAZA Executive Office f.a.o. Corinne Bos c/o Amsterdam Zoo PO Box 20164 1000 HD Amsterdam The Netherlands Payment by cheque Make cheques payable to Send to Please send any funds you raise at intervals throughout the year, rather than waiting until the end of the Campaign. Doing this will enable us to: • • • Get the projects supported by the EAZA Madagascar Campaign started as soon as possible; Receive news and updates from these projects during the lifetime of the Campaign; Send out the Fundraising Certificates for your zoo or aquarium as you reach the Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum and Red levels (see later in this Section). 15 Sharing information and materials From EAZA to you During and after the EAZA Madagascar Campaign, the Core Group will keep you informed of the progress of the Campaign. Not only will you be kept up-to-date with progress at the beneficiary field projects, but also about other Madagascar conservation stories and related issues. Furthermore, ideas for fundraising and awareness activities from your fellow members will be provided to stimulate the membership in successful campaigning and consequently making the EAZA Madagascar Campaign a huge success. From you to EAZA We need your help in order to provide the membership with successful ideas for raising awareness and fundraising for the selected projects. Please provide EAZA with your success stories, which we will then share with the membership. Your Campaign activities will be published in EAZA News and / or posted on the EAZA Madagascar website (www.eaza.net campaigns section). If you are willing to assist EAZA this way, please read the instructions below: EAZA News • Published quarterly (mid October, mid January, mid April and mid July) and sent to all EAZA members and subscribers; • Information and updates on EAZA Campaigns are published in the Campaign section of each issue; • If you want to submit your success story, please write a small article in English (100200 words) and submit it by email (corinne.bos@eaza.net). Relevant photos (in jpeg format, at least 300dpi) or illustrations are very welcome; • Please refer to the EAZA website for more guidelines for contributions to EAZA News. EAZA website: www.eaza.net • If your article is not placed in the magazine, it will be posted on the EAZA website; • Information and updates on the EAZA Madagascar Campaign will be posted on the EAZA website throughout the year; • If you want to submit your success story, please write a small article in English and submit it by email (corinne.bos@eaza.net). Relevant photos or illustrations are very welcome. EAZA files • EAZA keeps files on all conservation campaigns at the EAZA Executive Office, which includes information such as newspaper clippings, photographs, articles and press releases; • If you want to submit information on your activities to the Campaign Archives, please send it by email (corinne.bos@eaza.net) or mail (PO Box 20164, 1000 HD, Amsterdam, the Netherlands) to the EAZA Executive Office. EAZA membership emails • Information on the EAZA Madagascar Campaign which is relevant to the whole EAZA membership will be made available, by email, to the contact persons at all EAZA member institutions; • A separate list of email addresses will be kept for the Madagascar campaign representatives in each participating institution. 16 Awards and certificates Madagascar Campaign Fundraising Certificates As in the previous EAZA Conservation Campaigns, special fundraising certificates will be awarded to participating institutions in recognition of the fundraising achievements. All participating institutions, whether EAZA members or not, will receive a special Madagascar Campaign fundraising certificate when they reach - and hopefully pass! - the following fundraising targets: Award Target (€) Bronze 1,500 Silver 4,000 Gold 10,000 Platinum 20,000 Red 40,000 These certificates will be sent to the participating institutions as soon as the money arrives on the campaign account (see "Fundraising Money Transfer Details"). Please transfer raised funds during the campaign (rather than at the end of the campaign) so certificates can be sent during the campaign as soon as one of the targets has been reached. Madagascar Campaign Special Awards We do not just want the EAZA Madagascar Campaign to be about successful fundraising - as not all zoos and aquaria have the same fundraising potential. We are therefore inviting applications for special awards in the following categories: • Madagascar Campaign Education Award This will be awarded to the most innovative and original school and/or public education programme or product produced by an EAZA zoo or aquarium in support of the awareness target of the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. • Madagascar Campaign Fundraising Award This award is for the most innovative and imaginative fundraising scheme or event by an EAZA institution in support of the fundraising target of the Madagascar Campaign. This award will be judged only on the imagination and innovation involved – not on the amount of money raised. • Madagascar Campaign Community Impact Award This will be awarded to the participating EAZA member that is most active in the Madagascar Campaign community outreach activities (see Education Section), through the post cards, drawing competition and/or radio stations. The award will be for the zoo or aquarium that is most actively involved in these activities and/or develops its own community outreach programme. These Madagascar Campaign Special Awards will consist of a unique colour certificate and prize to be presented at the closing of the Madagascar Campaign at the EAZA Annual Conference in Warsaw in September 2007. The panel of judges will consist of members of the EAZA Executive Office and EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group. 17 Written applications should be no more than 500 words long and should be supported with photographs wherever possible. They should be submitted, preferably by email or on CDROM by 1 August 2007 to Lesley Dickie: lesley.dickie@zsl.org or EAZA Madagascar Campaign Lesley Dickie c/o ZSL Regent's Park NW1 4RY London United Kingdom 18 Campaign contacts Madagascar Campaign Core Group The Madagascar Campaign Core Group, chaired by Lesley Dickie and Alex Rübel, has developed and prepared the Madagascar Campaign and will oversee its successful running throughout the campaign period and, if necessary, afterwards. Core Group members: Lesley Dickie (ZSL) Alex Rübel (Zoo Zürich) Roger Graf (Zoo Zürich) Martin Bauert (Zoo Zürich) Quentin Bloxam (Durrell) Corinne Bos (EAZA Executive Office) lesley.dickie@zsl.org alex.ruebel@zoo.ch roger.graf@zoo.ch martin.bauert@zoo.ch quentin.bloxam@durrell.org corinne.bos@eaza.net Education Planning Group The Education Planning Group has prepared a whole range of various educational materials and activities for the Madagascar Campaign. The result of their work can be found in the Education Section of this Info Pack (Section 2), on the enclosed CD-ROM and on an Education CD that will be sent to all EAZA Members in November 2006. Education Group Members: Roger Graf (Zoo Zürich) Constanze Melicharek (Apenheul) Robert van Herk (Rotterdam Zoo) Dave Naish (Bristol Zoo) Mark Chappell (Durrell) roger.graf@zoo.ch Regional Representatives The regional representatives for your area are available as contact points in order to help you promote and support the Madagascar Campaign in your zoo or aquarium. They will be able to help with translation of the Campaign materials into your language and provide you with additional sources of information. If they are unable to help you directly, they will be able to put you in contact with someone who can. Furthermore, they may assist in case of (national) media interest in the Campaign. Please contact your representative if you or your institution can help by either suggesting a sponsor to support the Campaign in your region or by taking on some of the work or responsibility for the promotion of the Madagascar Campaign. Please note that all potential sponsors of the Campaign must be approved by EAZA and by the Campaign Core Group before work can begin. The overview on the next page shows the representatives for each region. If your country is not shown in this table, than please don’t worry! Contact Lesley Dickie or Corinne Bos directly for assistance. Austria Gaby Schwammer (Wien-Zoo) g.schwammer@zoovienna.at Belgium (French-speaking) and Luxembourg Sylvie Bonne (Bettembourg) zooschoul@parc-merveilleux.lu 19 Czech Republic and Slovakia Tomas Pes (Plzen) pes@zoo.plzen-city.cz Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden Peter Haase (Kobenhavn-Zoo) pnh@zoo.dk France Pierre Moisson (Mulhouse) pierre.moisson@agglo-mulhouse.fr Germany Jens-Ove Heckel (Landau) jens-ove.heckel@landau.de Hungary Marta Szabon (Budapest) szabon@zoobudapest.com Italy Cesare Avesani Zaborra (Bussolengo) direzione@parconaturaviva.it assistant.dir@parconaturaviva.it The Netherlands and Belgium (Dutch-speaking) Jenny van Leeuwen (EAZA Executive Office) jenny.van.leeuwen@nvdzoos.nl Poland Radoslaw Ratajszczak (Poznan) rratajszczak@zoopoznan.neostrada.pl Portugal Eric Ruivo (Lisboa-Zoo) eric@zoolisboa.pt Russia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Ukraine Elena Migunova (Moskva) lektorzoo@list.ru Spain Olga Santacana (AIZA) info@aiza.org.es Switzerland Roger Graf (Zürich) roger.graf@zoo.ch United Kingdom and Ireland Olivia Walters (BIAZA) conservation@biaza.org.uk 20 Thanks and acknowledgements Many, many people were exceptionally helpful and generous in compiling the information pack and assisting with all aspects of the planning of the campaign. This could not have been done without them We are particularly grateful to four people; • Nick Garbutt, Wildlife Photographer, who has so generously allowed us use of his amazing images of the island, • Iary B. Ravaoarimanana, Chargé d’Affaire, Embassy of the Republic of Madagascar, London, who helped us contact the President and with other aspects of the campaign, • John Cleese, Actor and Conservationist, who has so generously allowed us use of his image and name to aid the campaign, and most of all…… • Marc Ravalomanana, President of the Republic of Madagascar. His Durban Vision is an inspiration to all working on Madagascar for biodiversity conservation. We are extremely proud that he has lent us his support. A number of other people have also helped get this campaign in progress and are named below – we hope we have not missed anyone out but if we have our apologies and we are really grateful! Lantoniaina Andriamampianina, Aristide Andrianarimisa, Herizo Andrianandrasana, Chris Birkinshaw, Bert de Boer, Jeff Bonner, Corinne Bos, Robert Bourou, Helen Crowley, Joanna Durbin, John Fa, Anna Feistner, Karen Freeman, Joerg Ganzhorn, Pierre Gay, Jean-Noel, Matthew Hatchwell, Roland Hausheer, Frank Hawkins, Robert van Herk, Bengt Holst, Jukka Jernvall, Richard Lewis, Martijn Los, Lanto, Constanze Melicharek, James McKinnon, Dave Naish, Martina Raffles, Lala Jean Rakotoniaina, William Francisco Rakotombololona ,Angelo Ramy, Jonah Randriamahefasoa, Herilala Randrimahazo, Jonah Ratsimbazafy, Chris Raxworthy, Christophe Schwitzer, Peter Schachenmann, Nicole Schnyder, Mark Stanley Price, Miranda Stevenson, Hafany Tiandray, Anselme Toto Volahy, Olivia Walter, Chris West and Pat Wright. 21 22 Section 2 – Campaign targets Contents Campaign targets Possibilities for long-term relationships with Madagascar 24 25 Awareness • Ten good reasons to get involved 26 Education • Photographs and logos • Exhibition panels • Flyer • Worksheets for schools • Madagascar postcards • Madagascar painting competition • Digital photography competition • "Madagascar-Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2007" • Other ideas • Promotion of eco-tourism 28 29 29 29 29 32 34 35 38 38 Fundraising • Suggested fundraising activities • How will my money be used? 39 40 23 Campaign targets Six targets have been set for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign: • Raise public awareness of one of the most important reservoirs of natural history on the planet. Promoting the idea of biodiversity through the unique fauna and flora found on Madagascar. • Promote ecotourism to Madagascar. For many biodiversity rich countries, responsible ecotourism can be a viable way to bolster their economy, whilst ensuring that the unique habitats and wildlife that visitors come to view are afforded greater protection by being recognised as an asset. • Raise funds for specific conservation projects throughout the island. The fundraising target for the Madagascar Campaign has been set at: €500,000 • Highlight ways in which the public can make positive contributions to conservation through activities in their daily lives. If world conservation goals are to be achieved, sustainable use and recycling are messages that are particularly prevalent in the developed world, which uses a far greater share of the world’s resources than the biodiversity rich developing world. • Alert EAZA collections to the diversity of Madagascar wildlife – it’s not just lemurs! Promoting the responsible sourcing and keeping of conservation dependent species currently held in small numbers, or not at all, in EAZA collections. By disseminating information regarding threatened Malagasy species it is hoped that this will influence future collection planning decisions at EAZA institutions. • Promote the concept of "twinning" between EAZA members and National Parks and protected reserves. Whilst the EAZA Madagascar Campaign will run for one year, it is hoped that long-term interest in the island will be stimulated (see next pages). ANGAP (Association Nationale pour la Gestion des Aires Protégées), the government body established in 1990 to administer the protected areas of the island, hopes to link to zoos who wish to support protected areas. 24 Possibilities for long-term relationships with Madagascar EAZA Madagascar Campaign participants are invited to commit themselves to the conservation projects in Madagascar (see Section 5) also after the campaign year. The Malagasy project organisers set high hopes on the success of this EAZA scheme. Please consider a longer-term participation and join! You can find a list of possible project partners in this Info Pack (Section 4 - Protected areas and Section 5 - Supported projects). Several European zoos have already gathered experience in collaborative partnerships with nature conservation projects in Madagascar, for example the Mulhouse and Cologne zoos with Sahamalaza, Bird Park Walsrode, Allwetter Zoo Münster, Zoo Landau and Zoo Duisburg with the project Voronosy, Zoo Zürich with the Masoala National park, Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust with Lake Aloatra and Menabe and various other zoos with the Betampona reserve. A long-term commitment of your institution could consist of the following: • Raise and donate money for the selected project over a fixed time period of several years and in return receive exciting up to date information related to the project. • The received information can be communicated directly to the visitor. This will boost your institution's credibility and may lead to further donations. • By doing so, engagement in in situ conservation becomes a reality, without the need for your institution to get involved locally. Serious Non-Governmental Organisations are your direct contact and therefore act as your representative on site. • Your institutions name will be carried to Madagascar. Locals and tourists will take note of your involvement. • A long term engagement will enrich your activities and lead to an interesting northsouth-exchange. • You aid a substantial contribution towards nature’s conservation. We would like to offer you our help in the selection and mediation between project partners. Furthermore we dispose over a wide experience background in collaboration with Malagasy project partners. Please feel free to address one of the following advisers: Dr. Martin Bauert Curator for Nature Conservation Zoo Zürich martin.bauert@zoo.ch Telephone: +41 44 254 25 21 or Dr. Alex Rübel Director Zoo Zürich alex.ruebel@zoo.ch Telephone: +41 44 254 25 01 25 Ten good reasons to get involved 1. Madagascar is a biodiversity ‘hotspot’ Madagascar is the fourth largest island in the world with a unique fauna and flora. Madagascar has the highest combined levels of species richness and endemism of any place on the planet. It ranks in the top five ‘hotspots’ of the world. 3.2% of the world’s plants species are only found on Madagascar. 2.8% of all global vertebrates are endemic to the island. When considering the approximately 117 described mammal species, 90% are endemic, and if bats are excluded this rises to 100%. 2. Most EAZA members have Malagasy species Most EAZA members will have some form of Malagasy species, be it a lemur, bird, reptile or invertebrate, and therefore this campaign is very inclusive. Additionally, many aquaria house Malagasy fish, both freshwater and marine. Many zoos will also have Malagasy plants on their sites, allowing for botanical stories to be incorporated into campaign materials. 3. Lemurs are an instantly recognisable group that visitors love Although the fauna of Madagascar is generally small-bodied, lemurs are high-profile species, with a great deal of public goodwill associated with them. Lemurs will act as an informal flagship for the campaign, galvanising their popularity, whilst bringing attention to the lesser known, yet equally fascinating and unique species found on the island. Therefore this single island can be used as a focus for multi-taxa conservation awareness. 4. The movie ‘Madagascar’ has given the island higher profile and made it popular amongst all age groups Dreamworks, the Steven Spielberg film company, has made an animated film entitled Madagascar. It was a very popular film throughout 2005 and a sequel will be released in 2008. This popularity ensures that recognition of the island is appreciably higher in Europe than prior to the film release, and this is likely to be beneficial to the campaign. 5. In situ conservation on Madagascar needs our help Much of the fauna of Madagascar is threatened, with 90% dependent on the dwindling forest cover for their existence, and is therefore a conservation priority. Of the 332 Malagasy species described on the IUCN Red List 46.4% are listed as Critically endangered, Endangered or Vulnerable. Much of the flora of the island is also unique, with illegal trade in orchids and hardwoods a threat to their continued survival. 6. Madagascar has many different habitats The diversity of habitats found on the island includes rainforests, dry deciduous forests, bush, xerophytic and spiny forests, seasonal humid forests and anthropogenic grasslands. It is this striking diversity and varied topography that has led to Madagascar being termed the ‘8th Continent’. 7. Madagascar is an island! The majority of extinctions that have taken place in the past 500 years have occurred on islands (72% of all recorded extinctions) – Madagascar can be used as a tool to talk about this. EAZA campaigns have not targeted an island ecosystem, yet these are amongst the most conservation dependant areas of the world. 8. Madagascar is a culturally fascinating place as well as biodiversity hotspot Madagascar is culturally rich, with unique traditions, music and dance. Madagascar is associated with myth, legend and mystery (the Rohk of Sinbads travels is likely to have been based on the extinct Malagasy elephant bird, and historically pirates of the 17th and 18th centuries routinely based their Indian Ocean raids from Madagascar) allowing for informative, creative and fun materials to be developed for the campaign. 26 9. The government of Madagascar endorses this campaign The government of Madagascar, led by President Marc Ravalomanana, supports the aims of the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. This is an amazing level of support for the aims of the campaign and we hope to show that this support is not unwarranted. 10. "This is not just Madagascar’s biodiversity, it is the world’s biodiversity" These were the words of President Marc Ravalomanana at the World Parks Congress in Durban in 2003. This is an opportunity for us to get involved to make a real difference in Madagascar, for its biodiversity and its people. Let’s help in saving our biodiversity. Arovako i Madagasikara Conserve Madagascar 27 Education Section For educational activities, the EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group has prepared the following materials and products: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Photographs and logos (on the enclosed Campaign CD-ROM) Exhibition panels * Flyers * Worksheets and information materials for schools * Madagascar postcards (on the enclosed Campaign CD-ROM) The materials marked with an * are not yet available. As soon as these are complete, the will be available for download on the EAZA website so you can print and reproduce these materials yourself. A final Education CD with all educational materials will be sent to your educational zoo department probably in November 2006. The EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group also invites you to participate in the following events: 6. 7. 8. Madagascar painting competition – for children and young people Digital Photography Competition for adults Hire the travelling exhibition "Madagascar-Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2007" 9. Other ideas 10. Promotion of eco-tourism to Madagascar You can find detailed information on the above on the following pages. For queries, please contact Roger Graf at Zürich Zoo (roger.graf@zoo.ch or telephone 0041 44 254 25 00/35). 1. Photographs and logos We offer you a series of high quality photographs from Madagascar, which you can use freely for the purposes of the campaign at your institution (please refer to "Use of Images" Section 1 for detailed information). Please always mention the respective copyright when printing. The photos and logos can be found on the CD-ROM in the following folders: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Land and people Life habitat Fauna Flora and fungus Environmental problems Solutions EAZA projects Plants sale Logos The EAZA and the Madagascar Campaign logo's have to be printed on all released or sold Madagascar documents, worksheets, leaflets etc. produced by your institution. The addition of your institution's own logo is of course permitted. Please refer to the "Use of Logos" (Section 1) for detailed information. You will find the logos of EAZA and the Madagascar Campaign on the CD-ROM. 28 2. Exhibition panels The EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group has prepared a standard interpretive exhibition with five information panels for use by participating institutions. The panels are available in the following languages: English, French, German and Dutch. Due to foldable partitions, panel number 3 allows for the possibility of interactive configurations of your own choosing. The panels have the following themes: Board 1 Board as an Eye catcher (with holes for a "photo-moment") Board 2 Evolution, geography, habitat, species diversity, and endemism Board 3 Fauna and Flora Board 4 Problems (fire threats, erosion, poverty, illegal hunting, over-fishing, firewood, damage caused by storms) Board 5 Proposed solutions (donations, fair trade, tourism), dispensers for flyers and donation box. Board also functions as an Eye catcher (with holes for a "photomoment"). Proposed printing format of each board: 150 cm (wide) x 200 cm (tall) The boards can also be printed onto another format, the text can be changed and there is space for your own logo, a dispenser or a donation box. You will find the digital data for the education panels on the special "Education CD" (to be distributed in November 2006). 3. Flyer In addition to, or instead of, the exhibition panels, the EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group also offers the possibility to hand out a four-page flyer in A5/6 format to your visitors. The contents of the flyer are the same as the exhibition panels 2-5. The flyer is also available in four languages: English, German, French and Dutch. As with the panels, the contents of the flyer can be changed. You will find the digital data for the flyer on the "Education CD". You can print out this information for your own use. 4. Worksheets for schools Worksheets for children of various ages are under development. On the "Education CD" (to be sent to the education departments of all EAZA member institutions in November 2006) you will find the worksheets and further information. 5. Madagascar postcards A special EAZA Madagascar Campaign postcard has been developed to send directly to Madagascar. The postcard is in black and white so it can be coloured in by children and adults alike. The postcard campaign procedure will be organised as follows: 1. For small children and people who only like to colour in, biodiversity postcards will be available. These postcards can be printed by your institution. The template is available on the enclosed campaign CD-ROM and on the "Education CD". Or you can order postcards (see below) at Zürich Zoo. The card (size A5) can be coloured in bright colours and sent to your allocated radio station (see next point of postcard section) bearing messages preferably in Malagasy, French or English. Please do not send any negative messages. 29 Some ideas for short messages (in all three languages): Madagascar – Island of diversity. Madagascar – Île de la diversité. Madagasikara – Nosy maro endrika Protect Madagascar! Il faut protéger Madagascar! Arovy Madagasikara! Protect the forest! The forest is alive. La forêt, c’est la vie. Protégez-la! Arovy ny ala! Fa loharanom-piainana I protect the forest, do you? Je protège la nature. Et toi? Arovako ny tontolo iainana, ary ianao? Madagascar must live! Madagascar doit vivre! Tsy maintsy velona Madagasikara! Colourful Madagascar. Madagascar – une île haute en couleur. Madagasikara mibaliaka. 2. During the campaign year, a Malagasy radio station will be allocated to your institution as a partner. The Madagascar Campaign Core Group will provide your institution with the address of the selected radio station. The address can be applied to the postcards on preprinted sticky labels. Please make sure to sell stamps with the card in order to make sure that they will be sent to Madagascar. The postcards should not be included in the drawing competition (see below), but sent to Madagascar directly. 3. The recommended sale price of a postcard is 2 euros. The net profit can be used as contribution to the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. 4. The radio stations will collect the postcards and make them available for public viewing. 30 Order form Postcards EAZA-Campaign 2007 The size of the postcard is A5. We print postcards in your preferred language and with the address of your Malagasy radio station. Costs: 1,000 copies: €200.2,000 copies: €250.5,000 copies: €450.10,000 copies: €700.Please complete the following: Number of cards required: ____________________________ Preferred language: ________________________________ Delivery address: ________________________________ ____________________________________________ ____________________________________________ Billing address (if different): ____________________________ ____________________________________________ ____________________________________________ Responsible person Name: ________________________________________ Telephone number for queries: E-mail address for queries: Please return by post: Zoo Zürich Zooinformation Zürichbergstrasse 221 CH-8044 Zürich ________________________ ____________________________ or by fax: 0041 44 254 25 10 Please return before: 30 November 2006 31 6. Painting competition A joint painting competition will be organised for children and young people in Europe and Madagascar. The following two age categories for schools and other groups can participate: children between the age of 8 and 12 and young people between the age of 13 and 18. Name: Anja Steiner Zoo: Zürich Zoo Zoo visitor in Masoala exhibit looking at two snakes and a lot of leaves. The procedure for the painting competition will be as follows: 1. School classes from your region can paint or draw pictures of Malagasy animals and/or plants, which they have seen in your zoo, aquarium or botanical garden. Age groups: Category 1: 8 to 12 years Category 2: 13 to 18 years Image size: Not larger than an A3 format Number of pictures: Each child or young person can paint or draw one image and the submission of the paintings is respectively as school class or group (at least 10 pictures per group or class). 2. Each picture has to be clearly labelled with the category, name of school or group, the name of the institution and the location of production. 32 Every collection of school class or group work should be accompanied with a (short) friendly letter or a simple greeting. Please write in French or Malagasy, should this not be possible, please write in English. Please do not write any negative massages. Some ideas for very short messages: Madagascar – Island of diversity. Madagascar – île de la diversité. Madagasikara – Nosy maro endrika. Protect Madagascar! Il faut protéger Madagascar! Arovy Madagasikara! Protect the forest! The forest is alive! La forêt, c’est la vie. Protégez-la! Arovy ny ala! Fa loharanom-piainana! I protect the forest, do you? Je protège la nature. Et toi? Arovako ny tontolo iainana, ary ianao? Madagascar must live! Madagascar doit vivre! Tsy maintsy velona Madagasikara! Colourful Madagascar. Madagascar – une île haute en couleur. Madagasikara mibaliaka. 3. The drawings must be sent or handed in to your institution directly. The drawings need to be sorted by category (1 or 2 depending on the age of the participants, see above), school classes or groups, addressed, wrapped and tied up. Please store the pieces of works. 4. Finally, the collected works can be, probably in a parcel, sent off to Madagascar. The Madagascar Core Group will allocate a Malagasy radio station as a partner to your institution during the campaign year. The radio stations in question are private radio stations, which are politically as well as religiously neutral and socially accepted. Please send the pictures to the radio stations (address will be provided) by the end of May 2007. Each individual zoo should send its own pictures to the radio station and therefore bear the cost of postage – an additional cost for the zoo that you should be aware of. The respective people at the radio station in charge will be informed by the EAZA about the campaign in time and all agreements confirmed by the Madagascar Campaign Core Group. 5. The Malagasy radio stations will keep the pictures available for access. The people in the catchment area of the respective broadcasting studios will be informed about the painting competition and the EAZA campaign via the radio. School classes will be invited to visit a radio station and pick up drawings made by a European school class. Malagasy are used to picking up information at radio station offices or simply drop by for a visit, as vast parts of the country do not benefit from postal delivery. The Malagasy children and young people will be asked to draw pictures in return, which they will enjoy! The theme of the works will be their everyday lives. 33 6. The Malagasy schools will submit their works to the radio stations by the end of August 2007. From there the drawings made by Malagasy children will reach Europe and the respective zoo partners via the Wildlife Conservation Society office in Antananarivo and the EAZA Executive Office in Amsterdam. 7. The participating EAZA members have the possibility to exhibit "their" pictures made by Malagasy children and young people. The most impressive and beautiful class works can be rewarded with a prize. Exercise books, crayons and other school materials (printed school material only in French) are very welcome. 8. Finally, the Malagasy works can be dispersed to European school classes and groups. This is where the EAZA campaign and consequently your institution's responsibility ends. 9. Continuing correspondence between European and Malagasy schools is possible and to be encouraged. In this case the European schools will write directly to Madagascar (without a detour via your institution). Dependant on the regional situation, the radio station's office remains the contact address, should there be no possibility of a direct postal delivery. With the painting competition and the postcard campaign we hope to reach the following goals: In Europe: • School participation in the painting competition surrounding the themes of Madagascar, the tropical rainforest’s, endangered animal and plant species, zoo animals. • Exhibition of drawings produced by Malagasy children and young people portraying their everyday lives. These drawings will be ideal to illustrate nature and environment conservation related themes. In Madagascar: • The campaign will be viewed as an act of friendship and hopefully bring lots of joy and support to the Malagasy people. • The multiplicity of the portrayed animal and plant species, will awake an impression among the Malagasy, that the Europeans are fond of their environment. Thereby pride and motivation in supporting nature conservation can be supported. • The media coverage of the EAZA Madagascar Campaign will be successful through the involvement of the Malagasy radio stations. The message of friendship and the EAZA campaign information, will be carried to the most remote parts of the country. The EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group will supply the radio stations with appropriate press releases. 7. Digital photography competition During the official campaign year, every participating institution can call on their visitors to participate in a photography competition. Only digitally produced images are allowed. This is to enable the future possibility of reusing the images for a travelling exhibition (see information on travelling exhibition below). Conventional photography with negatives or 34 slides causes too much effort and the image quality, especially with slides, can suffer. The subjects admitted to the competition are to be exclusively Malagasy animal and plant species displayed in your zoo, aquarium or botanical garden. A jury, appointed by your own institution (perhaps a prominent person), evaluates the images and draws up a ranking list, at least for the top three ranks. Naturally your institution can also hand out prizes of your choosing. Your institution is absolutely free with regards to the advertisement of the photography competition as well as jury selection. You must ensure that all competitors give permission to use their image as part of the travelling exhibition if they are a winning entry. The competition participation is free, but it is possible to implement a fixed participation fee to raise extra funds for the EAZA campaign. However the decision upon these participation fees is up to you. 8. Travelling exhibition "Madagascar-Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2007" The three best photographs taken in your zoo or aquarium can be sent on a CD to: Zoo Zürich Zürichbergstrasse 221 CH-8044 Zürich Switzerland on 30 September 2007 (date of the post stamp) ultimately. A jury selected by the EAZA Madagascar Campaign Core Group will select the best 30 photographs for exhibition. Prizes for the best photographs may also be awarded dependent on prize sponsorship. The 30 selected photographs will be honoured in a special exhibition, which will be produced at the Zürich Zoo. This weatherproof exhibition can then be shown as a travelling exhibition in various zoos and aquaria all over Europe. The exhibition can be booked in advance using the enclosed form. Depending on the number of participating institutions, the exhibition will cost around €5,000 at a maximum. This is due to costs for production, installation, disassembly and transport. This price may decrease considerably as sponsorship is being investigated, EAZA Member institutions will be kept updated the costs. Naturally, the exhibition offers further possibilities to collect money for nature preservation in Madagascar. 35 The exhibition consists of the following elements: • • • • The 30 best photographs of animal and plant species of Madagascar; With each photograph, the name of the photographer and the name of the institution, where the photograph was taken will be mentioned; Accompanying each presented photograph will be a brief text with a relevant nature conservation statement; All institutions that show the travelling exhibition, can present their logo on the exhibition boards. The last station of the travelling exhibition is the Malagasy capital of Antananarivo. There the exhibition shall be permanently on display at the local zoo or on the boulevard close by the central station. 36 Entry form for the travelling exhibition The exhibition can be shown at each presentation location for a maximum of two months. Whereby time for set up, disassembly and transport from and to another presentation location needs to be allocated. The required space is approximately 20 square meters. Our institution would like to book the travelling outdoor exhibition "Madagascar-Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2007", for the following time period: Please tick the appropriate time period (please select at least three possible time periods): 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 January 2008 February 2008 March 2008 April 2008 May 2008 June 2008 July 2008 August 2008 September 2008 Delivery address: 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 October 2008 November 2008 December 2008 January 2009 February 2009 March 2009 April 2009 May 2009 June 2009 ________________________________ ____________________________________________ ____________________________________________ Responsible person: Name: ________________________________________ Telephone number: ________________________________ E-mail address: ________________________________ Please return by post: Zoo Zürich Zooinformation Zürichbergstrasse 221 CH-8044 Zürich or by fax: 0041 44 254 25 10 Please return before: 30 August 2007 37 9. Other ideas • Leaf painting Visitors will be able to buy a paper leaf from a selection of designs, to paint or initialise with a message. These will then be stuck over the silhouette of a baobab tree. This act represents reforesting Madagascar and turning it green. Funds raised from the sale of leaves will go towards the campaign. Required materials for the leaf painting activity will be made available on the "Education CD (to be sent in November 2006). • Discounted zoo entrance for children that have painted a mask featuring a Malagasy animal onto their face. • Create animal dolls out of old socks. • Organise a sport-or fun contest with VIP’s and/or their respective partners in order to collect funds. • Also see the general fundraising ideas list later in this Section. 10. Promotion of eco-tourism Madagascar is aiming to receive more tourists. Tourism acts as an important instrument in applying economic value to protected landscapes. Many national parks and their surrounding villages rely on an income through tourism (park fees, provision of work to local people). To support this, you could produce an address list of travel agents that offer reputable (eco-friendly) trips to Madagascar. Or you could keep promotional material of these businesses at hand, visitors interested in travel will be grateful. 38 Suggested fundraising activities The fundraising target for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign is €500,000 euro. It is an ambitious target – but we are confident that EAZA members can meet this challenge! There are many ways that you can raise funds for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign and no doubt EAZA members will be highly imaginative and experienced after five conservation campaigns. But to start you off here is a suggestion list: Have a special Madagascar day/week/month at your zoo or aquarium Do you want to have a daytime event? Kids art competitions (see Education Section) face painting and raffles, are just some of the possible activities. How about special evening ticketed events, with Malagasy music and dancing? "Salegeh" the rhythmic contagious music of Madagascar will get everyone on their feet! Have a special competition to win an ‘up close and personal’ meeting with the Malagasy species at your zoo or aquarium Sell raffle tickets for a once in a lifetime meeting with lemurs, hissing cockroaches, mantella frogs, and vasa parrots. What if you have fossa? Then allow your winning visitor the opportunity to prepare enrichment items and diet for the largest carnivore on Madagascar, the "pink panther" of the island. Get your local newspapers, radio and television stations involved in promoting any events and competitions. Merchandise Purchase the campaign merchandise for your shop and make a special shop display. The varied materials will make great presents for young and old (see Section 3 - Merchandise). Evening lectures Do you have any local experts on Malagasy species, folklore, music? What about a special evening lecture series? Corporate Donations Do you know of any local businesses that may be interested in donating to this cause? Do they have a Malagasy animal or plant as their logo – if they do, why not ask them to help? Local Museums Does your nearest large museum have Malagasy artefacts? Would they help out with spreading the news about the campaign with a special display? Local travel companies Can you link up with a local travel operator or tour company to offer a special raffle prize of a trip to Madagascar? Sports Events Is there a marathon run near your zoo or aquarium? How about finding volunteers to run the marathon for the campaign? Or any other sponsored sports event or physical challenge? 39 How will my money be used? Twenty different projects have been selected as recipients for funds raised and a full description of the selection process and summaries of the projects is given in Section 5 (Beneficiary projects). Each of the projects will use the money in different ways, but below are a few examples from the projects (individual projects not specified) of how funds raised will help secure biodiversity in Madagascar; Cost Activity €75 25 watering cans could be purchased and distributed to enable villagers to be more productive and environmentally friendly in their agricultural practices €200 GPS packs, torches, data loggers and tents could be purchased to allow vital research work to be undertaken in designated locations for the new national park system €300 A boat could be purchased to allow more efficient and improved monitoring and protection of an important marine area €700 450 information ‘comics’ could be compiled, printed and distributed to children in villages to help them understand, and thereafter conserve, their endemic wildlife €1440 Two forest protection guards could be hired for two years €2500 Fruit trees and seeds could be purchased and sold at a subsidised rate to local villages to assist them to set up long-term, sustainable agricultural practices to generate income €2800 An entire college science lab could be renovated to assist in the improved training of Malagasy scientists and conservationists of the future €2880 Three trained field assistants could be employed for one year to help monitor and protect endangered lemurs in lowland rainforest €5760 A new local community-NGO conservation structure could be initiated and run for one year, providing local field coordination of conservation actions These are just a few examples of the kind of uses for monies raised in the campaign year. Although the fundraising target for the campaign is €500,000 we have only allocated €361,645 to the conservation projects (see Section 5) at this point and this has been done for a number of reasons. Firstly we wanted to have some confidence when allocating funds – the first round funding comes to €289,777 – and I think we would all be disappointed, given the fantastic performance of the previous campaigns, if this sum could not be reached. However, we have been cautious. Secondly if we are very successful and raise more than the €361,645 then we would like to investigate whether a more permanent EAZA Madagascar fund could be initiated and we will 40 be discussing this over the campaign year. Your ideas and input are invited. If at the end of the campaign we have decided not to create a new entity then the additional monies will be distributed to the existing campaign recipients, through discussion with the campaign core group and the project reviewers. Thirdly, we wanted to have a contingency fund. We very much hope that no new environmental disasters strike Madagascar, but if this does occur, for example during the cyclone season particular damage is sustained by high priority areas, then we would like to be in a position to offer emergency funds, as with the 2004/5 EAZA Shellshock Campaign in the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami. 41 42 Section 3 - Merchandise Contents Madagascar Campaign merchandise 44 Plant • • • 45 47 48 merchandise Malagasy succulents: Ambassadors for Madagascar Order form Illustrations of plants Merchandise product sheets • Ravensden • Something Different 49 51 43 Madagascar Campaign merchandise Selling Madagascar merchandise in your souvenir shop is a good way to raise funds for the Campaign. That is, if you allow part of the profit from the sales to go to the Campaign. And of course, this can be done in addition to putting up a collection box and/or organising all kinds of activities to collect money for the Madagascar Campaign conservation projects. To assist you in setting up a special Madagascar Campaign corner in your gift or souvenir shop, the Campaign Core Group has made arrangements with a number of companies to prepare special Madagascar merchandise with the official Campaign logo. Of course, you can also produce your own Madagascar souvenir products, for which we sincerely hope that you will contribute a part of the profit made to the Campaign. Malagasy succulents Some extraordinary plants from Madagascar can be ordered through Zoo Zürich. The plants are grown in the "Stadtgärtnerei" of Zürich and offered to all Madagascar Campaign participants. Selling these plants with an amount added for the campaign is a very good and interesting way to raise money for the campaign. More information and ordering details can be found on the following pages. Merchandise already prepared for the Madagascar Campaign Information and order details of two companies that have prepared Madagascar merchandise are provided on the next pages. Both companies have agreed to donate 10% of the sales revenue from each product to the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. On the following pages, a brief description of the products of both companies is provided. More detailed information can be found on the colour inserts. The following two companies have prepared Madagascar Campaign merchandise: Something Different: T-shirts Ravensden: Various products (e.g. plush toys, mugs, writing materials) Source your own Madagascar Campaign merchandise Registered participants in the Campaign may also produce their own products to support the EAZA Madagascar Campaign financially. The EAZA logo, the Campaign logo (if using just one, then please use the Campaign logo) and the images on the CD-ROM may be used on these products. Madagascar Shop For further information on available Madagascar Campaign products, please also refer to the EAZA website (www.eaza.net) as part of the Campaign section. Merchandise information will be regularly updated during the Campaign period in the "Madagascar Shop". 44 Malagasy succulents: Ambassadors for Madagascar The sale of these extraordinary plants from Madagascar for the benefit of selected conservation projects for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign is a very appealing way to promote the Campaign in your institution. In the context of its commitment to the Masoala National Park in Madagascar, the Zoo Zürich has been selling these plants regularly in the last few years, with favorable response from the zoo visitors. By advertising in the local media it was possible to sell more than a thousand plants during each of these weekend sales in the Zoo Zürich. Malagasy succulents are beautiful ornamental plants and easy to care for. They are attractive and well appreciated by the public. As live ambassadors of Madagascar they allow their purchaser to care for some of the rarest species. Many of these plant species are under threat of extinction in their natural environment, due to habitat destruction, fire and illegal harvesting. Therefore, a large number of these plant species are protected under the Washington Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). Madagascar boasts an extremely large diversity of water-storing plants. In the highlands and in the even more arid Southwest of the island some really remarkable succulent species can be found, many of them limited to a small habitat. The study of these plants is far from concluded, new species are being discovered and described all the time. The Stadtgärtnerei Zürich in cooperation with experts on succulents and the Zoo Zürich, under the supervision of the CITES authorities in Switzerland, has set up a program for the reproduction of these Malagasy succulents. All plants are reproduced and grown in Zürich, so no plants are taken from the island. Registered EAZA Madagascar Campaign participants that would like to sell these plants as well, have to agree to contribute an amount of at least €2 for each plant sold to the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. Preliminary order The preparation and production of the plants takes time. Please let us know before 31 December 2006 if and when you intend to have a plant sale. See order form for contact details. Order Orders need to be submitted to the Zoo Zürich at least 5 weeks before the date of delivery to allow for the procurement of the required CITES documentation. See order form for contact details. 45 Delivery The plants will be delivered ready for sale in a clay pot of 8 cm diameter. The soil in the pot is interspersed with ornamental pebbles corresponding to the origin of the plant. Each plant is provided with a plastic sticker showing its scientific name. Storage of the plants The plants need to be irrigated regularly and stored in a temperate and bright place until the sale. Temperatures below 10°C (even for short periods) and drying out of the soil is not well tolerated by the plants; it reduces their quality or may destroy them. Responsibility for storage lies with the purchases. Documentation An illustrated documentation on origin and maintenance of the various plant species will be available in German from December 2006. The two tables with photographs in this document are included on the CD-ROM that is enclosed in the Info Pack. Plant species A set with the number of plants ordered will be selected from the plant species listed below. The set will include those plants which are the most beautiful at the time the order is picked. All these plant species are endemic to Madagascar and are grown from seeds in the Stadtgärtnerei Zürich specifically for the EAZA Madagascar Campaign. Between ten and twenty species out of the list below will be represented. Aloe capitata Aloe conifera Aloe descoingsii var. augustina Aloe schomeri Didiera madagascariensis Euphorbia cap-manombatoensis Euphorbia gottlebei Euphorbia horombensis Euphorbia iharanae Euphorbia lophogona Euphorbia milii var. Ihosy Euphorbia milii var. Mandritsara Euphorbia milii var. roseana Euphorbia milii var. vulcani Euphorbia spec. Euphorbia vigueri Kalanchoe grandidieri Kalanchoe tomentosa Lomatophyllum spec. Operculicaria pachypus Pachypodium ambongense Pachypodium baronii Pachypodium densiflorum 46 Pachypodium geayi Pachypodium lamerei Pachypodium mikea Pachypodium rosulatum ssp. cactipes Pachypodium rosulatum ssp. rosulatum Pachypodium rutenbergianum Pachypodium windsorii Talinella pachypoda Xerophyta dasylirioides Order form Offer price per plant shipping costs 1) set of 576 plants €3.00 2) set of 1152 plants €2.70 3) set of 1728 plants €2.50 To be paid by the purchaser The shipping costs for sets of 576 and 1152 plants are the same. examples: 1) set of 576 plants to London: ca. 800 € 2) set of 1152 plants to London: ca. 800 € 3) set of 1728 plants to London: ca. 1200 € 1) set of 576 plants to Madrid: ca. 820 € 2) set of 1152 plants to Madrid: ca. 820 € 3) set of 1728 plants to Madrid: ca. 1220 € actual shipping cost will be calculated on request customs duty, VAT contribution to EAZA Madagascar Campaign dates of delivery Varies according to country, to be paid by the purchaser at least € 2 per plant calendar week 14 (before Easter) calendar week 16 calendar week 19 calendar week 21 (before Whitsun) other delivery dates to be agreed on request To order plants please contact: Zoo Zürich "Malagasy Plant Ambassadors EAZA" Zürichbergstr. 221 CH-8044 Zürich Switzerland Preliminary orders (notification) should be made before 31 December 2006. Email: zoo@zoo.ch Fax: +41 (0)44 254 25 10 Final order should be made at least five weeks before the requested date of delivery. 47 Illustrations of plants Pachypodium lameri Euphorbia milli Aloe conifera Euphorbia gottlebei 48 Ravensden has been supplying a comprehensive range of animal themed merchandise to zoos and aquariums for over 30 years. We stock over 2,000 products which can be viewed at our UK showroom by appointment. We are pleased to be involved in the Madagascar campaign with 10% of all proceeds to be donated to the EAZA fund. Ravensden Plc Ravensden Farm, Bedford Road, Rushden, Northamptonshire. NN10 0SQ. UK. Telephone - +44 (0) 1933 356221 Fax - +44 (0) 1933 410108 email - office@ravensden.co.uk www.ravensden.co.uk For further information or a copy of our catalogue please contact us by email : office@ravensden.co.uk telephone : +44 (0)1933 356221 fax : +44 (0)1933 410108 or visit our website at www.ravensden.co.uk We look forward to hearing from you soon Printed By Approved EAZA Campaign Merchandise The NEW 2007 EAZA Conserve Madagascar Campaign Merchandise from The Mountain T-Shirt Company and Something Different. We are proud to support EAZA by supplying environmentally friendly T-shirts for the up coming campaign; this range has been designed with the co-operation of EAZA and The Mountain so that we can help achieve the campaign target of €500,000. Children’s Gecko Lizard Burgundy Adults Ring Tailed Lemurs Brown Children’s Black & White Lemur Dusty Blue Adults Gecko Lizard Burgundy Pocket Reverse Print T-shirts Front Back Adults Ring Tailed Lemurs Brown Front Back Adults Gecko Lizard Burgundy Front Back Adults Campaign Madagascar Map Beige / White For all our product and price information or to request a FREE sample, please visit the EAZA website www.eaza.net or e-mail us at admin@somdiff.com, we offer a 90 day free trial to all campaign participants and easy ordering options. Units 3 & 4 Thistle Park, Crossways Road, Bridgwater, Somerset, TA6 6LS, UK. Tel: 0044 (0)1278 423600 Fax: 0044 (0)1278 420966 E-mail: admin@somdiff.com www.somdiff.com Section 4 – Madagascar information Contents Madagascar - A fantasy island in the balance Madagascar's new system of protected areas Examples of protected areas around Madagascar and the projects ongoing • Sahamalaza • Betampona • Ranomafana • Baly Bay • Alaotra • Menabe • Masoala • Andringitra Bibliography 53 54 61 64 69 73 77 80 84 87 91 95 Madagascar – A fantasy island in the balance Lesley Dickie Introduction Madagascar, lying in the Indian Ocean 400 km off the east coast of Africa, is the 4th largest island in the world, with only Greenland, New Guinea and Borneo larger. It is over 1600 km in length and covers nearly 600,000 km2. The island has always attracted travellers and adventurers, and retains an air of mystery and wonder, not least because of its fascinating and unique wildlife. But how did Madagascar come to have this remarkable flora and fauna and why is it so unique? Moreover, what are the challenges for conservation on the island and how can EAZA member institutions help? Geology, geography and habitat The great landmass of Gondwanaland was made up of present day South America, Africa, Antarctica and Australia. Madagascar, the ‘Great Red Island’, was at the core of this supercontinent. The Malagasy tectonic plate split apart from mainland Africa, creating the Mozambique Channel, approximately 165 million years, beginning Madagascar’s journey to becoming an island in the Indian Ocean. However it was not until 70 million years ago that the Indian sub-continent, that other great landmass, split off, creating the straight eastern edge of Madagascar, and began its journey northwards, driving into the Asian continent to form the Himalayas. The island is famed for the remarkable breadth and diversity of its habitats, so much so that it is sometimes known as the ‘8th Continent’. This diversity results from its geographical location, (nestling almost entirely between the Tropics), its great size and unusual topography. The east coast is characterised by an abrupt steep slope rising from the Indian Ocean, and this side of the island has a very wet climate and is battered by tropical storms between December and March. This scarp leads up to the Haute Plateaux, with its cool nighttime temperatures and then begins the long slow slope to the west, where Madagascar meets the warm, blue waters of the Mozambique Channel. The west coast is dry, becoming even drier still towards the south. Fig. 1 Biogeographic areas of Madagascar (after Garbutt, 1999) The island can be roughly divided biogeographically into the Eastern Region and the Western Region (Figure 1). The Eastern region is then further subdivided into four naturally occurring ’domains’ and one manmade landscape; the eastern domain of lowland rainforest, the central domain of midaltitude montane rainforest, the high-mountain domain of high-altitude montane forest, the Sambriano domain of seasonal humid forest and the eastern anthropogenic grasslands. The Western Region is divided into two naturally occurring domains and one area thought to be man-made; the western domain of dry, deciduous forest, the southern domain of spiny forest/thorn scrub and the western anthropogenic grasslands (see Garbutt, 1999 and Goodman and Benstead, 2003 in 54 bibliography for further details of geology, geography and habitats). Why is the flora and fauna so unique? Madagascar split from mainland Africa in the time of dinosaurs and today, particularly on the west coast, dinosaur fossils have been extensively recorded. This of course leads to the question as to how the stem fauna of extant Malagasy species arrived on an island, so far from mainland Africa, that had rifted apart when dinosaurs were extant and the mammalian fauna was yet to evolve? The answer is a peculiar one, but it appears that the stem fauna may have rafted to the island. These rafting events are sometimes called "sweepstakes dispersals". It is suggested that large mats of vegetation break away from the mouths of vast rivers and act as rafts, allowing species to cross water barriers of considerable distance. This is also the hypothesised method of dispersal of proto-New World monkeys to South America from Africa across the Atlantic, a far greater and more arduous crossing than that of East Africa to Madagascar. Very occasionally today sailors report vegetation mats at sea with animals sometimes observed. Although a difficult crossing, statistically a rafting event is favoured and as the early colonisers of all forms were likely to be small this would aid a sea-crossing event. Some modern representatives of the Carnivora, display traits which would make them more able to survive a sea crossing. The Malagasy civet (Fossa fossana) can lay down fat reserves, particularly in its tail, to cope with times of lean foraging opportunities. These fat reserves may account for 25% of their body weight. It is, however, suggested that mammals have successfully colonised the island fewer than a dozen times. Herptiles could also have used this rafting method and birds and insects may have been blown off course as they navigated around the African coastline. Vegetation mats would also have brought the stem plant species from which the endemic forms evolved. Alternatively they were blown to the island, or were brought in the droppings of the rafting species. The early colonisers of Madagascar are thought to have been insectivorous mammals, perhaps similar to present day tenrecs, with subsequent colonisation events bringing several founding species, which then evolved in isolation for millions of years to bring about the unique assemblage of species observed today. The amazingly high levels of endemicity found on the island result from the millennia Madagascar has spent in splendid isolation from the other great landmasses. Examples of endemism on the island today (from Goodman and Benstead, 2003); Plants ~12,000 species 85% endemic Amphibians >300 species* >90% endemic Reptiles 346 species >90% endemic Birds 209 species▪ 51% endemic Terrestrial Mammals 101 species ~100% endemic * More and more amphibians are being described ▪ 209 is the figure for birds that breed regularly on the island. A total of 283 species are recorded on the island But is this endemism exceptionally high in comparison to other parts of the globe? Madagascar as a ‘hotspot’ When discussing the importance of Madagascar globally, it has been described as a ‘hotspot’. The phrase hotspot was first coined in 1988 by the scientist Norman Myers to describe areas that were especially rich in endemic species and threatened by human activities, such as deforestation and urbanisation. Since then 25 areas worldwide have been identified as hotspots. These hotspots contain 44% of all species of vascular plants and 35% of all mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles in only 1.4% of the land surface of the earth. Since this original listing Myers and colleagues then identified the ‘hottest hotspots’ 55 to provide a focus for conservation priority setting, suggesting that global conservation bodies and governments take a ‘silver bullet’ approach to the current extinction crises. They identified areas that should be targeted forthwith, in an effort to slow the rate of loss of species (Table 1) These five hotspot areas cover only 0.4% of the earth's land surface, yet clearly account for a significant amount of global biodiversity. Madagascar and the Caribbean are also relatively small areas, intensifying their importance as high biodiversity areas. Table 1. The top five "hotspots" Endemic Plants Endemic vertebrates Hotspot (% of global total) (% of global total) Tropical Andes 20,000 (6.7) 1,567 (5.7) Sundaland 15,000 (5.0) 701 (2.6) Madagascar 9,704 (3.2) 771 (2.8) Brazil’s Atlantic forest 8,000 (2.7) 567 (2.1) Caribbean 7,000 (2.3) 779 (2.9) Totals 59,704 (19.9) 4,385 (16.1) When examining the number of threatened species in relation to the total described Madagascar once again emerges as an area of high importance. Coupled with the high levels of endemicity previously described it would appear imperative that global conservation efforts should focus resources on this island "continent". Today, remarkable animals and plants are found on Madagascar; the beautiful and varied Sifaka sp., the fabulous fossa (Plate 3), the remarkable seven species of baobabs (in comparison to the single species found on mainland Africa) (Plate 4), and the intriguing amphibians (Plate 1), reptiles (Plate 2), invertebrates (Plate 5) and birds (Plate 6). It is this fascinating biodiversity that keeps visitors returning to the island time and time again. But in our interest in the island we should also take time to meet with the welcoming people of Madagascar. Plate 1. Tomato frog (Dyschophus aquineti) © Franco Andreone Plate 2. Chameleon (Brookesia peyrierasi) © Nick Garbutt 56 Plate 3. The fossa (Cryptoprocta ferox) ©Nick Garbutt Plate 4. Baobabs ©Nick Garbutt 57 Plate 5. Giraffe-necked weevil ©Nick Garbutt Plate 6. Vanga ©Nick Garbutt 58 The Malagasy Humans arrived surprisingly late on Madagascar, with archaeological evidence of their activity dating from approximately 2000 years ago. Evidence of settled communities only dates from 1200 years ago. The likely origins of the Malagasy are found in Indonesia/Austronesia and they share common features such as rice growing practices, outrigger canoes and language affinities. In addition a number of Bantu African practices can also be found on the island and some Bantu words are part of the language. Europeans began trading extensively with the island from the 16th Century onwards and many pirates made their base on the island to conduct Indian Ocean raids. Many early European traders and settlers fell prey to malaria and survival rates were low. The very earliest travellers may have included Marco Polo who described the mythical Rohk bird, believed to be based upon the long extinct elephant bird, Aepyornis. Amongst the earliest European explorers were the Portugese in 1500 followed by the French and English. From around this time some detailed maps were produced (Fig. 2) – complete with sea-dragons! Today the people of Madagascar are grouped in 18 distinct tribes, with varying interpretations of the "vintana" or codes of practice which govern the animist belief system of many of the people. Fig. 2 Map dating from the 17th Century. Threats to the biodiversity of the island Madagascar is an economically impoverished country that is making great efforts, through the government of President Marc Ravalamanana, to improve the living standards of its people. The population at present stands at over 17 million with an annual growth rate of 3.03%, a doubling time of 25 years. Half of the population is under 15, with a median age of 17.4 years. The birth rate is 41.9 births per 1000 with an infant mortality rate of 78.5 per 1000 live births. Illiteracy is running at 45% and the average Malagasy mother has 6.6 children. Madagascar is a very young country. Coupled with the fact that agriculture, much of it small scale (rice, coffee, vanilla, spices) is the primary livelihood for 70% of the population, the land is under extreme pressure. In the south of the island cattle herding predominates and the zebu rapidly destroy native habitats, nutrient poor grasslands often replacing them. It is also in the south that much of the forests are being destroyed in charcoal burning, as most Malagasy still cook over charcoal. It is estimated that 90% of Madagascar’s original forest has been converted by man, for extraction of hardwoods, fuel-woods, for farming and for mining. In the eastern rainforest 111,000 ha have been lost every year from 1950-1985, a 50% decline in 35 years. The eastern rainforest is thought to cover, at best, just 34% of its original extent. The dry deciduous forest is believed to be declining at an even more advanced rate. Inevitably, as the forests and other unique habitats disappear, so do the species that depend upon them. It is not only outright destruction of habitat that is of concern. Sustained exploitation can lead to that habitat being degraded and fragmented, creating small islands of remnant forests in seas of anthropogenic grasslands. Secondary forest growth may begin to 59 predominate, which can have great effect on some species. While some introduced species thrive in altered and man-made landscapes, the endemic fauna is at far greater risk Many species are entirely reliant on forested areas, and as these disappear, they will face greater and greater problems. Although in some areas of Madagascar hunting of certain species is prohibited by local tribal "fady" or taboo, many threatened species are hunted. Commercial trade is also threatening many endemic species. It must be emphasised that much of the threats to biodiversity in Madagascar are due to poverty. Tavy, the slash –and-burn agriculture practice is carried out by rural Malagasy to feed their families, as is charcoal burning and hunting. The Malagasy are proud of their island and culture but often the choices they have are limited. Madagascar is very much an island paradise in the balance. The solutions We have described above some of the problems facing Madagascar and its people. But many conservationists are now hopeful that Madagascar has a more promising future. The President of Madagascar, Marc Ravalomanana, announced at the World Parks Congress in Durban in 2003 that his government would triple the protected area in Madagascar in 5 years (2003-2008). This bold statement has been followed by the formation of a new protected area system (see next chapter) and millions of hectares of land have been designated as new protected areas under this system. Many of the new areas will be available as managed resource areas for local peoples and the management of the areas will be very much collaborations between local people, government, private sector bodies and conservation NGO’s, to name but a few agencies. Providing the Malagasy people with the skills they need to effectively manage these areas will be a major challenge, but is one that is being firmly grasped by many conservation bodies in conjunction with the government. You will see in the Projects Section (Section 5) of this Info Pack that many of the selected projects have training elements – a key for the future of the island. However, the President also stated during this historic address that "This is not just Madagascar’s biodiversity, it is the world’s biodiversity". This was both a statement of fact and challenge to the world. Is the world ready to respond and assist Madagascar in this amazing and bold effort? We hope so. Already many EAZA members are doing their best to help conserve biodiversity in Madagascar (see next chapters). We hope this campaign represents an opportunity to get involved and we can all help the President, his government and the people to conserve the most wonderful island on Earth – Arovako i Madagasikara, Conserve Madagascar. Next chapters We realised that this Info Pack island introduction could only give a taste of the biodiversity on the island. We therefore decided not to focus on just a few species, but to set out how the new protected area system works and to describe some existing locations on the island where exemplary conservation work is taking place. We hope the work described in the following pages will prompt you to find out even more about Madagascar and a bibliography is provided at the end of this Section to help you begin further reading. 60 Madagascar’s new system of protected areas – Implementing the ‘Durban Vision’ Joanna Durbin The Government of Madagascar made a bold commitment in September 2003 to conserve the nation’s wealth of natural resources and biodiversity by tripling the protected area network from the existing 1.7 million hectares to cover 6 million hectares or 10% of the country’s surface area in the coming five years. This commitment made by the President of the Republic of Madagascar at the Vth World Parks Congress in Durban, South Africa, became known as the ‘Durban Vision’. Creating the new protected areas has stimulated remarkable collaboration between Government, funding agencies, non-governmental organisations, private sector and individuals at all levels. The ‘Durban Vision Group’ was created in 2003 as a think-tank and orientation platform grouping government entities and national and international partner organisations working in conservation and biodiversity in Madagascar to support the Ministry and its partners in implementing the Durban commitment. The group was divided into several sub-groups: site prioritization, management and categorization, legal framework, communication, finance. Regional commissions have also been created that provide a platform for local and regional interests, ensuring good communication between national and regional levels, while also guiding and coordinating creation of the protected areas in the field. Plate 7. Isalo landscape (© Richard Durbin) Plate 8. Lake Bedo (© Alice Smith) A more flexible approach to protected area management has been adopted, with the aim of maximizing direct and indirect uses of natural resources while also safeguarding biodiversity. It was decided that most of the new protected areas will not be managed by ANGAP, the existing protected area management agency, but could be managed by the Directorate General of Waters and Forests (DGEF) or its regional offices (DIREEF or CIREEF), by non-governmental organisations, by community organisations, by private sector organisations, or by a combination of these through collaborative management agreements. According to the management objectives defined for the site, the protected areas can be classified in any of the six International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) protected area categories: • Category 1 - extensive wilderness or ecosystem areas that are strictly protected, • Category 2 – ecosystem areas that also provide recreation, such as national parks, • Category 3 - areas that conserve specific features, such as natural monuments, • Category 4 - managed areas that maintain species and habitats, • Category 5 - protected landscapes with harmonious interaction between people and nature 61 • Category 6 - substantially natural areas managed for sustainable use of natural resources. All Madagascar’s protected areas will belong to a single national system of protected areas (Système d’Aires Protégées de Madagascar or SAPM), including existing ANGAP-managed and new protected areas. The three fundamental objectives of the SAPM are: • To conserve the entirety of Madagascar’s unique biodiversity (ecosystems, species, genetic variability); • To conserve Madagascar’s cultural heritage; • To maintain ecological services and promote sustainable use of natural resources to contribute to the reduction of poverty and sustainable development. Fig. 3 Map showing existing protected areas and potential sites for new protected areas, July 2004 In addition to contributing to these national objectives, each protected area should conform to the IUCN definition of a protected area: "An area of land and/or sea especially dedicated to the protection and maintenance of biological diversity, and of natural and associated cultural resources, and managed through legal or other effective means". 62 The prioritization of sites has followed an iterative process. Results of earlier prioritization exercises were overlaid to provide a preliminary map of potential sites: CI-GEF 1995, Birdlife’s Important Bird Areas 1999, APAPC-MBG Priority Sites for Plants 2004 etc. Subsequent and on-going analysis has mapped polygons of endangered and endemic species to model distribution of sites to ensure maximum biodiversity coverage. A further exercise has been to take the new concept of protected areas and the maps of high biodiversity value to the regions to verify that they corresponded with regional and local interests and preoccupations. In general, the SAPM approach has been received positively and a new set of priority sites have been identified according to local interests, particularly ensuring that areas of cultural importance in addition to biodiversity value were included. In the meantime, different organisations proceeded with negotiations over definition of management objectives and delimitation for specific sites around the country. A new decree (Décret d’Application No 848-05) for the existing protected area law (Code des Aires Protégées or COAP) was approved by the Council of Ministers on 12 December. This enabled the creation of four new categories of protected areas (Natural Park, Natural Monument, Protected Harmonious Landscape and Natural Resource Reserve corresponding with IUCN categories II, III, V and VI respectively), to add to the three existing categories (Strict Nature Reserve, National Park and Special Reserve corresponding with IUCN categories I, II and IV respectively). The decree also stipulated that the Ministry could delegate organisations other than ANGAP for protected area management, enabled comanagement and simplified the process for creation of protected areas. With a legal framework in place, the new protected areas are now being created. The Minister of Environment, Waters and Forests signed a set of protected orders (arrêté de protection temporaire) in December 2005 giving legal protection to 5 new protected areas: Loky-Manambato (near Daraina) of 70, 837 ha, Iles Radama/Sahamalaza of 130,000 ha, Makira of 371,217 ha, Ankeniheny-Zahamena forest corridor of 425,000 ha and the Anjozorobe-Angavo forest corridor of 52,200 ha. This meant that the Government’s objective of creating 1 million hectares of new protected areas in 2005 had been achieved. These protection orders grant provisional legal protection as well as defining the management objectives and the organisation delegated to manage the protected area. The dossiers have to be supported by evidence of consultation at the Commune level and general support at local and regional levels for the creation. The protection orders stipulate that further negotiation must be undertaken to agree on the exact limits, which must then be verified by the appropriate government departments, and a management plan must be developed and approved within the following year to justify final creation of the protected area. The President of Madagascar declared in January 2006 that a further 1 million hectares of protected areas should be created before Independence Day celebrations on June 26 2006, which has stimulated increased efforts to prepare the dossiers for other new protected areas. In the meantime further work is in progress to finalize a manual on creation, management, negotiation and communication for SAPM and also to improve understanding of governance types and quality with respect to protected area management particularly promoting participation by local communities. 63 AEECL Programme Sahamalaza Iles Radama: Conservation and study of critically endangered lemurs in northwestern Madagascar Christoph Schwitzer The blue-eyed black lemur (Eulemur macaco flavifrons; plate 9) is a highly endangered lemur taxon from the Sahamalaza Peninsula, northwest Madagascar. The population size is estimated to be in the low thousands. The subspecies E. m. flavifrons is still one of the least-studied of all lemur taxa. It exclusively occurs in a very small area of about 2,700 km2 south of the Andranomalaza, north of the Maevarano, and west of the Sandrakota rivers, where it inhabits primary and secondary forests and forest fragments. The Sahamalaza Peninsula lies within a transition zone between the Sambirano evergreen forest region in the north and the western dry deciduous forest region in the south. Called the southern Sambirano, this area harbours semi-humid evergreen forests with tree heights of up to 30 m on ferruginous alkalescent and alkaline soils based on sandstone, basalt or clay. Average annual precipitation is around 1600 mm. The dry season lasts from April to October, the rainy season from November to March. The vegetation in Sahamalaza both includes plant species from the Sambirano as well as from the western dry deciduous forests. The forests and forest fragments are separated through grassland with shrubs. Plate 9. Female blue-eyed black lemur (Eulemur macaco flavifrons) in Sahamalaza. (© Nora Schwitzer) In addition to the blue-eyed black lemur, Sahamalaza is home to a secretive species of sportive lemur (Lepilemur sahamalazensis; plate 10) that was first described by science in February 2006 from the Ankarafa Forest on the Sahamalaza Peninsula. The Sahamalaza sportive lemur also seems to exclusively occur in this area. Even though nothing is yet known about the size of its remaining population, looking at the amount of available habitat the species is likely to be highly endangered, too. Other lemur species in Sahamalaza include the aya-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis), the western bamboo lemur (Hapalemur occidentalis) and the newly described Mirza zaza. 64 Plate 10. Sahamalaza sportive lemur (Lepilemur sahamalazensis), a species newly described in February 2006. (© Klaus Krieger) Box 1. The blue-eyed black lemur (Eulemur macaco flavifrons) The blue-eyed black lemur is a critically endangered lemur taxon from northwest Madagascar. It exclusively occurs in a very small distribution area on and adjacent to the Sahamalaza Peninsula. Blue-eyed black lemurs are sexually dichromatic, the females being beige brown and the males being completely black. Probably because of these differences in fur colouration, the two sexes were regarded as different species and were thus described separately by science during the 19th century: Gray named the females Lemur flavifrons in 1867, and in 1880 Sclater described the males as Lemur nigerrimus. As nobody knew where exactly these animals came from, and no scientist seems to have seen them again for the 100 years that followed, the blue-eyed black lemur was by some authors regarded as a "neverending myth" until as recently as 1983, when the subspecies was finally rediscovered by L. Koenders during an expedition financed by Mulhouse Zoo and Strasbourg University. After subsequent genetic studies, the subspecific status of Eulemur macaco flavifrons was verified. Blue-eyed black lemurs are critically endangered because of their limited distribution area, fragmentation of their remaining habitat, and small total population size. The latter is estimated to be in the low thousands. In 1984 and 1986, some individuals from a non-viable subpopulation were captured and brought to Europe to become the founders of the blue-eyed black lemur EEP. The EEP is directly linked with an in situ conservation and research programme for the taxon, carried out by European and Malagasy scientists on the Sahamalaza Peninsula. All European zoos keeping blue-eyed black lemurs contribute to finance this programme through their membership in the Association Européenne pour l’Etude et la Conservation des Lémuriens (AEECL). The lemur species living in Sahamalaza are threatened by hunting and forest destruction. All over Madagascar forests are burned down at a very high rate, both for slash-and-burn agriculture and to gain space for grazing cattle. Blue-eyed black lemurs were assessed Critically Endangered (CR A2cd) by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) at their most recent Red List Assessment in April 2005, based on an 80% population reduction during the last 25 years. The same probably applies to the Sahamalaza sportive lemur, which was however not yet assessed at this Red List Assessment. The Association Européenne pour l’Etude et la Conservation des Lémuriens (AEECL) is a consortium of 16 European Zoological Gardens and one University who have joined forces to carry out conservation and research projects for Madagascar’s highly endangered lemurs Since the late 1980s, AEECL has implemented or financed a number of different research projects, mainly on the cytogenetics, taxonomy and distribution of lemur genera such as Hapalemur, Lepilemur, and Propithecus. The Sahamalaza region has been in AEECL’s focus of scientific and conservation interest since 1988. As one of its priorities, AEECL has been working on the creation of a reserve for the blue-eyed black lemur on the Sahamalaza Peninsula since a number of years. The work of AEECL has led to the implementation of a UNESCO biosphere reserve in Sahamalaza in September 2001. On 26 January 2005 the Malagasy government issued a decree proclaiming an immediate temporary protection of the core zones of the future protected area Sahamalaza – Iles Radama, altogether comprising 260 km2 of forests, coral reefs and mangroves, until the final creation of a national park. This was an important step on the way to achieving an official conservation status for the area under Malagasy law, but it does not yet effectively increase the level of protection of the last remaining blue-eyed black lemur habitat. To achieve an effectual protection, a motivated and well-equipped troop of park rangers is needed, a measure which is however already foreseen in the programme of the Malagasy national parks authority ANGAP for the coming years. The future protected area Sahamalaza – Iles Radama is one of a few parks in the process of creation that were selected to be part of the Programme Environnemental 3 (PE 3), a 65 governmental nature conservation programme. The worldbank has made a donation of around 50 million US$ (the highest amount of money ever given to a country without the obligation to pay it back) to fund this programme, and part of the money will be used for Sahamalaza. Box 2. The Association Européenne pour l’Etude et la Conservation des Lémuriens (AEECL) European zoos have been involved in efforts to protect the last remaining habitat of the blue-eyed black lemur on the Sahamalaza Peninsula since the late 1980s, when the zoos of Mulhouse, Cologne and Saarbrücken as well as the University of Strasbourg founded a consortium for lemur research and conservation. This consortium has developed into the Association Européenne pour l’Etude et la Conservation des Lémuriens (AEECL), which today counts 16 member zoos from all over Europe. Together with its American partners, the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), and with the Malagasy national parks authority (ANGAP), AEECL has since its creation been working on the implementation of a UNESCO biosphere reserve (created in 2001) and a national protected area on the Sahamalaza Peninsula. During the course of 2004 a field research and conservation station and a scientific working group have been established by scientists of AEECL and the Universities of Antananarivo and Mahajanga in the Ankarafa forest, situated within the UN Biosphere Reserve and proposed national park "Sahamalaza - Iles Radama". Ongoing studies address the ecology of the blueeyed black lemur and other lemurs living in Sahamalaza. The results will be used to help design effective conservation measures for these critically endangered lemurs. The AEECL member zoos have furthermore initiated captive propagation programmes for the blue-eyed black lemur as well as for other lemur species within the framework of EAZA, that are directly linked to the in situ conservation project in Sahamalaza. During the course of 2004 a field research station (plate 11) and a working group have been established by scientists of AEECL and the Universities of Antananarivo and Mahajanga in the Ankarafa Forest, situated within the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and proposed APMC (Aire Protégée Marine et Côtière) Sahamalaza – Iles Radama. Ankarafa’s forest fragments accommodate one of the largest populations of blue-eyed black lemurs still remaining. The first three long-term research projects, namely on the nutritional ecology, socioecology and parasitic status of E. m. flavifrons, have been or are currently being carried out within the Plate 11. The AEECL field station in the framework of AEECL’s Programme Sahamalaza. Ankarafa Forest on the Sahamalaza Peninsula. Other species that have been subject to studies (© Christoph Schwitzer) and/or census work in Sahamalaza during the last years were Mirza zaza and Lepilemur sahamalazaensis as well as birds. Studying the blue-eyed black lemur... These studies, as well as the follow-up work that will be carried out during the coming years, aim at generating knowledge that contributes to the improvement of in situ and ex situ conservation efforts for the blue-eyed black lemur and other lemur species in Sahamalaza. AEECL’s Programme Sahamalaza is part of a larger initiative, the "Critically endangered lemurs programme", jointly financed through Conservation International, AEECL and other NGOs, and coordinated by the Malagasy NGO Fanamby. This initiative aims at establishing scientific conservation programmes for the eight most endangered lemur taxa, among them Eulemur macaco flavifrons. Madagascar’s lemurs are primarily 66 threatened by the destruction and degradation of their natural habitats all over the island. Forests are being cut to make way for rice cultivation (plate 12) or grazing cattle, or selectively logged, e.g. for rosewood exploitation. The Malagasy government is well aware of the critical situation of the country’s ecosystems, and the Malagasy President, Marc Ravalomanana, has promised to triple the size of Madagascar’s protected area network until 2010. Although an increase in the number and size of protected areas constitutes a large step into the right Plate 12. "Tavy", forest destroyed to make direction, it does not in every case equal an way for agriculture in Sahamalaza. effective protection of an endangered (© Christoph Schwitzer) species. It is therefore necessary to establish an individual management programme and action plan for each of the most endangered lemur species, based in each case on studies on the species’ ecology and behaviour and on the impacts of habitat degradation on the latter. ...and saving it from extinction There still remain large gaps in the knowledge we have about the blue-eyed black lemur. Together, the zoos united in AEECL are aiming at filling some of these gaps, especially concerning population and social dynamics, Box 3. Visiting Sahamalaza - Iles Radama habitat utilisation, nutritional ecology, and veterinary issues, to be able to develop The Sahamalaza Peninsula in northwestern comprehensive conservation and Madagascar is the best place to see the management plans for this critically Critically Endangered blue-eyed black lemur endangered species. The research project (Eulemur macaco flavifrons) and perhaps the will moreover increase public awareness for northern giant mouse lemur (Mirza zaza). It is the forest ecosystem in the target area and also the only place to see the newly described will facilitate long-term conservation and Sahamalaza sportive lemur (Lepilemur research efforts for the target species and sahamalazensis). The Ankarafa forest in their habitat. Sahamalaza can be reached by a one-hour boat trip from the town of Analalava to the Other than research and direct conservation small village of Marovato and a subsequent measures, AEECL and its American partners two-hour hike inland. Boats as well as local from the Wildlife Conservation Society guides can be arranged in Analalava (contact (WCS), with the involvement of the AEECL office or the Hotel Talio). A local representatives of local communities from guides association is in the process of being the Sahamalaza Peninsula and formed. Analalava is no longer served by Air representatives of several environmental Madagascar, but it is possible to take a plane institutions, have implemented a to the regional capital Antsohihy and continue community-based natural resource by bush taxi or (in the rainy season) by ferry. management programme (CBNRM) in Use of an Antananarivo- or Antsiranana-based December 2000. Two objectives of this tour operator is recommended. The programme were identified: to maintain and Sahamalaza Peninsula can also be reached by strengthen natural processes and the pirogue from Maromandia, which is situated condition of terrestrial and marine between Antsohihy and Ambanja on the ecosystems; and to improve natural National Road 6. The best time to visit resource use techniques in order to improve Sahamalaza is between August and October, the standard of living of the local human as these are the coolest and driest months. populations. An action plan (Natural You need to bring a tent and camping Resources Community-Management Plan) equipment. was proposed and is currently being 67 implemented. It has since been the reference framework for the AEECL/WCS consortium’s interventions in the Sahamalaza region. Twenty-one Local Community Associations (LCA) were set up in four communes as well as several social and professional associations grouping young people, women, farmers, fishers, and craftspeople. An LCA is defined as a village-level association to which the law grants the power to manage natural resources within its territory. These associations will partly take over the management of the natural resources in their communities and engage themselves to manage them in a sustainable way. Thereafter, a local agreement ("dina") on the conservation of the environment was developed and formalized for each of the LCAs that were set up. Moreover, in each village ("fokontany") a Village Forest Protection Committee was set up. The committees work in liaison with the forest department’s representative in Analalava to check permits issued by the representative for any logging and to look after the work. AEECL and WCS help the local associations by providing assistance with bureaucratic procedures as well as through offering courses in e.g. sustainable rice cultivation or the production of handicraft for sale to tourists. As part of the CBNRM for Sahamalaza, in 2005 AEEL/WCS funded a training in irrigated rice farming that was carried out in partnership with the NGO Voahary Salama, specialised in farmers training. From the training benefited 27 people from Sahamalaza. Yields were 13.55 t/ha and 17.14 t/ha, respectively, in pilot rice fields A and B, against 3 t/ha in local rice fields where traditional techniques were used. To increase awareness of the environment and the need for its conservation, AEECL also participates in the organisation of local festivals such as the "Vitrines de la Sofia" in July 2005 (plate 13) or the "Festival of the blue-eyed black lemur", which took place for the first time in September 2005. Plate 13. The stand of AEECL at the "Vitrines de la Sofia" exhibition in Analalava. (© Christoph Schwitzer) 68 Betampona Nature Reserve Karen Freeman Madagascar Fauna Group (MFG) The MFG is an international Non-Governmental Organisation - established in 1988 to contribute to the conservation of Madagascar’s endemic wildlife. Comprised primarily of zoo members, the MFG’s in-situ programs are funded through the members’ annual dues. The MFG’s core programme began under the direction of MFG/Duke Primate Centre technical advisors Andrea Katz and Charlie Welch who came to Parc Ivoloina at the request of the Malagasy government for international assistance in the reconstruction and management of the Ivoloina Zoo. Since then the objectives of the MFG have broadened to include conservation, environmental education, socio-economic development, forest restoration and the promotion of sustainable agricultural and agro-forestry practices. In 1998 the MFG became involved with Betampona Nature Reserve when, in partnership with ANGAP (Association National pour la Gestion des Aires protégées) the first of three releases of captive-reared black and white ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata variegata) took place at Betampona*. The subsequent follow-up to the releases led to the development of the partnerships and conservation activities that are in effect today. Betampona Nature Reserve (Réserve Naturelle Intégrale de Betampona) Betampona is situated approximately 40 km northwest of Toamasina in the eastern Malagasy rainforest belt. Recognized today as one of Madagascar’s top biodiversity hotspots, in 1927 the 2228 ha Betampona forest became the first area to receive the designation "Réserve Naturelle Intégrale" or "strict nature reserve". At that time Betampona was part of a much larger fragment of rainforest than it is today. Ranging between 250 and 600 m in altitude Betampona now stands alone – one of Madagascar’s last fragments of lowland rainforest - probably saved from deforestation by its extreme slopes as much as by its protected status. For most of the year the climate at Betampona is hot and humid with an annual average humidity of between 81 and 91%. There is no true dry season. Rain can be expected for more than 300 days each year with over 2000 mm falling each year. The average annual temperature is 24°C with annual lows of around 16°C between June and August and annual highs of 32°C possible between December and February. Betampona’s designation means that access is available only to ANGAP and to researchers approved by the Malagasy government. MFG is the main research organisation working at Betampona and is ANGAP’s official partner for the management of the site. Plate 14. Betampona Nature Reserve. (© K. Freeman) The forest, which occasionally still suffers from small-scale illegal wood extraction, remains largely intact, except for past selective logging of precious woods and pressure from encroaching invasive plant species. It is home to 11 species of lemur including the black and white ruffed lemur, and the largest of the nocturnal lemurs, the aye-aye (Daubentonia * See ALERT 69 madagascariensis). At least 88 species of bird and 70 amphibian species also inhabit the forest along with 67 species of reptile, including the critically endangered gecko Paroedura masobe and the prehistoric looking leaf-tailed gecko genus (Uroplatus sp.) The reserve shelters countless plant and invertebrate species – many of which are still undescribed. Species new to science are being found every year. Plate 15. Paroedura masobe: Threatened by its value in the illegal pet trade market. (© K. Freeman) Plate 16. Liopholidophis sp.: Potential new species for Betampona. (© K. Freeman) Betampona has also been described as one of the most florally diverse and important regions of Madagascar (pers. comm. Birkenshaw, Missouri Botanical Gardens) and, as intact lowland rainforest, represents one of the most threatened habitats in the country. Conservation activities Today’s conservation objectives The conservation of Betampona’s primary forest depends upon the consideration of two areas; the reserve itself and the area immediately surrounding the reserve including the Zone of Protection. The Zone of Protection is a 100 m wide belt of land surrounding the reserve, intended as a buffer between villages and the reserve proper on which the traditional "slash and burn" agricultural practice "tavy" is not legally permitted. It has historically been cultivated by local villagers and continues to be so, so good relations with the local population are vital. Within the reserve the MFG is carrying out research to increase knowledge of the species present and their distribution to try to establish an idea of the conservation status of each. Conservation management measures can then be taken to protect the oftentimes critically endangered species. Monitoring of the released lemurs continues and valuable data is being collected on population and group dynamics in the black and white ruffed lemurs to help ensure their long-term survival in the reserve. The reserve itself needs to be protected from invasive plant species, buffeting from cyclones and the illegal extraction of forest products. Seven subsistence-farming dependent villages are located around the Betampona periphery. The importance of developing sustainable, economically viable land practices for these rural communities is accentuated by the close proximity of the primary forest edge. Rapidly expanding village populations and increasing poverty are driving up the demand for land and intensifying the pressure on the forest. Deforestation up to the reserve’s limit has left a sharp primary forest edge, which is regularly buffeted by cyclones, creating gaps. Each time a gap appears invasive plant species colonize it, suppressing native forest regeneration and driving the forest back. In addition, small-scale poaching and illegal timber extraction continue in areas of the forest despite MFG and ANGAP’s combined efforts. 70 The MFG conservation and research objectives are targeted at the reduction of these problems through continuing research and education initiatives for the local populace. Today a talented team of five MFG conservation agents work at the Betampona field-station, Rendrirendry (S017559, E049121), directed by Dr Karen Freeman. Supplemented by Malagasy and international researchers, the fauna research programme has diversified from a largely lemur-based study into a broader programme incorporating birds, small mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish and invertebrates. The flora programme has built upon the foundations laid by Welch’s reforestation trial plots to include research into the management of invasive species and the provision of economically desirable plants at cost price for local villagers. The MFG also collects long-term phenological and meteorological data in the reserve to help monitor long-term trends in population fluctuations. The findings of all studies conducted by MFG staff and researchers are given to ANGAP so that they can be used in the management and protection of the reserve. In collaboration with ANGAP (who’s activities in Betampona are largely financed by MFG) the information obtained from the work of the MFG agents and researchers will be used to plan and direct the following initial conservation based initiatives: 1) The management of invasive species, specifically guava (Psidium cattleianum) and longoza (Aframomum angustifolium). 2) The reforestation of the Betampona Zone of Protection using a combination of native trees and non-invasive, economically beneficial exotic trees and shrubs. 3) The identification of the need for and implementation of single species conservation projects at Betampona. Other benefits from the MFG The presence of the MFG agents at Betampona is a deterrent to poachers and illegal timber extractors. The southern areas of the reserve, which due to the location of Rendrirendry, are frequented far more often by the MFG conservation agents than the northern areas, suffer a far lower level of illegal activity than the northern areas. There is a small MFG-run plant nursery at Rendrirendry where plants suitable for agroforestry, forest restoration and sustainable agricultural practices are propagated. The young plants and trees are given or sold very cheaply to villagers in the areas around Betampona. The MFG and ANGAP agents run annual training programmes, reforestation days and environmental awareness campaigns in the villages around Betampona to encourage sustainable land-use and reduce pressure on the reserve. Plate 17. Reforestation near Betampona organised by MFG and ANGAP. (© K. Freeman) 71 Getting to Betampona Due to its "Réserve Naturelle Intégrale" protected status, Betampona is only open to ANGAP, permitted researchers, MFG staff and funders. Research permits can be obtained from the Ministry of the Environment, Water and Forests via ANGAP. Entry permits for consultants can also be obtained at the discretion of ANGAP. The first point of contact for gaining authorisation to visit Betampona should be ANGAP, Toamasina. They should be contacted well in advance of the proposed visit (allowing three months in the case of research permits) for the authorisation to be processed. Once a permit has been obtained a taxi-brousse can be taken, or a four-wheel drive vehicle organised to get to Anosibe, which is about 24 km northwest of Toamasina along the Ivoloina River. At Anosibe the river must be crossed by boat before taking a taxi-brousse a further 12 km to Fontsimavo. From Fontsimavo, a guide is needed for the 4 km hike up to Betampona. Guides can be organised through the MFG. Seven hours should be allowed for the journey to Rendrirendry from Toamasina. Box 4. Black and white ruffed lemur releases Betampona’s profile was raised internationally by a lemur restocking program, which featured the releases of captive born black and white ruffed lemurs (Varecia variegata variegata) from MFGmember zoos in 1997, 1998 and 2001. The objectives of the releases were to improve the genetic viability of the small existing black and white ruffed lemur population at Betampona and to assess the feasibility of utilising captive-bred lemurs to reinforce wild populations. After thorough veterinary screening, the animals were flown to Madagascar and taken to Betampona where they were held in cages to acclimatise them to wild foods and the forest, before being released. A team of seven Malagasy conservation agents, led by British scientist Dr. Adam Britt, closely followed the progress of the released lemurs for five years; less intense but systematic monitoring continues today. The primary goals of the restocking programme were realized – one captive-born pair successfully reproduced in the wild and another two of the released individuals produced offspring with wild-born mates. There were losses due to predation by fossa (Cryptoprocta ferox) and some released lemurs proved to be unable to adapt to forest conditions. The successes and disappointments of the lemur releases provided valuable information, which can be used should future lemur introductions prove necessary. The releases also suggested that, whenever possible, translocations of wild lemurs, already habituated to primary forest conditions, may be preferable to reintroductions of captive-born animals. Plate 17. Black and white ruffed lemur. (© K. Freeman) 72 Ranomafana National Park Pat Wright Location Ranomafana National Park (RNP) became the fourth national park in Madagascar on 31 May 1991. Impetus for the establishment of the park was the 1986 discovery of a new species of lemur: the golden bamboo lemur (Hapalemur aureus) by Dr. Patricia C. Wright and colleagues. The park boundaries were carefully delineated so that no villages are within the park. Ranomafana National Park is located in southeast Madagascar between 47°18’ – 47°37’ E and 21°02’ – 21°25’ S, approximately 90 kilometers west of the Indian Ocean, 60 km northeast of the provincial capital Fianarantsoa, and 400 km southeast of the capital city Antananarivo. The park covers 43,500 ha, (166 square miles or 106,253 acres). The park receives on average 3000 mm of rain a year with most of the rain falling from December to March. Description of habitat The climate of Ranomafana National Park is subtropical with rainfall averaging 2,300 – 4,000 mm annually. Monthly rainfall is highest in the warm season, December to March (400 mm), and lowest in the cool season from May to October (90 mm). Temperatures average 18 – 20°C, with lowest and highest recorded temperatures in the area being 4°C and 37°C, respectively. Most of the park area is mountainous (altitudinal gradient 400 – 1374 m) with steep terrain and contains lowland moist forest, cloud forest, and high plateau forest. One third of the park has been selectively logged; the remaining 2/3 is undisturbed. The forest is the primary watershed for southeastern Madagascar, and 29 rivers originate in the park. Protected status Prior to 1991 Ranomafana was a classified forest managed by the Madagascar Department of Water and Forests. In May, 1991 Ranomafana was declared a National Park managed by Duke University and then ICTE/Stony Brook University. In 1997 management was turned over to the Madagascar National Park Service, the parastatal ANGAP (Association pour la Gestion des Aires Protégées). No collecting or hunting of plants or wildlife is allowed in the park. Researchers must apply to a consortium of University of Antananarivo, Parc Tsimbazaza Zoo, ANGAP and Department of Water and Forest (CAFF/CORR committee) for research permits, and tourists pay entrance fees and must be accompanied by a tour guide. Half of the funds collected for entrance fees are returned to the villagers for conservation projects. Thirty park rangers and park staff patrol and manage the park. Species found at the location Ranomafana National Park has a high diversity of primates, a total of 13 species. The RNP lemurs range from 32 gram to 6 kilogram, with five day-active, six night-active, and two which are active six hours during the day and six hours during the night. Biodiversity is extremely high: 13 lemurs, 118 birds, >70 amphibians and reptiles. Endangered species include golden bamboo lemur (Hapalemur aureus), greater bamboo lemur (Prolemur simus), black and white ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata), aquatic tenrec (Limnogale mergulus), Madagascar serpent eagle (Eutriorchis astur), and the slender-billed flufftail (Sarothrura watersi). RNP contains most species found in the threatened eastern forest corridor of Madagascar. Conservation and research activities at the location Dr. Wright was the driving force behind the development of a research station in Ranomafana National Park in 1986 and of the modern research and training Centre ValBio in 2003. Centre ValBio’s mission is to promote and research biodiversity and conservation of 73 Madagascar’s rainforests, and to train a new generation of conservation biologists. The research station provides meals, laboratory, and classroom space for researchers and students. Over 150 international and Malagasy scientists come to the site to study rainforest biology each year. The publication list of research conducted at RNP exceeds 325 articles (see www.sunysb.edu/madagascar). Ecological research contributes to the management decisions for the park. Research built a strong conservation foundation at Ranomafana by beginning early to assist the local people in understanding the value of their biodiversity. The project built seven schools, and rebuilt seven more in the first five years. Following this came development of conservation materials in Malagasy for the school teachers to incorporate into the curriculum. Recent programs initiated are Young Naturalists groups for adolescents, reforestation project in the schools, local language pamphlets on biodiversity. Health is also a concern of these remote villages, and the a health team headed by a medical doctor brings basic health and hygiene to 25 villages, linking the conservation of this watershed with improvements in health. By providing over 150 jobs for local residents directly linked to the park (park rangers, research assistants, tourist guides), as well as the increasing number of jobs for the burgeoning tourist industry in shops, hotels and restaurants, the Malagasies see a direct economic value to preserving wildlife. Small businesses like production of top quality honey, reforesting and selling endemic trees, producing and weaving native silk products, harvesting medicinal plant gardens make small but effective ways that local people can value their biodiversity. At an international level, research carried out at Centre ValBio provides the scientific knowledge that has formed the basis of numerous print and broadcast media (BBC, National Geographic, Smithsonian Magazine, National Public Radio) and documentaries that have increased international appreciation for the biodiversity value of the area. Box 5. Greater bamboo lemur helps protect itself from extinction In 1986, Hapalemur simus was feared to be extinct. Though it is the most abundant subfossil lemur in parts of Madagascar, it had only been seen alive in two localities in the previous 100 years. So the discovery by Dr. Patricia Wright and colleagues of a group of 11 Hapalemur simus in the Ranomafana forests and group of six in a coffee plantation to the east was cause for excitement. After the establishment of Ranomafana National Park in 1991, Dr. Wright and her student Chia Tan initiated long-term studies of the H. simus. From 1986 - 2006, 54 exploratory searches for lemurs were mounted, and these located only eight groups of H. simus. In 2003, taxonomists separated H. simus into a separate genus (Prolemur simus). By this date, only eight groups of Prolemur simus were known, and the only habituated group was in Ranomafana National Park. In December 2004, a Centre ValBio lemur technician reported that the adult males of the Ranomafana group had disappeared! Maybe they were eaten by a fossa? The breeding season is April-May and the birth season is in November. No males were seen in that group all during 2005. No infants were born into the group in November of that year. In April 2005, the IUCN Global Mammal Assessment Committee declared that Prolemur simus was the most endangered lemur in Madagascar, and one of the top five endangered primates in the world. As the 2006 breeding season was approaching, discussions included whether males should be translocated to Ranomafana from another group in the wild or from captivity. But then the lemurs took action! On April 12, the entire Ranomafana Prolemur simus group, with the females leading, began to move. They travelled out of their territory, north out of RNP across the tourist foot bridge, across the main highway in southeastern Madagascar, back into the northern parcel of Ranomafana National Park, and out again into the peripheral zone near the village, Ambatolahy Dimy. There they met the only other known Prolemur simus group in the Ranomafana region, which also had no males. After a month of travel over 10 km, the group returned to their original territory, maleless. Then in June, a young male joined the group, we don’t know from where. We are hoping for infants in November! The immediate conservation need is to find a breeding male for the peripheral zone group and keep it protected. 74 Conservation targeted at endangered species Prolemur simus (greater bamboo lemur) is one of the most critically endangered primates in the world. The Centre ValBio is currently working with local villagers to establish a community based conservation programme in an area where a group of P. simus resides near a village. The project includes monitoring of the P. simus population by trained villagers, cultivation and reforestation of the bamboo species favored by P. simus and also used for housing construction by the villagers, and education. Reforestation: Centre ValBio scientists are working closely with villagers to develop and implement methods of reforesting deforested areas outside the park using native species. Currently we have several tree nurseries where native species are grown to the sapling stage. Villages have donated land where the saplings are planted, and participate in the planting. Several tree species are doing well, and the villagers are seeing regrowth of deforested areas near their villages. Local schools are involved in this project, raising the tree seedlings and planting the saplings near their schools. Box 6. Lemur kindergardens: Varecia variegata Varecia variegata (the black-and-white ruffed lemur) is a critically endangered primate that can be found only in the eastern rainforests of Madagascar. Ruffed lemurs have lavish black-and-white coats and a white ruff surrounding their faces and ears. Their fluffy appearance and playful personality makes this species one of the most entertaining to observe in the wild. Interestingly, it is the only diurnal lemur that gives birth to litters, often between two to five young. Unlike most primate offspring, Varecia infants lack clinging abilities during their first few months after birth so the mothers are faced with a unique challenge: how to get enough food while supervising a litter of vulnerable and relatively uncoordinated infants. Their solution is to ‘park’ their babies in nests, called ‘kindergartens,’ constructed from lianas and branches high in the trees. Multiple mothers have been seen using the same nest at once, hiding all of their offspring together in a single location. A lone adult is then left to babysitting all of the infants until their mothers’ return. Little information is known about this intriguing behaviour. Who is responsible for babysitting? Siblings? Aunts? Males interested in befriending mothers? The father? And what are their responsibilities while participating in this unique behaviour? Stony Brook University graduate student, Andrea Baden’s research in Ranomafana National Park will be the first to observe V. variegata nesting behaviours in the wild to answer these very questions. Baden and colleagues are also participating in both genetic and biomedical surveys to assess the health of the black-and-white ruffed lemurs in Ranomafana National Park. These surveys will be used to help improve conservation management plans for this species in the wild, as well as to better understand how to care for these animals in captivity. Local communities and customs The people around Ranomafana National Park are from both the Betsileo and Tanala ethnic groups. The Betsileo are traditionally paddy rice farmers from the high plateau area of Fianaranatsoa. The Tanala (people of the forest) depend on slash and burn agriculture. Cultural traditions emphasize a strong respect for ancestors and elders. Communities Villages (150-200 residents) are organised around descendent groups headed by an "mpanjaka" (king or queen) and traditional knowledge of medicines and the spirit world is guarded by the "ombiasa" (medicine man or woman). Villagers have limited access to medical care, and most rely on traditional herbal remedies. Running water and electricity are available in the town of Ranomafana (7 km from the park entrance), but most villages do not have access to either. Village children generally receive only 3-6 years of education, with children in Ranomafana having access to more schooling (through high school) than children in remote villages. 75 The park is surrounded by a semi-managed 3 km wide buffer zone. Approximately 27,000 people live in the buffer zone. Fifty percent of all tourism revenue within the park is redistributed to villages in the Buffer Zone. The dominant source of deforestation in southeast Madagascar is agriculture. Indeed in the Ranomafana area, more than 85% of the people in the buffer zone rely on subsistence agriculture as their principal economic activity. Rice is the staple crop, with minor crops including bananas, cassava, coffee, corn, beans, pineapple, sugar cane, and tobacco. Farmers chose between two methods of rice production: slash-and-burn upland rice (tavy) and wetland paddy rice. The principal anthropogenic threats to the forests surrounding RNP arise from the clearing of hillsides for the slash and burn tavy. Additional threats, come from the conversion of wetlands to paddy fields, and the harvesting of non-timber forest products (NTFP) in buffer zone forests, including firewood, crayfish collection, fruits, palms, roots and other products for subsistence use. How to visit the site People interested in visiting Ranomafana National Park can fly Air France, Air Madagascar or Air Mauritius into Ivato International Airport near the capital city of Madagascar, Antananarivo. From Antananarivo to the park is either an 8 hour scenic drive south on a main paved road or a one hour flight to the regional capital, Fianaranatsoa. Flights from Antananarivo to Fianarantsoa only occur once or twice a week. From Fianarantsoa to RNP is a 1.5 hour drive. Arrangements for travel to RNP can be made by contacting MICET (Madagascar Institut pour la Conservation des Ecosystems Tropicaux, MICET@wanadoo.mg). Excellent clean and well managed hotels with good restaurants include Centrest Hotel, Setam Lodge and Domaine Nature. Tent sites are available at the entrance to the park. The best months to visit are April, May and June, as well as the spring September- December when wildlife is breeding and raising offspring. 76 Baly Bay Joanna Durbin, Richard Lewis, Hafany Tiandray, Robert Bourou, Herizo Andrianandrasana and Angelo Ramy The area around Baly Bay in northwestern Madagascar is a gently undulating landscape at 0-84 m altitude with fragmented western dry deciduous forest, bamboo scrub, palm savanna, lakes and raphia stands along valleys, and mangroves, beaches and mudflats around the coast. Dry forests, probably the original climax vegetation of the area are reduced to a few fragments, many of which are degraded by wood-cutting and cyclone damage. These forests are interspersed with bamboo scrub dominated by Perrierbambos madagscariensis, a species endemic to this area. After repeated burning, forests and bamboo scrub have been converted to savanna dominated by palms such as Bismarkia nobilis and Hyphaene shatan and grasses such as Heteropogon contortus. Aristida rufescens, a grass of poor grazing quality, is becoming more widespread in more degraded areas. There are two marked seasons, with most of the average 1160 mm annual rainfall in the hotter season from November to April. Plate 18. Baly Bay aerial. (© Herizo Andrianandras) Plate 19. Baly Bay women and children. (© Hasina Randriamanampisoa) Considered one of the most threatened tortoises in the world, the ploughshare tortoise Geochelone yniphora locally known as "angonoka" is restricted to an area of 66,000 ha around Baly Bay, living in around 16,000 ha of bamboo thicket and associated dry forests. There are believed to be less than 2,000 individuals existing in the wild, found in five isolated populations. The diversity of habitats harbours a diversity of Madagascar’s endemic and endangered wildlife. The all-white Decken’s sifaka Propithecus deckeni, western bamboo lemur Hapalemur griseus occidentalis, Angel’s chameleon Furcifer angeli inhabit the forests. Nesting Madagascar fish eagles Halieaeetus vociferoides, Madagascar white ibis Threskiornis bernieri, Madagascar plover Charadrius thoracicus, flamingos, nesting yellowbilled storks Mycteria ibis occur in coastal areas. Some of the few remaining good populations of side-necked turtles (or rere) Erymnochelys madagascariensis are found in rivers and lakes. Beaches provide nesting sites for green, hawksbill, olive ridley and loggerhead marine turtles and there are feeding areas for dugongs in the bay. The main threat to the remaining dry forests, the bamboo scrub and the species found within them is fire, often spreading from fires set to renew pasture in savanna or to chase errant cattle out of the impenetrable bamboo thicket. Forests are also degraded by wood cutting and cyclones. Historically the ploughshare tortoise was threatened by trade for maritime consumption and it is still threatened by illegal collection and international trade to supply unscrupulous private collectors despite its protected status nationally and on Appendix 1 of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). Such 77 collection can be the final blow to such long-lived slow-growing species in depleted and fragmented populations. Dugongs, sea turtles and the fresh-water rere turtle are threatened by hunting for local consumption. Box 7. Ploughshare tortoise reintroduction project Richard Lewis In order to reduce the risk of extinction of the ploughshare tortoise, a reintroduction project is underway to create a new wild population from captive-bred juveniles. Survivorship in the wild suggests that at least 50 animals should be released and they should be at least 200 mm long (too big to be eaten by wild pigs), which is about 8 years old for captive-bred juveniles. All the captive animals have always been kept in relative isolation. They undergo regular health checking and extensive testing has shown that blood and intestinal parasites, bacteriology, blood parameters appear to be similar between wild and captive populations and that captive animals they are not carrying any dangerous pathogens such as mycoplasma and herpes virus that could endanger either themselves or wild animals. A trial release of five animals in 1998 proved that captive-bred young can adapt to the wild. It was feared that the animals would home back to their place of birth (Ampijoroa is 100 km from the wild populations), but all five established home ranges around the area where they were released. These released animals have continued to grow faster than their wild counterparts. This is partly due to the fact that the area where they were released is one of the best habitats for tortoises. The area (Beaboaly) is 700 ha of prime tortoise habitat but tortoises disappeared decades ago when it was burnt in the 1970’s destroying the habitat and the tortoises. Since then the habitat has regrown but tortoises are unable to recolonise the area as it is isolated from the other populations. Using the captive stock a sixth wild population is being established. The release programme began in December 2005 when 20 captive-bred tortoises were transferred to pre-release enclosures from which they were released in January 2006. It is planned to continue similar releases of up to 100 individuals over the next five years. Plate 20. Ploughshare tortoise. (© Alice Smith) Local people have been closely involved in ploughshare tortoise conservation since the early 1990s when Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust organised a series of festivals and workshops to learn about local interests and build good relations with local communities. This led to strong local participation in the delimitation and designation of Baly Bay National 78 Park (57,418 ha), created in 1998 to protect the tortoise and its habitat. All the villages around the park, in 11 groups, take part in an annual participatory ecological monitoring competition organised by Durrell with the National Park managers (ANGAP) and the local Water and Forests service. One of the innovative management techniques initiated as a result of local consultation about conservation as been the application of traditional fire control techniques to protect tortoise sites and forests against fires. Local communities have installed fire-breaks (a total length of about 50km) around the tortoise sites since 1995. Strips are burned in the late wet season when fires can be easily controlled and these burned areas act as barriers to uncontrolled fires later in the dry season. Durrell has been monitoring areas burned since 2000. There was a decrease in the area affected by fires in Baly Bay National Park between 2000 (730 ha) and 2002 (47 ha). However, in 2003, fire affected 1,500 ha. For most of 2002, Madagascar had no acting government due to contested presidential elections. Two parallel governments meant that there was no national government and animal traffickers were able to increase their activities in Madagascar. There was little control on the country’s borders and CITES permits were available for whoever was willing to pay. Working with the new government authorities since late 2002, Durrell, the local and regional authorities and the local communities have been working together to stamp out this traffic. An agreement was signed in late 2005 between Durrell, ANGAP, the General Direction of Waters and Forests, the Region of Boeny and the Commune of Soalala to define roles and responsibilities to protect the tortoise from illegal collection and trade. There have been recent notable successes catching criminals and bringing them to trial so there is hope that this threat is diminishing. Situated at Ampijoroa Forestry Station in northwestern Madagascar, the captive-breeding programme for the ploughshare tortoise run by Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust since 1986 had successfully raised 250 captive-bred juveniles by December 2005. The captive population represents a sixth population for the species. It has an important role as a safety net in case of wild extinction, to raise awareness of the plight of the species and as a source for the creation of new populations. 79 Alaotra wetlands Joanna Durbin, Herizo Andrianandrasana, Lala Jean Rakotoniaina, Jonah Randriamahefasoa, Richard Lewis and Jonah Ratsimbazafy The Alaotra wetlands in central eastern Madagascar are the largest wetlands in the country. Lac Alaotra is 20,000 ha, has an average depth of 2-4 m and is situated at 750 m asl. Surrounding the lake are 23,000 ha of marshes dominated by papyrus Cyperus madagascariensis and rushes Phragmites communis and then 120,000 ha of rice-fields within a watershed encompassing 722,500 ha and reaching 1,300 m at the highest point. At least three species are endemic to the Alaotra wetlands, all of which are Critically Endangered: Alaotran gentle lemur Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis, Alaotra little grebe Tachybaptus rufolavatus and Madagascar pochard Aythya innotata. A small carnivore was also recently discovered in the marshes, which is likely to be a new species Salanoia sp. The two endemic bird species may already be extinct, probably because of exotic fish introduction and excessive drowning in fishing nets. Local people claim that the carnivorous introduced fish Channa striata has been a significant predator of young of diving species such as the endemic grebe, which had limited flight capacity. Of the 50 water bird species recorded at the lake, 8 are Madagascar endemics. Six fish species are Madagascar endemics. Alaotra is an example of a shallow wetland that is a highly productive ecosystem, very valuable for people and biodiversity, but also vulnerable to degradation, particularly linked to sedimentation. This process is easily affected by human activities, such as agriculture causing increased erosion and siltation, and introduction of aquatic plants and fish causing dramatic changes in the trophic structure of the ecosystem. The endemic fauna at Alaotra is threatened due to major environmental changes including: • habitat degradation, • over-hunting, • over-fishing, • competition and predation by introduced fish species, • siltation from erosion, • pollution by human waste, fertilizers and pesticides and • invasion of introduced aquatic plants. The human population living in the Alaotra watershed has increased five-fold from 109,000 in 1960 to approximately 550,000 people today, the majority of whom depend on rice cultivation and fishing for their livelihood. The original Sihanaka people have been joined by migrants from all over Madagascar. The Alaotra is the most important rice production area in the country and has one of the most important inland fisheries. Once forested, most hills around the lake are now denuded, causing development of accentuated erosion gullies which deposit infertile laterite and sands on lower land resulting in loss of rice fields, silting of irrigation canals and acidification of the lake. Only 81,500 ha are now under cultivation giving an annual rice production of around 250,000 tonnes. Since the 1950s, the water lilies (Nymphea spp.) that covered large parts of the lake have almost disappeared. Over 70% of the waterways and lakes within the marshes have been invaded by Azolla sp., Salvinia molesta and Eichhornia crassipes which have reduced access to fishing grounds and significantly altered habitats. Most of the original marshes, home to the lemurs have been transformed into rice fields, while remaining marshes have been burned frequently either in an attempt to create further rice fields, to create pasture for cattle, or to create open areas for fishing as a result of choking of traditional fishing areas by invasive plants. 80 Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust began research in 1986 on local endemics at Alaotra and began a public awareness campaign from 1997 involving festivals in over 70 villages and environmental education in over 100 schools. This catalysed grass-roots interest in marsh conservation, as villagers recognized that they provide a refuge and breeding ground for fish and birds, are the source of materials for houses, woven baskets and mats and of dried rhizomes for cooking fuel, and they form a barrier protecting the lake from siltation and pollution. Building on this local interest in marsh conservation, a series of meetings and workshops at village, commune (group of villages) and regional levels stimulated local conservation and management initiatives from 2001. Fig. 4 Monitoring results map. (© Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust) Nine communities have so far received three-year renewable resource-management transfers from the State (the legal owner of the lake and marshes) giving them management control over 35% of all the marshes and the entire marsh area will soon be legally managed by surrounding communities. Sustainable use and marsh protection have been developed through the creation of by-laws ("dina") and federations of community associations. Regional fishing laws have been adopted since 1998 that control fishing practices with the aim of maintaining fish stocks and have become progressively more effective with enforcement of a two-month closed fishing period from 2001. All fishermen are members of associations since 2003. Communities took the initiative to start replanting marshes during the first marsh festivals in 1997. In subsequent years, 26 villages have replanted 22.5 ha with the aim of recreating a green belt of marshes around the lake. 81 The entire Alaotra watershed was designated as a Ramsar site in 2003, formalising the new regional and national commitment to conserving its biodiversity and maintaining the ecosystem functions through sustainable use. A regional organisation representing all stakeholders ‘Alaotra Rano Soa’ has been created to coordinate wetland management. Following the declaration by the President of the Republic of Madagascar that protected areas would be tripled to cover 6 million hectares or 10% of the country at the World Parks Congress in Durban in September 2003, Alaotra has been identified as a priority for creation of a new protected area in which sustainable use for fishing and harvest of marsh products will be promoted while also protecting habitats and endangered species. Over the past two years we have facilitated a participatory process to gain support for creation of the protected area and to agree on the limits and type of management. This process has led to strong support for the creation of the protected area and good integration of conservation priorities into regional development planning. Box 8. The Alaotran gentle lemur (Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis) Jonah Ratsimbazafy The Alaotran gentle lemur Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis is found only in the marshes of Lac Alaotra, the largest lake in Madagascar located in the centraleastern highlands. The species is ‘Critically Endangered’ according to IUCN Red List criteria due to its extremely reduced geographical range (only occurring in the remaining 23,000 ha of Alaotra marshes) and the rapid decline in population. The main causes of its decline have been transformation of its marsh habitat to rice fields, widespread and repeated burning of remaining areas of marsh and hunting for local consumption. Hapalemur g. alaotrensis is the only primate taxon in the world that lives exclusively in a wetland habitat. It is a small folivorous primate that lives in family groups of 2 to 12 individuals occupying territories of 1 to 5 ha. To evaluate the conservation status of this species, Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust team has conducted annual censuses of the lemur population in four sites since 2001 during the rainy season. Durrell also assesses the habitat where the species occurs and threats that affect the survival of the species. Study methods involved direct lemur observations from canoes along transects, characterisation and mapping of different marsh habitats and interviews with local people to determine the history of burning and other threats to the species. Earlier studies indicated that the population plunged by 60% from around 7,500 individuals in 1994 to around 3,000 individuals in 2001. By comparing the results of the census of H. g. alaotrensis within the five-year period from 2001, our findings indicate that encounter rates of H. g. alaotrensis have increased overall. Both the number of the observed individuals and groups increased during the surveys. We conclude that the H. g. alaotrensis population was at least stable during the last few years. Results also indicate that the lemurs are only present in marshes that have not been burned for more than three years, which have the same structure, floristic diversity and size of stems as undisturbed habitat. The suitable habitat for the species was about 54% of the total area of the marshes or 10,100 ha in 2003, 13,750 ha in 2004. The results of participative ecological monitoring held in 2004 and 2005 indicated that big fires were recorded in Andilana sud and Anororo in 2003, then in Andilana and in Ambodivoara in 2004. Those fires had a big impact on the size of the suitable habitat in 2005 when only 5,089.8 ha was good habitat (suitable) for the Hapalemur g. alaotrensis in total in the four key sites (about the third of the total size of the marhes). The campaign to conserve the biodiversity and productivity of the Alaotra wetlands has consistently gained momentum and increasingly widespread support from grass-roots beginnings when fishing people living around the lake vigorously expressed their wish to 82 turn the tide of ecological degradation during the first marsh festivals in 1997. Popular support has been strengthened by the capacity of the wetland ecosystem to respond relatively quickly to management, such as reduction in marsh burning, introduction of a closed fishing season and enforcement of minimum mesh sizes for fishing nets. Ecological monitoring data show that the fish have increased in size. The average catch rate varied between 0.2 and 0.4 kg/person/hour with a significant increase from 2002 to 2003 (paired t-test p≤0.05), although longer-term data will be important to show if this is a real trend. Encounter rates for Alaotran gentle lemurs have increased consistently from 2001 suggesting that the population has stabilised. We hope that the foundations have been laid to maintain Alaotra’s unique biodiversity while also sustaining human populations, although many challenges remain, such as controlling the impact of invasive species. Box 9. Participatory ecological monitoring at Lac Alaotra Herizo Andrianandrasana Since 2001, Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust has organised annual participatory ecological monitoring, both to evaluate the effectiveness of these management initiatives and to reinforce local commitment to management by demonstrating the impacts. Participatory methods were used to facilitate data collection and also to develop broader local knowledge of the wetland biodiversity and resources and the level of threats. It was hoped that this would foster greater local ownership of wetland monitoring and management to help ensure future sustainability. The goal is to detect natural and/or human-induced changes in the state of the biodiversity and natural resources as an aid to evaluating and improving management. Data were collected in 16 villages covering 90% of marshes around the lake by teams including Durrell staff, local communities and Government technicians on key species, such as the locally endemic lemur and water birds, on useful natural resources and on the major threats to the Alaotra wetland. 83 Menabe Joanna Durbin, Anselme Toto Volahy, William Francisco Rakotombololona, Herizo Andrianandrasana, Jonah Ratsimbazafy The Central Menabe region, between the Tsiribihina river to the north and the Morondava river to the south, is an area of exceptional biodiversity importance. At least four species are endemic to the zone (a frog Aglyptodactylus laticeps, flat tailed tortoise Pyxis planicauda, giant jumping rat Hypogeomys antimena and Berthe’s mouse lemur Microcebus berthae). Their entire global distribution is limited to a small area of dry deciduous forest. This forest also constitutes a major part of the distribution of at least 14 other species, including narrow striped mongoose Mungotictis decemlineata decemlineata, white breasted mesite Mesitornis variegata, Coquerel’s dwarf lemur Mirza coquereli, 3 frogs, 2 chameleons, 3 lizards, 2 snakes and an insectivore. The biodiversity interest of the region is enhanced by the associated wetlands, such as the Mandroatra river flowing through the forest in which the side necked turtle (or rere) Erymnochelys madagascariensis is found and Bedo coastal lake and marshes which provides a refuge for endemic waterbirds such as Madagascar teal Anas bernieri, Humblodt’s herons Ardea humblodti and many other species such as flamingos, pelicans and ducks. Plate 21. Deforested field in Menabe. (© Joanna Durbin) Plate 22. Removing pirogue. (© Joanna Durbin) The main forest block covers about 100,000 ha and is one of the few remaining western Malagasy dry deciduous forests of this size. This forest type is the most threatened and fragmented in Madagascar with an estimated 3% remaining. Menabe forests are no exception and deforestion, mostly for slash and burn cultivation of maize was 32% per year from 1963-1993 and rates have subsequently increased. Other pressures include unsustainable levels of commercial logging and subsistence hunting. The Menabe forests and fauna have been the subject of numerous studies by biologists and foresters for decades. Kirindy concession in the southern part of the main forest block was created in 1978 with support from Intercooperation Suisse to the Centre de Formation Professionelle Forestière for research and training on sustainable logging. Intensive studies were made on growth rates, regeneration, reforestation techniques, > etc. Over 13 years research led to a conclusion that logging in this particularly slow growing forest could not be both sustainable and commercially viable. The biologists demonstrated the impact of even the relatively low levels of logging in Kirindy on the more sensitive animal species, such as the giant jumping rat. Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust has conducted studies on distribution, population, threats and conservation status of endangered species in Menabe including the rat, the tortoise and the mongoose since the late 1980s. From 2003, Durrell teamed with Deutsches Primatenzentrum, which had conducted research primarily on the lemurs at Kirindy since the late 1980s, to undertake a more comprehensive biodiversity 84 assessment of the Menabe forests. Results showed that the full complement of Menabe species are only found in the two least-disturbed areas within the main forest block (Kirindy and Ambadira) which also tend to represent the areas of highest abundance for the species studied. The populations of many species are already fragmented (for example the giant jumping rat only occurs in 33,000 ha in two distinct populations) making it a major priority to protect these remaining populations from disturbance and to protect and eventually restore the corridor between the two areas. Box 10. Participatory ecological monitoring linked to incentives Joanna Durbin In order for community-based conservation to be effective and for resource use to be kept within sustainable limits, it is clearly important not only for the users to agree on rules but also to ensure that they will be respected. Some level of monitoring and enforcement is necessary. The Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Madagascar programme has developed participatory ecological monitoring with village groups to assist them and us with verifying whether management activities are effectively maintaining resources and biodiversity. The results of the monitoring have also been linked to incentives aimed at encouraging and rewarding biodiversity conservation. The Menabe participatory ecological monitoring competition is similar to sponsoring a community to create a reserve to conserve endangered species and biodiversity. The ultimate aim is to contribute to a more equitable distribution of costs and benefits of biodiversity conservation by channelling some of the ‘willingness to pay for the existence value of biodiversity’ of the more developed world back to those in biodiversity-rich but less developed countries. Benefits from conserving biodiversity are often perceived at the international or national level, but it is the local people, often the rural poor struggling to assure their livelihoods, that sustain the highest opportunity costs. There may be some existing local benefits from conservation, such as ecological services like watershed protection, or employment or revenue sharing from eco-tourism. However, not all sites and not all members of society can benefit from these, and sites with exceptional levels of local endemism like Menabe may succumb to logging and deforestation pressures because of insufficient local incentives for conservation. It is perfectly understandable that a villager sees a lemur as just another kind of protein to supplement their diet unless we can reinforce the perception that having lemurs near your village provides a competitive advantage, bringing in tourists, or conservation NGOs with development friends, or a direct benefit. A Population Habitat Viability Analysis for the Giant Jumping Rat in 2001 with the support of the Conservation Breeding Specialist group led to creation of a regional platform for conservation of the biodiversity of Menabe. This provided a forum for exchange between all regional stakeholders and led to agreement to create a new protected area and to ban logging from the Central Menabe forests. In 2003, this platform became the Environment, Forest and Biodiversity Commission of the Regional Development Committee which ensures integration of conservation into the rural development agenda. New partners joined the conservation efforts, such as Fanamby, a Malagasy NGO, and Conservation International, particularly with a goal of creating a new protected area as part of President Ravalomanana’s commitment made at the World Parks Congress in 2003 to triple protected areas to cover 10% of the country or 6 million ha. The new protected area will cover 125,000 ha including the main dry forest block, mangroves and wetlands. A strict conservation area will cover 30,000 ha including the forest areas of Ambadira, Kirindy and the corridor between them which have been shown to be of greatest importance for biodiversity conservation. The protection order was signed in early 2006. 85 The main forest block includes areas used traditionally by local communities, some of which have been or will be legally transferred to community management through contracts with the State. Durrell has been working with these communities to encourage them to contribute to conservation by allocating areas next to the Priority Conservation Zone for strict protection. In 2004, an ecological monitoring competition was launched in three of the villages. Their conservation areas, which effectively extend the Priority Conservation Zone by 4,893 ha, were surveyed at the end of 2004 to check whether the locally endemic or often hunted species were present and to evaluate any forest disturbance in the areas they had agreed to conserve. Prizes for the competition depended on the results of the monitoring and were used on projects of their choice such as bicycles to improve surveillance, corrugated iron for a community building and a generator for the winning village. This scheme provides positive incentives for biodiversity conservation based on results. The participatory monitoring competition was extended to five villages in 2005, and will be extended to all ten key villages surrounding the central Menabe forest in 2006 Aerial photos and observations made on an overflight in 2005 confirmed that there has been no new deforestation since 2003, which is a remarkable achievement given that several hundred hectares of primary forest were lost annually in preceding years. The villagers that were involved in slash-and-burn cultivation of maize are turning to more sustainable alternatives since there has been greater communication about the creation of the protected area and the start of the monitoring programme. 86 Masoala: A unique partnership for conservation Alex Rübel, Matthew Hatchwell and James MacKinnon First of all, Madagascar is one of the world’s top three biodiversity hotspots. Due to its long independent evolutionary history, its flora and fauna developed separately from the large continents of Africa and Asia. Thanks to its varied topography, geology and climate, rich and diverse flora and fauna have developed with high levels of endemism and representatives of primitive taxa found nowhere else on earth. This richness in biodiversity culminates in the rainforest zones. The Masoala peninsula contains the largest remaining block of rainforest in Madagascar. Over the past twelve years, a unique alliance has evolved for rainforest conservation in Madagascar that combines the diverse talents of Zoo Zürich, the Wildlife Conservation Society, the national parks service (ANGAP) and a range of other national and international partners. Beside managing the park, many research and community projects all around the peninsula are stabilizing the conservation work. Masoala National Park in northeastern Madagascar with a size of 2,300 km2 is the largest and probably the richest protected area in a country that is classed, in its entirety, as a hotspot of biological diversity and therefore a global priority for wildlife conservation. At the time being it is screened for a world heritage site which we hope will be approved during the EAZA campaign. The park is situated on a peninsula to the east of Antongil Bay, whose forested slopes are thought to contain half or more of all the plant and animal species known to exist in Madagascar. It contains coral reefs – the underwater equivalent of rainforests in terms of their species diversity – and rainforests running uninterrupted from the coast all the way up to more than 1300 m above sea level. Masoala is the only home in the world of the beautiful red-ruffed lemur and harbors such rare birds as the serpent eagle and red owl. Discoveries new to science among its plants, insects, reptiles and amphibians are commonplace. Humpback whales and hammerhead sharks breed in nearby Antongil Bay, sea turtles lay their eggs on its sandy beaches, and it is one of the few remaining places on the east coast of Madagascar where the endangered dugong survives. For centuries, local people have known the peninsula as Masoala – the Eye of the Forest – a perfect name for this sparkling jewel of life on earth. Box 11. Illegal logging of hardwood Over 25 species of ebony (Diospyros) occur on the peninsula, several of which have commercial value, and indeed the northeast of Madagascar seems to be a centre of diversity for this family. Masoala also harbors high densities of species from the genus Dalbergia, including several pallisandre species and the renowned Malagasy rosewood. Protecting a genetic reservoir of these important commercial species is an important role for Masoala National Park. Even though the park was carefully designed to leave enough forest outside it to continue harvesting this valuable resource, uncontrolled timber exploitation has left few large trees outside park boundaries. Trying to stop illegal felling in the park is a constant struggle for park managers. Why Masoala should have so many species of commercial value is a mystery. One possible explanation is that high-density woods, which give these species their value, are better able to withstand the impact of cyclones than other species. Thus, the frequent damage wrought by the cyclones actually gives them an ecological advantage in the forests. The possibility has not been researched, but there is some support for the idea since hardwoods seem to be more common on the exposed east coast of the peninsula than on the sheltered western slopes. 87 The geography of the peninsula increases its biological value. Its centre is mountainous and densely forested and its long coastline varied in structure with many different habitats such as coral reefs and extensive littoral forests. To the west, the peninsula forms Antongil Bay, a relatively quiet bay that provides the setting for the famous Nosy Mangabe Special Reserve, created in 1966 as an island refuge for aye-ayes introduced from the Malagasy mainland. The peninsula is still relatively remote and not easy to reach either by land or sea. In the past, its human population was very low, which helps to explain the relatively untouched state of its forests. But the need for conservation measures at Masoala is just as great as the value of its biodiversity: the latest estimate is a population of about 85,000 people living in an area of 450,000 hectares, which translates into a human population density of 20 people per square kilometer – still low by many standards, but high enough to explain the accelerating degradation of Masoala’s forests. Box 12. Nosy Mangabe The Nosy Mangabe Special Reserve, managed together with Masoala National Park is the smallest protected area in the ANGAP network, an uninhabited island of 520 hectares in the northern part of Antongil Bay across from the town of Maroantsetra. It is 30 min boat ride from Maroantsetra and a favorite for all tourists visiting Masoala. Black and white ruffed lemurs, Uroplatus and Brookesia can be seen on a visit, and if you are really lucky and stay overnight, it is one of the best places to see the famous aye-aye. One lemur species, the red-ruffed lemur, is unique to the Masoala peninsula. It is amongst the most beautiful of the lemurs and the haunting calls of the competing family groups can be heard every morning throughout the rainforest. During the day, another species, the white-fronted brown lemurs, can be encountered in large groups. Seven nocturnal lemur species occur at Masoala, including the strange aye-aye. Some of the easiest nocturnal lemurs to find are the mouse lemurs, as their eyes reflect back in the torchlight during a nighttime stroll. Masoala also has a rich carnivore fauna, with records of 9 species, including the puma-like fossa, and one of the least known carnivore species, the brown mongoose. Bats are well-represented at Masoala, with both insectivorous and fruit-eating species. One, the sucker-footed bat, represents an endemic family for Madagascar. The tenrecs are probably the most ancient of Madagascar’s mammals. These insectivores retain primitive characteristics that more advanced mammals have lost. Of the 22 raptors recorded from Madagascar, 19 have been found on the peninsula and researchers from The Peregrine Fund have confirmed nesting records for many of them. Masoala is thought to be the main stronghold of the Malagasy Serpent eagle, which was only rediscovered during the 1980s after being thought extinct for several decades. The serpent eagle is a large bird for the rainforests, measuring up to 65 cm from beak to tail. As its name suggests, this raptor feeds mostly on snakes and lizards, but it will occasionally take small lemurs. Another powerfully-built and rare raptor, Henst’s goshawk, commonly takes lemurs. The red owl, a close relation of the European Barn owl, is another of Masoala’s biological jewels. Discovered only in 1993, this rare species remains little-known and appears to be restricted to the forests of the east and northeast of the island. In total, 94 of Madagascar’s 203 resident bird species have been recorded at Masoala. Apart from the birds of prey, other highlights include the ground-dwelling and elusive red-breasted coua and ground-rollers, the pygmy kingfisher, which captures insects rather than fish, and the helmet vanga. Madagascar’s reptiles and amphibians are amongst the most beautiful of the island’s biological treasures. Most of them are endemic. Masoala is home to the largest and amongst the smallest of the chameleons. The largest chameleon, Calumma parsonii, is frequently 88 seen at Masoala, and is reputed to take not just the usual insects but occasionally birds with its sticky, darting tongue. By contrast the tiny Brookesia peyrerii, which is little longer than a fingernail, is almost invisible to the untrained eye in the leaf litter where it lives. The most spectacular snakes are the large boas and the thin Langaha whose arrow-shaped heads have given rise to the Malagasy legend that they spear their prey by dropping on them from trees. Masoala is also one of the best places to find the extraordinary Uroplatus leaf-tailed geckos. In contrast to the cryptically camouflaged Uroplatus, the Phelsuma geckos are colored with bright greens, reds and blues. Some frogs specialize in living in the tree canopy, others in the pools of water that accumulate in tree hollows, while others are cryptically colored and almost impossible to tell apart from the leaves that litter the forest floor. Some of the best-known species of the region are the tomato frog, so called for its beautiful bright red coloration and the those of the genus Mantella. Masoala’s three marine parks were amongst the first to be created in Madagascar. They protect a variety of habitats, including coral reefs, seagrass beds and mangroves. Although species diversity in these reefs, mangroves and seagrass beds is extremely high, they have low endemism by comparison to Madagascar’s terrestrial environment since ocean currents disperse eggs and the young of most marine species over enormous distances. Nevertheless the protection of marine habitats is essential not only for their biodiversity value, but also for the ecological services that they provide. All these ecosystems are important as areas for fish and invertebrate reproduction, as well as for nutrient recycling and protecting the coast from erosion. On the east coast of Masoala, an outer fringing coral reef gives protection to a shallow lagoon within which smaller blocks of corals are found, and where seagrass beds and mangroves can develop in the less turbid water. The fish of coral reefs come in a dazzling array of colors, forms and life-styles. Amongst them are the parrotfish, the predatory groupers and moray eels and other carnivores such as snappers. Corals, worms, snails, limpets, clams, mussels, starfish, urchins and sea cucumbers to name but a few. Box 13. Masoala’s carnivorous plant: Nepenthes masoalensis One of Masoala’s best-known plants is an endemic pitcher plant that is restricted to a handful of sites on the east coast of the peninsula. The Nepenthes pitcher plants are best known from Southeast Asia and particularly Borneo. Madagascar has two species of these fascinating carnivorous plants, which are found on nitrate-poor soils, particularly in areas that are waterlogged. To make up for the lack of useable nitrate in their environment, the plants have evolved a system whereby they capture insect prey and digest them to obtain the essential nutrients that they are unable to absorb from the soil. Insects that are lured into the pitcher, which is a specialized leaf, drown in a liquid rich in enzymes that are able to break down the insect’s body. The best-known visitors to the bay d’Antongil are the humpback whales. The bay is a globally important breeding site for humpback whales. From July to September each year hundreds of these huge mammals migrate from the nutrient-rich Antarctic to the warmer waters around northern Madagascar. Here they spend the winter months giving birth and mating, particularly in Antongil Bay. A long-term research project, run since 1997 by the American Museum of Natural History and the Wildlife Conservation Society, has identified over 1200 individual whales in the bay. Several females are known to have returned to give birth over the years. Although it is difficult to estimate the total size of the population, it is clear that several hundred whales visit the bay each year. 89 Half or more of the country’s species, or some two percent of the world’s living organisms, are found in the forests around the Antongil Bay including the Masoala peninsula. Masoala is also the last place in the country where tropical rainforest still extends down to the sea. Thus the national park protects two of Madagascar’s rarest habitats – its lowland and coastal forests – as well as extending into the mangroves and coral reefs of the marine environment. In addition to rainfall brought in by winds off the Indian Ocean, Madagascar is often hit by cyclones. These cyclones have a devastating impact on people living along the coast and can also have a huge effect on the environment. The forests of the east are probably welladapted to the natural effects of cyclones and are able to recover after a few years. However, in the current situation with the additional human pressures, the effects of a cyclone can be devastating. Large amounts of dead wood increase the risk of fire during the short dry season between October and January, and in the aftermath of cyclones people turn to the forests to hunt and for new land to replace areas that have been ravaged by flooding. 90 Andringitra - A granite massif as a relict of GONDWANA with unique sub alpine forest/grassland ecotones Peter Schachenmann Context The Andringitra Massif’s residual granite relief represents a visible testimony of Madagascar’s geological past. During the Jurassic period until approximately 160 million years ago, Madagascar was part of the enormous super-continent GONDWANA. Since the slow southeastward drift away from mainland Africa towards its present position 120 million years ago and the break-off of India 80 million years ago, it evolved in isolation. Man has inhabited Madagascar only since about 2000 years ago. The Andringitra Mountains were never permanently occupied but rather gained mystical and spiritual values and served as a refuge from feudal warfare for early settlers of the southern Madagascar highlands. According to village legend, the first people to venture into sub alpine elevations were cattle herders in search of healthy and productive pastures and more security from early cattle rustling. Since about 150 years ago, the sub alpine to alpine pastures of Andringitra upwards of about 1900 m have been included as integral parts of an intricate lowlandupland rotational grazing cycle. Stonewalls for cattle paddocks, rock shelters and burial sites are today vivid testimonies of this traditional form of transhumance. Thus, this ecosystem is not entirely natural, but represents a "sustainably disturbed" anthropogenic landscape. Today, with natural population increase and additional pressures from in-migration, economic development, globalisation influences and liberalisation processes in rapid evolution, this form of traditional land use is in danger of getting into conflict with modern stakeholder interests such as conservation and tourism. As a consequence, the unique natural assets of the Andringitra Mountains are today co-managed by the national park service ANGAP and the local population. Plate 23. "The balloon". Andringitra is said to have the most spectacular granite erosion formations in the world. (© Peter Schachenmann) Plate 24. A typical representative of the local "Betsileo" draped in a "Lambalandy", a traditional wild silk shawl, woven from cocoons of endemic silk worms Borecera madagascariensis or "Landibe". (© Peter Schachenmann) 91 Physiographical situation and climate The Andringitra mountain range is located in south/central Madagascar. Its geographic position is approximately 100 km west from the Indian Ocean and a 120 km north of the Tropic of Capricorn (22°07’-22°21’S lat. and 46°02’-47°02’ E long.). Being NW-SE aligned and having an elevational range between ~500 - 2600 m with numerous granite domes and peaks (Pic Boby 2658 m, Pic Bory 2630 m), it represents an orographic barrier between the humid and cooler oceanic flank in the east and a dry and hotter continental flank in the west. Seasonal climatic changes between summer and winter and temperature and humidity variations between day and night are brutal and the most extreme in Madagascar. The dry season during June to October coincides largely with the austral winter, where minimum temperatures at night may drop up to minus 16°C at summittal zones above 2500 m. Snow may fall occasionally and stay for a day or two down to around 2000 m. During November and December, before the monsoon season starts it gets very hot with prevailing winds from the west. Daily thunderstorms strike the summital zones. Lightning frequently starts fires and precipitation remains very variable in space, duration and amount (from floods to droughts). During the monsoon season between December and April, the prevailing humid climate is from the oceanic east. Precipitation is variable but there is a steep gradient from the east- to the west slope of Box 14. A mountain poem by Gaston Bachelard the mountain range (2000->1000 mm), with only "…and so they started talking of the blue sky, about half the amount of of murmuring seas, sweat airs and mountain highs, rain in the lee behind the as travellers, mingling from time to time granite arena. Throughout contempt and laughter for their native clime the year, except during September and October, the …My pleasure still is to flow the stream, to walk upper limit tree line on the along the banks in the right direction, in the direction eastern slope is exposed to of the flowing water, the water that leads life towards daily cloud formation the next village…." producing in parts the typical aspects of a cloud forest. Flora and fauna Predominant factors shaping the vegetation are doubtless elevation and desiccation processes during the dry season. Daily temperature differences may be very marked, especially in some humid depressions. The "inselberg" character of the massif, combined with altitudinal zonation has led to high local endemicity. Among the monocotyledons, of the 40% native to Madagascar, 7.7% are endemic to the Andringitra Mountains. Among the dicotyledonous, the corresponding proportions are 24% and 3.4%. Additionally, topographic variability, geomorphology, aspect, slope and exposure produce a high diversity of microclimates with their corresponding microhabitats with ericoid bush, sub alpine woodlands (Agauria,….) rich in lichen, dry and humid grasslands with a high diversity of Ericaceae, Asteraceae, Poaceae, peaty depressions and rocky outcrops rich in xerophyts. The sub alpine prairies are unique for geophytic Orchidaceae, of which over 30 species have been recorded so far. Biodiversity assessments along altitudinal transects also confirmed an extraordinary corresponding faunal diversity. Among the reptiles, 80% are native to Madagascar of which 12% endemic to Andringitra. For amphibians, 11.4% of 52% native to Madagascar are endemic to Andringitra. 15 species of primates and insectivores were recorded, all endemic to Madagascar. And uniquely amongst the primates, a race of ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta) has adapted from their typical lowland forest habitats further to the southwest to this high mountain environment, colonizing a very special ecological niche of rock "desert" with succulent vegetation forms, moving up and down on the western flank according to season, temperature and availability of preferred food plants. 92 Box 15. The "pristine" environment a myth? We learnt and scientifically proved that, contrary to conventional conservation wisdom, traditional land uses can be compatible with or may even be necessary for landscapeand biological diversity and functionality. After this discovery, the notion of a "pristine environment" appears a myth. The landscape keeps a memory of human "footprints" and conversely the cultural history of people is directly or indirectly entwined with the natural history of the land with its specific geo-morphology, climate, flora and fauna. Land users are automatically also land managers, therefore principally relationship managers, who continuously need to interpret physical, ecological, economic, social and political contexts and processes and adapt to, or manage interactions between nature and people over space and time in order to survive and thrive. Conservation objectives can therefore better be considered by inclusion rather then exclusion of people and by favouring a synergistic co-evolution of the transformation processes. Creative interaction and co-evolution grows and strengthens among equal partners having mutual respect for each others views, perceptions, logic,.... Historical context of land use Remoteness, rugged terrain and rough climate never permitted permanent settlement and land use of the Andringitra Mountains. According to village legend, herders used fire as a tool to control ericoid bush, as well as expanding pastures into laurophyll mountain forests of Agauria. This period can be described as the colonization phase. During botanical expeditions by the botanist Humbert in the early 1920’s, the outstanding biodiversity value of the Andringitra mountain range was recognized and approx. 31’000 ha of the massif set aside as a Strict Nature Reserve in 1927 (Strict Nature Reserve 5) and legally ratified in 1966. After 1927 and up to political independence from the French colonial power in 1960, the reserve was patrolled and protected from unsustainable human impacts by forestry agents from the then powerful Water and Forest Service. Protection focused however more on forests then on montane grasslands, where cattle grazing continued to be tolerated on a moderate scale. During this period, natural fires from lightning and strategic anthropogenic fires set by pastoralists were controlled by human intervention within the reserve boundary as far as possible. This period may be considered the conservation phase. After independence and until the early 1990’s the Forestry Service lost influence, means and motivation to patrol the reserve and manage land use effectively. This resulted in a period of conflict, where the "owner" (the Water and Forest Service of the Government) had no means to control and the "user" (the local population) had no rights to continue to valorize the mountain pastures on a traditional basis, leading to haphazard and illicit use of mountain resources. We may call this period the open access phase. The Andringitra National Park today Effective in 1993, within the framework of the 1st Malagasy Environmental Action Plan, an Integrated Conservation and Development Project (ICDP) was mandated to develop a scientific base, tools and a legal framework for establishing and managing a new Andringitra National Park, finally decreed in 1998 as the 14th National Park in Madagascar. Under IUCN Cat. II protection status, the mandate for a park manager is one for conservation of unique natural resources and for visitor enjoyment in the form of sustainable ecotourism. As traditional resource access was somewhat curtailed (no grazing and fire), rapid ericoid bush encroachment led to more standing woody biomass with less herbaceous vegetation, outshading geophytic orchids, while concurrently increasing the fire risk from highly inflammable fuel loads (Ericaceae). Also, people/park conflicts flared up, leading to several protest fires within the park, damaging in particular the fragile montane forest ecosystem on the eastern ecotonal limit. 93 Strict protection being counterproductive in this context, we finally recognized, that traditional moderate land use and management of the sub alpine forest/grassland ecotones are necessary for shaping and maintaining (through grazing and fire) a mosaic of forest patches, ericoid bush and open grassland, combining unique biodiversity, important pasture values and aesthetic beauty for tourism. For future sustainable multiple land use, using a holistic perspective for integrating and safeguarding these conservation-, pastoralist- and tourist objectives, a systemic approach and an integrative-, participative- and trans-disciplinary research and management methodology was developed. A negotiated tri-partite agreement between the park manager (ANGAP), the local population and the Water and Forest Service regulates current multiple stakeholder access and use. The current period may therefore be called, the co-evolutionary management phase. How to visit the site The Andringitra National Park and its immediate surroundings are well known today and have easy visitor access by road, off the Antananarivo -Tulear trunk road (RN7), either from Ambalavao town through the official northern gate of Namoly, where one finds the park headquarters, a magnificent interpretation centre, a well run ecolodge "TRANOGASY " and several campsites or, through the western access of the SAHANAMBO valley and TSARANORO, where two lodges (CAMP CATTA and TSARA CAMP) offer comfortable starting points for several days of mountain trekking. For VIP visitors or emergency evacuation the Andringitra massif may be accessible by small plane. Box 16. The Andringitra ICDP: "Learning by doing" and adaptive management system "Learning by doing" is an open ended and flexible process combining investigation, analysis, intuition, interpretation and "informed" trial and error and adaptation, copying nature in as much as the system permits to better tailor the approach to the context, the continuous elimination of failures and the rapid strengthening of successful options. For example, the scientists learnt from long standing observation, experiences, intuition, legends and taboos of local people and vice versa, interested villagers learnt to be excellent para-scientists, integrating their "soft" traditional knowledge in a database from "hard" sciences, at the same time learning to comprehend and even apply Cartesian logic and methodology of modern sciences; or in other case, adapted modern state legislation permitted integration of traditional "law" (Dina) for conflict resolution or third, different land-uses like e.g. pastoralism and tourism can be compatible with conservation needs. These components, segregated in the past, developed more and more synergy, creating a base for mutual understanding and reciprocal benefits from a matrix of multiple objectives and land-use systems. 94 Bibliography We include here many books about the amazing and diverse natural history of the island of Madagascar, but we also include some books about the history and people of the island. We hope you are intrigued to find out more about this jewel in the Indian Ocean. 1 Attenborough, D. (1961) Zoo Quest to Madagascar. Lutterworth Press. 2 Bittner, A., editor. (1992) Madagaskar: Mensch und Natur im Konflikt. Birkhauser Verlag, Basel, Boston, Berlin. 3 Bloch, M. (1993) Placing the Dead: Tombs, Ancestral Villages, and Kinship Organisation in Madagascar. Waveland Pr. Inc. 4 Bradt,H. (2002) Madagascar: the Bradt Travel Guide. Seventh edition. London. 5 Brown, M. (1995) A History of Madagascar. Damien Tunnicliffe. UK. 6 Brown, M. L. (2003) Reclaiming Lost Ancestors and Acknowledging Slave Descent: Insights from Madagascar. Forthcoming in Comparative Studies in Society and History. 7 Dahl, Ø. (1999) Meanings in Madagascar: Cases of Intercultural Communication. Bergin & Hervey, Westport Connecticut and London. 8 Dransfield, J., and Beentje, H. (1995) The Palms of Madagascar. Kew: Royal Botanical Gardens and International Palm Society. 9 Du Puy, D., et al. (1999) The Orchids of Madagascar. Kew: Royal Botanical Gardens. 10 Durrell, G. (1994) Aye-Aye and I: Rescue Expedition in Madagascar. 11 Fitzpatrick, M., et al. (2001) Madagascar: tradewinds, taboos and traditions. Fourth edition. Lonely Planet. 12 Garbutt, N. (1999) Mammals of Madagascar. Pica Press (New field edition to be published in 200) 13 Glaw, F., and Vences, M. (1992) A Field Guide to the Amphibians and Reptiles of Madagascar. Vences & Glaw. Cologne. 14 Goodman, S. M. and Benstead, J. P. (2004) The Natural History of Madagascar. University of Chicago Press 15 Goodman, S. M. and Patterson, B. D. (1997) Natural Change and Human Impact in Madagascar. Smithsonian Institution Press 16 Grandidier, A. (1875) Histoire physique, naturelle et politique de Madagascar. Imprimerie Nationale. Paris. 17 Grandidier, A. (1903) Collection des Ouvrages Anciens Concernant Madagascar. Paris. 18 Harpet, C. (2000) Le Lémurien: du sacré et de la malédiction. L’Harmattan. Paris. 95 19 Henkel, F-W., et al. (2000) Amphibians and Reptiles of Madagascar, the Mascarenes, the Seychelles, and the Comoro Islands. Krieger Publishing Co. Florida. 20 Heying, H. E. (2002) Antipode: Seasons with the Extraordinary Wildlife and Culture of Madagascar. St. Martin’s Press. New York. 21 Howarth, J. (1990) Lemurs of the Lost World: Exploring the Forests and Crocodile Caves of Madagascar. 22 Jolly, A. (2004) Lords and Lemurs: Mad Scientists, Kings with Spears and the survival of biodiversity in Madagascar. Houghton Mifflin. 23 Kull, C. A. (2004) Isle of Fire: The Political Ecology of Landscaping Burning in Madagascar. 24 Laidler, K. (2005) Female Caligula: Ranavalana, the Mad Queen of Madagascar. John Wiley and Sons. 25 Langrand O. & Bretagnole V. (1990) Guide to the Birds of Madagascar. Yale University Press. New Haven and London. 26 Langrand O. & Bretagnolle V. (1995) Guide des Oiseaux de Madagascar. Delacheux et Niestlé S.A., Lausanne. 27 Lasky, K. and Knight, C. G. (1998) Shadows in the Dawn: The Lemurs of Madagascar. Gulliver Green. 28 Mack, J. (1986) Madagascar: Island of the Ancestors. British Museum, London. 29 McElroy, C. J. (2001) Over the Lip of the World: Among the Storytellers of Madagascar. University of Washington Press. 30 Mittermeier R.A., Konstant W.R., Hawkins, F., and Louis, E. E. (2006) Lemurs of Madagascar. Conservation International, Washington D.C. 31 Mittermeier, R.A.; Myers, N.; Gil, P.R. and Goetsch Mittermeier, R. (1999) Hotspots – Earth’s Biologically Richest and Most Endangered Terrestrial Ecoregions. Cemex S.A.. Mexico. 32 Morris, P, and Hawkins, F. (1998) Birds of Madagascar: a Photographic Guide. Yale University Press. New Haven and London. 33 Murphy, D. (1990) Muddling through in Madagascar. 34 Nicoll, M. E., and Langrand, O. (1989) Madagascar: Revue de la Conservation et des Aires Protégées. WWF International. 35 Pearson, M. P. and Godden, K. (2002) In Search of the Red Slave: Shipwreck and Captivity in Madagascar. Sutton Publishing. 36 Preston-Mafham, K. (1991) Madagascar: A Natural History. Facts on File. 37 Quammen, D. (1996) The Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in an Age of Extinctions. Hutchinson. London. 38 Rogozinski, J. (2000) Honour Among Thieves: Captain Kidd, Henery Every and the Pirate Republic of Libertalia. Stackpole Books. 96 39 Rübel, A. MacKinnon,J., Hatchwell, M. and Ketterer, P. (2003) Masoala – the Eye of the Forest. A new Strategy for Rainforest Conservation in Madagascar (available in English, French, German). Th. Gut-Verlag. Stäfa. 40 Ruud, J. (2002) Gods and Ancestors: Society and Religion Among the Forest Tribes in Madagascar. Portland. 41 Shafer, C.L. (1990) Nature Reserves: Island Theory and Conservation Practice. Smithsonian Institution Press. Washington and London. 42 Soulé, M.E. (1980) Conservation Biology: an Evolutionary – Ecological Perspective. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland. Massachusetts. 43 Tattersall, Ian. (1982) The Primates of Madagascar. Columbia University Press. New York. 44 Tyson, P. (2000) The Eighth Continent: Life, Death and Discovery in the Lost World of Madagascar. William Morrow. New York. 97 98 Section 5 – Beneficiary projects Contents Project selection process Overview of selected projects Selected first round projects Waiting list second round projects 100 101 102 133 99 Project selection process A total of 46 projects applied to the EAZA Madagascar campaign for funding. In total these projects requested €901,187 in funding. We were delighted to receive such a high number of good quality applications, but of course this made the selection process even more difficult. The applications received were subdivided into different categories; Education focused, Community focused, Habitat focused, Research focused and multi-focused projects. Projects would be selected from all categories to ensure an interesting and representative example of the conservation activities taking place on the island. All projects were selected using a standard project scoring sheet (see below); -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Project Support Applications to EAZA Madagascar Campaign Title: Applicant: Total Cost of Project: Amount requested (%): Please answer the following questions using a 5 point score; 1= Poor, 5 = Excellent Question? Score out of 5 Is the proposal clear and well documented? Is the project leader (institution) suitably experienced or qualified? Is the proposal credible and of good quality? Will the project assist, maintain or improve biodiversity in Madagascar? Is the budget balanced and credible? Are you confident that the funds will be used properly? Does the project show evidence of 50% matching support? Does the project build and/or consolidate good relationships with local communities? Has the project good potential for a link-partnership with a zoo if it does not already have one? Has the project good potential to receive longitudinal funding from the zoo community after the end of the campaign year? Has the project endorsement from influential NGO's, local communities or Malagasy government agencies? What is your personal feeling about the project? TOTAL SCORE FOR PROJECT (out of 60) Additional YES/NO questions; Is the request for more than €20,000? Is there already a zoo link? Is it an ongoing project? Additional comments on this project (use a further page if required): -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------A total of 21 project screeners, from Madagascar, Europe and America, received between 1 and 6 projects each to score. The scores were then analysed to see which came out best. In addition there was ongoing discussion as to how best use the monies raised and whether the applicants were able to receive monies elsewhere. While no screening process is infallible we feel that the projects chosen are all of an excellent standard and give good representation of the ongoing conservation initiatives in the island. A total of €361,645 has been allocated in the first and second rounds. 100 Overview of selected projects A total number of 20 projects has been selected for funding initially: 16 projects are in the first round of selected projects a further four projects have been selected for funding after the initial 16. The projects are presented in the table below and on the following pages. More information (full versions of the summaries presented here) and images are available on the CD-ROM that is enclosed in this Info Pack. Organisation Requested funding (€) Project name First round projects Madagascar Wildlife Conservation CEL Madagascar Fauna Group (MFG) University of Hamburg Project Alaotra 9,470 BACC+3 Diploma in Environmental Conservation and Management at the Libanona Ecology Centre (CEL) Ivoloina Conservation Training Programme Impacts of habitat characteristics and human forest utlization on Geochelone radiata in southern Madagascar Biodiversity inventory and conservation priorities of the Zoologische limestone formation of the Montagne des Francais region in Staatssammlung northern Madagascar München IADE Appui à la restauration de la forêt naturelle de Ialatsara Durrell Wildlife Conservation of endangered lemur species and biodiversity Conservation Trust of Manombo lowland rainforest, southeast Madagascar AEECL Community based natural resources management in Sahamalaza ANJA Anja, a Voluntary Protected Area (VPA) developed and managed by the Village association ANJA MIRAY (AMI) Durrell Wildlife Participatory ecological monitoring competitions as direct Conservation Trust incentives for threatened species conservation in Madagascar Initiation of an Environmental Education and Community Association pour le Training Centre for Sustainable Livelihoods and Biodiversity Sauvegarde de Conservation in Ankilibe, Madagascar l'Environnement (ASE) Vogelpark Walsrode, Project "VORONOSY" - conservation project for the Allwetter Muenster, Zoo biodiversity of Bombetoka Bay (Mahajanga / NW Landau, Zoo Duisburg Madagascar) and its Mangrove islands Centre ValBio Increasing support for biodiversity conservation around Ranomafana National Park Wildlife Conservation Radiated tortoise conservation and forest management Society through community empowerment in southern Madagascar Missouri Botanical Promoting ecotourism and environmental education at two Gardens priority areas for plant conservation, Madagascar Antongil Conservation Antongil Conservation 20,000 17,880 18,885 14,600 20,000 19,944 20,000 18,000 19,908 19,800 20,000 20,000 20,000 11,290 20,000 Second round projects Gondwana Conservation and Research Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust MFG Wildlife Conservation Society A pilot study for the conservation of Dyscophus antongili and D. guineti, two tomato frogs from eastern Madagascar 16,350 Developing capacity for community co-management of the new Lac Aloatra protected area, central eastern Madagascar Betampona Forest Protection Programme Freshwater Fish Conservation and Community Based Natural Resource Management in Nosy Be. 19,908 Total funding committed 15,610 20,000 €361,645 101 Project number: 1 Project applicant: Madagascar Wildlife Conservation Project Name: Project Alaotra Funds provisionally allocated: €9,470 The region of Alaotra Lake Alaotra is the largest lake of Madagascar and is surrounded by a vast wetland area consisting of marshes and rice fields. Due to the high productivity of these wetlands, the Alaotra Basin is known as the "Grenier de Madagascar", producing one third of the island's starch. Moreover, Lake Alaotra provides the highest amount of fresh water fish of the island. Today, more than 600,000 people live in this region. These wetlands are also known for their complex ecosystem: The reed and papyrus beds are home to a rich animal community including 72 species of birds and the Alaotra Gentle Lemur (Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis), the "Bandro", a species of lemurs endemic to the region. Destruction of the marshes The marshes surrounding the lake have several substantial functions in the complex local ecosystem and are of fundamental importance for the fauna inhabiting them and for the human population of the Basin. The vegetation serves as a refuge and safe breeding ground for fishes. It also acts as a natural filter reducing pollution of the lake by breaking down chemicals used in rice production. Furthermore, the marshes store humidity during dry season benefiting the adjacent rice fields and in turn prevent flooding during periods of high rainfall. In the last 50 years, the marshes have suffered from an extensive destruction due to the increasing use of these natural resources by humans. For example, large areas have been burnt down and transformed into new rice fields. Additionally, the papyrus and reed beds provide the traditional material for the construction of the typical Sihanaka houses, as well as for the weaving products. Finally the deforestation of the surrounding hills for the gain of agricultural and pasture land has led the red soil to be washed away. As there is always less papyrus and reed beds to act as filter, the sediments are carried directly into the lake covering its ground with a layer of mud. Endangered Bandro The increasing human activity around the lake has resulted in a severe loss and fragmentation of natural habitat. Together with further factors, such as hunting and fishing, this is threatening the survival of many local animal species. Consequently, the endemic Alaotra little grebe (Tachybaptus rufolavatus) and Madagascar pochard (Aythya innotata) might already have gone extinct and the Alaotra gentle lemur is struggling for survival. While in 1990 11,000 individuals were counted, today only 2,500 – 3,500 remain, mostly in isolated subpopulations. If the population continues to decline at this pace, the Bandro will be extinct in less than 40 years. Goals From the 600,000 people living in the region almost 50% are children. Roughly 13,000 of the 100,000 six to twelve year olds are attending schools. MWC will implement environmental education in the curriculum of the public primary schools (EPP) to improve the children's knowledge and awareness on the complexity of their environment. In the long term this will raise public sensitivity and appreciation for the importance of an intact lake and preserved marshes. This is a prerequisite for the survival of future generations of 102 animals and the wellbeing of the people. The basis of this education programme is a comic developed and produced by MWC. Its main characters are a Bandro, a kingfisher and a duck representing wildlife and a group of two boys and two girls representing the villagers. The book consists of eight episodes covering different conservational issues specific to the local ecosystem. These episodes are written in Malagasy and drawn by a Malagasy artist. Each episode addresses a specific conservation issue and will be the starting point for a class discussion or an activity. It should also function as a promoter for more scientific themes such as the biology of lemurs or endemism. For deeper understanding of the subject, the teachers will receive supplementary material for creating the lessons accompanying each episode. Schedule A test phase with 8 selected classes has started in 2006. After an evaluation of the impact of the comic book and improvements based on the feedback from the teachers, MWC will start to gradually provide these comic books to all schools in the Alaotra region, starting in 2007. Every year a number of teachers from the regions EEP's will be trained, informed in detail and supplied with supportive educational material by MWC in collaboration with the Ivoloina Zoo. In 2007 and 2008, 50 classes, will be provided with comic paperbacks. MWC aims to have the environmental education implemented in most EEP's of the Alaotra region by 2016. 103 Project number: 2 Project applicant: Centre Ecologique de Libanona Project Name: BACC+3 Diploma in Environmental Conservation and Management at the Libanona Ecology Centre Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Environmental, economic and cultural contexts The southern region of Madagascar is home to an incredible diversity of unique habitats. Coastal and marine habitat, littoral forests, and montane humid forests in the east of the region give way to traditional and dry spiny forests in the west. Within Madagascar, which is itself recognized as a biodiversity hotspot, the south and southeast are especially accepted to be among the highest priorities of environmental conservation. This importance is demonstrated by the designation of the spiny forest ecoregion as one of World Wildlife Fund's Global 200 Ecoregions and of the Anosy Region in the southeast as one of Madagascar's three "critical Ecosystem" by CI, USAID, and the World Bank. Fort Dauphin serves as the centre for environmental conservation and management efforts in southern Madagascar. Within a short distance from Fort Dauphin there exists a plethora of natural ecosystems unparalleled anywhere on earth. Within a 50 km radius of Fort Dauphin a diverse array of 9 pristine natural ecosystems exist, with an 80-90% rate of endemism. This region, however, is facing various threats, including mining exploitation (for Ilmenite), human activities like slash and burn, as well as deforestation for fuel and construction materials, and marine erosion. To meet these varied environmental challenges, the government, private, and voluntary sectors must have at their disposal both adequate management and technical staff trained to conduct the variety of conservation and development interventions required. The graduates of the LEC programme will help meet this vital need. Localization and brief historic Libanona Ecology Centre (LEC) was created in 1996 by a group of ecologists and conservation practitioners based in Fort Dauphin. LEC is based on the Libanona peninsula in Fort Dauphin. This site and the infrastructures were developed throughout the 20th century by the American Lutheran Mission in Madagascar, and the site is the property of the Malagasy Lutheran Church (FLM), though it is managed by LEC. The LEC was originally created with an objective to train diverse regional professionals and students for roles in rural development, natural resources management, and conservation programs in southern Madagascar. At first, LEC aimed, among other objectives, to develop training programs for regional high school graduates and university students designed to support the actions of rural development and conservation programs operating in the south. This purpose would be accomplished through the development of communication and training programs for the myriad of native social groups in the south. In October 2004 the Libanona Ecology Centre launched a two year training programme to develop and instruct the human resource needs of the region. This programme is designed to train the future personnel needs for the regional governmental, public, and private institutions working in the domains of conservation and development in Southern Madagascar. This programme provides the students of Fort Dauphin the opportunity to compete in a market of a globalizing economy. The goal of the LEC is to prepare well trained technicians to balance conservation and development in a globalizing world. Graduates will be able to contribute to the conservation of natural resources and the implementation of social and economic initiatives. At the end of the course of study, students will be graduated as Superior Technician of the Environment (DTS). All high school graduates with a baccalaureate degree are eligible to follow the training at LEC. New change According to the positive feedback from local conservation and development organizations, 104 students and parents, and to stay in accordance with the Malagasy Ministry of Education's decision to adopt the internationally used "License, Masters, Doctorate" (LMD) university system, LEC plan to change the training curriculum by upgrading from a two year technicians programme to a three year License programme (BACC+3, the equivalent of Bachelors of Science) taking effect during the next academic school year. This new programme is preparing for not only students who are coming from the Fort Dauphin region but any youths wanting to contribute to the conservation program. Project aim and objectives The Libanona Ecology Centre BACC+3 will meet the human resource needs of Southern Madagascar with highly trained management and technical for the institutions working in the domain of conservation and development. In order to make a significant contribution to the overall goal, the LEC is seeking support to strengthen its training capacity through the following four objectives: 1) Strengthen the only technical training centre for the region which will produce operational technicians to work in conservation and development institutions in southern Madagascar by developing the classroom, information technology, and resource facilities of the school. 2) Develop the programme from a two-year technicians degree to a three-year professional degree, qualifying 20 graduates a year to assume conservational management positions. 3) Ensure that the content of the training provided meet the specific needs identified by institutions working in the region through active participation in the programme design, curriculum development, and training of the students by local organizations. 4) Maintain flexibility to ensure that as human resource needs evolve, the training courses required can be developed and implemented through established systems to monitor the qualifications of the graduates within the workforce. 105 Project number: 3 Project applicant: Madagascar Fauna Group Project Name: Ivoloina Conservation Training Programme Funds provisionally allocated: €17,880 Summary Madagascar is one of the most biologically important countries of the world in terms of its stunning biodiversity and level of species endemism. It is, however, also one of the world's poorest countries and faces an ever increasing threat of ecological disaster as the growing population tries to support itself. With a growing population depending almost exclusively on subsistence farming, the greatest threat to Malagasy biodiversity is the near-ubiquitous use of slash and burn agriculture (tavy). Already more than 90% of Madagascar's forest has been destroyed and the destruction continues yearly. Only by addressing the core problems facing the Malagasy people (food insecurity and the use of unsustainable farming techniques) and thereby reducing the rate of forest destruction can there be any hope of preserving the unique flora and fauna of Madagascar. Madagascar Fauna Group (MFG) have worked for 17 years with local Malagasy government and environmental groups to help conserve critically endangered species through captive breeding programs, research, environmental and alternative agriculture education, and capacity building. The local authorities have requested help from the international community, and specifically MFG, to provide more sustainable alternatives to tavy and for training to be provided in those alternative techniques. As a result the MFG's Environmental Education Centre (CEE) and the Agricultural Model Station based at Parc Ivoloina have evolved over recent years to meet these needs through provision of training in environmental education and sustainable agricultural methods. The training targets a diverse audience ranging from school children to local government leaders. Over the past few years demand for the MFG training sessions has exceeded the capacity of the modest infrastructure already in place at Ivoloina and a project has been started to construct a purpose-built training centre to meet the ever-growing local needs. The first phase of construction is already completed composing of a meeting room able to hold 100 people, a teaching laboratory and a small computer room. The second phase is now underway to provide a dormitory, which will accommodate 24 people allowing groups from further afield to come for training and to lodge at Ivoloina at minimal cost. The majority of the funding for this venture has already been secured but there is an outstanding amount left to raise to complete the construction and equip the dormitory with basic furniture to make it fully functional. Additionally funds are required to cover the basic costs of running the Ivoloina Conservation Training Centre (ICTC) for the year of 2007 and to facilitate an increase in number of people trained. If funding is secured the project will target a diverse audience of key members of the local communities ranging from farmers and school teachers to local mayors and school district chiefs. The main goal of this project is to build local capacity for natural resource management in Toamasina through training of farmers and village leaders in sustainable agriculture approaches and methods. The topics of training will cover mainly practical subjects taught in the field promoting sustainable techniques such as composting, soil stabilisation and more intensive cultivation methods. As well as the practical agricultural subjects there will be training sessions for local school teachers and school district chiefs to improve environmental education in local primary schools in order to promote understanding of the need to conserve Madagascar's precious biodiversity The specific project aims are to: • Ensure the completion of building and furnishing of a dormitory that is already under construction, which will provide accommodation for visiting groups at the ICTC and facilitate longer training sessions and groups coming from further afield. 106 • • • • • Ensure a year's effective functioning of the ICTC (payment of maintenance, administration and personnel costs). Provide 300 local villagers with training in sustainable agricultural techniques with the aim of reducing the practise of tavy in the areas immediately surrounding Parc Ivoloina and the Betampona Natural Reserve. Provide follow-up support visits for villagers showing interest in adopting the promoted techniques, offering technical assistance on the ground. Provide a second phase of training for all of the 17 mayors of the province of Toamasina reinforcing the importance of promoting sustainable agriculture at the commune level and increasing practical and technical knowledge of a range of improved agricultural techniques. Provide a third phase of training for the 16 local school chiefs (Chef ZAPs) of Toamasina province reinforcing the importance of promoting environmental education in primary schools and increasing technical knowledge in a range of environmental subjects. 107 Project number: 4 Project applicant: University of Hamburg Project Name: Impacts of habitat characteristics and human forest utilization on Geochelone radiata in southern Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €18,885 Summary The spiny forest of Madagascar is one of the least studied but most threatened ecosystems of the world (Fenn, 2003; Mittermeier et al., 2004). Due to the harshness of the environment only basic inventories and short pilot studies have been carried out, but no in depth ecosystem analyses are available for this ecosystem and for most animal species living there. This is unfortunate as southern Madagascar harbours many endemic species with restricted ranges and special adaptations to the arid environment. One of these species is the Radiated tortoise (Geochelone radiata), which is likely to suffer from habitat destruction, overexploitation of the habitat through livestock and hunting for food and for the pet trade. Even though G. radiata is probably the best-known tortoise species of Madagascar, very little is known about its status and habitat requirements (Pedrono and Smith, 2003; Leuteritz et al., 2005). In view of these deficits the aims of the project are: 1) Description of the relations between the occurrence of the tortoise Geochelone radiata and abiotic and biotic habitat characteristics in the spiny and dry forests of southern Madagascar; 2) Description of population characteristics in different vegetation formations across its range; 3) Assessing human impacts (grazing, fire, hunting / pet trade) on populations of Geochelone radiata. The study will be carried out along a gradient of habitats ranging from very dry habitats in and around the National Park of Tsimanampetsotsa to the NP of Andohahela (with a variety of dry to more mesic habitats). The NP of Andohahela is situated at the eastern limits of the distributional range of Geochelone radiata. Andohahela represents the only continuous transition in Madagascar where spiny vegetation gradually changes into evergreen humid forest. Parts of both protected areas and especially the areas around the parks are subject to varying intensities of cattle grazing, collection of wood and other human impacts (ANGAP et al. 1999a, b; ANGAP 2003). Thus, the two parks comprise the full range of possible habitats for G. radiata and several different human impacts. This set-up should allow identifying habitat requirements and the effects of different environments on G. radiata. Within the framework of the "Durban Vision" formulated by Madagascar's President Marc Ravalomanana in 2003, both parks will be extended. In order to arrive at a comprehensive and cost-effective protection of the ecosystems and their communities, it is important to understand the relationships between human impacts, vegetation characteristics and the requirements of the animals living in the areas. Population characteristics of G. radiata will be assessed in pairs of monitoring plots along the gradient: one plot of each pair will be located at a protected site, the other plot of the pair will be located in the same vegetation formation at a site under human impact. Population dynamics will be assessed by repeated surveys in permanent monitoring plots. Similar data will be collected on the Spider tortoise (Pyxis arachnoides) where they are sympatric with Geochelone radiata. The project has been developed within the framework of the regional conservation priorities formulated by the National Park Management (ANGAP). It will be carried out by a team coming from national universities, staff from ANGAP and expatriates. The data should result in a GIS based document to provide an estimate of population size of the Radiated Tortoise in different parts of its range. The results should be integrated directly into management plans for the parks and their future extension. 108 References ANGAP 2003. Parc National d'Andohahela: Plan de Gestion de la Conservation. ANGAP, DFS, and EEDR. (1999a). Etude pour l'élaboration d'un plan d'aménagement et de gestion au niveau de la Réserve Naturelle Intégrale de Tsimanampetsotsa: Diagnostic physio-bio-écologique. Pages 176. ANGAP, DFS, EEDR, Antananarivo. —. (1999b). Etude pour l'élaboration d'un plan d'aménagement et de gestion au niveau de la Réserve Naturelle Intégrale de Tsimanampetsotsa: Diagnostic socio-économique et culturel. Pages 49 + Annex. ANGAP, DFS, EEDR, Antananarivo. Fenn, M. D. (2003). The spiny forest ecoregion. Pages 1525-1530 in S. M. Goodman and J. Bensted, eds. The Natural History of Madagascar. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Leuteritz, T. E. J., T. Lamb, and J. C. Limberaza. 2005. Distribution, status, and conservation of radiated tortoises (Geochelone radiata) in Madagascar. Biological Conservation 124:451-461. Mittermeier, R., P. Gil, M. Hoffmann, J. Pilgrim, T. Brooks, C. Goetsch Mittermeier, J. Lamoreux, and G. da Fonseca. (2004). Hotspots revisited. CEMEX, Mexico City. Pedrono, M. and L. L. Smith (2003): Testudinae, Land Tortoises. Pages 951-956 in S. M. Goodman and J. P. Benstead (eds.). The Natural History of Madagascar. The University of Chicago Press. 109 Project number: 5 Project applicant: Zoologische Staatssammlung München Project Name: Biodiversity inventory and conservation priorities of the limestone formation of the Montagne des Francais region in northern Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €14,600 Summary By far most of Madagascar's species diversity is concentrated in the areas with remaining primary vegetation which cover less than 10% of the island's surface. Some of these areas harbour a remarkable number of potential local endemics and are therefore of crucial importance for the survival of many species. Unfortunately, several of these areas are still unprotected, poorly studied and under heavy pressure by local people. This is also true for Madagascar's northernmost limestone formation which includes the Montagne des Francais and several smaller, isolated areas of the same geological formation (e. g. Windsor Castle and the island Nosy Hara). The Montagne des Francais massif is still largely covered by deciduous dry forest and its altitudinal range is from sea level to ca. 400 m. Due to the beautiful landscape and the proximity to the city of Diego Suarez (Antsiranana) the region might have a high potential for ecotourism, but is also threatened by illegal deforestation. Our ongoing studies revealed almost 50 species of reptiles and amphibians at Montagne des Francais, including many threatened species which are listed on the CITES appendices: one species of Madagascar poison frogs (Mantella), two species of Madagascar boas (Sanzinia and Acrantophis), six species of chameleons (Furcifer and Brookesia), at least one species of leaf-tailed geckos (Uroplatus) and two species of day geckos (Phelsuma). Furthermore we discovered many new species of reptiles, including geckos, snakes, at least one skink, and one dwarf chameleon. All these new species are hitherto exclusively known from Montagne des Francais, suggesting that they might be local endemics and considered as seriously threatened once a Global Reptile Assessment will have been accomplished. Recent surveys by another team in the year 2005 revealed further rare, threatened and even undescribed reptile species at Montagne des Francais, confirming the enormous importance of the region for the survival of Madagascar's herpetofauna. Furthermore, we recorded many other remarkable animal species in this massif, among them a still unidentified rodent (Eliurus), giant stick insects (Achrioptera), theraphosid spiders, scorpions, land crabs, and at least two species of lemurs (Eulemur coronatus and Lepilemur septentrionalis). Among the plants local endemics are known as well, including euphorbias and at least one orchid species. Other species are regional endemics which occur at Montagne des Francais and in associated limestone formations or have very small ranges in northern Madagascar. These species include several succulents (Pachypodium, Aloe and Euphorbia) and even one species of Baobab trees (Adansonia). The obvious species richness and the high level of local endemicity are still poorly known and have been rarely documented, and for these reasons the region is still not yet included in Madagascar's net work of protected areas (although it has the status as "classified forest"). The legal protection of the area(s) is therefore crucial for the long-term survival of many locally or regionally endemic species. The aim of the proposed project is to provide the scientific data which are necessary to justify the legal protection of these areas (either as Reserve Special or National Park) by publishing species inventories of selected groups of animals and plants in Montagne des Francais and associated unprotected limestone formations of the north. Furthermore, conservation priorities for the surveyed areas and their (presumed) threatened local or regional endemics will be proposed. For this reason, conservation-related aspects (population density, habitat characteristics) of selected local endemics (e. g. the new dwarf chameleon and the critically endangered frog Mantella viridis) will be studied in detail to evaluate their conservation status more reliably. 110 The field studies will be carried out in cooperation with the Département de Biologie Animale, Université d'Antananarivo, for a period of about six weeks in the rainy season between January and March 2008 by international scientists, Madagascan biology students, and local guides. Surveys will include vertebrates (freshwater fishes, amphibians, reptiles, selected mammals), selected groups of insects (e. g. Mantodea, Phasmatodea, selected Coleoptera and Lepidoptera), invertebrates (e. g. crabs, scorpions, myriapods), and plants (e. g. succulents). The final selection of the 4-5 study areas and taxonomic groups will be done after a short pre-study in the field. The results of the surveys including the recommendations of conservation priorities will be documented by scientific publications which can be considered as short term success of the project. The long term success of the project would be that Montagne des Francais and (pending on the survey results) additional areas in the region would receive the legal status as nature reserves (e. g. Reserve Speciale or Parc National). This long term success might largely depend on the political situation in Madagascar, especially on the Madagascan government. However, since Madagascar's current president, Marc Ravalomanana, has declared his intention to greatly enlarge the current network of nature reserves, we consider the chances of a long term success of the project as very high. 111 Project number: 6 Project applicant: Ialatsara Developpment Ecotourism (IADE) Project Name: Appui à la restauration de la forêt naturelle de Ialatsara Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Summary Fragmentation of forest is more and more common in Madagascar. It is the result of deforestation in order to gain agricultural land. The fragmented forest patches still have parts of the once original fauna, but this richness depends is affected by hunting pressure from the nearby villages. This situation is frequent in Madagascar, but there is hope for the preservation of endangered species. The Ialatsara forest station compromises 2500 ha with three different parts: 500 ha Eucalyptus, 1000 ha pine-forest and 1000 ha natural forest. The Ialatsara forest station is situated 6 km north of Ambohimahasoa, in the Region of Haute Matsiatra, Province of Fianarantsoa. The Ialatsara forest station is part of the regional corridor Befotaka – Fandriana. Figure 1 The Ialatsara Forest The natural forest of Ialatsara is a high altitude rain forest (1000 – 1500 m above sea level), of which about the half is intact/pristine. The natural forest is divided in 10 plots due to repeated uncontrolled forest fires. There are many different animal species, and as yet six lemur species (Propithecus edwardsi, Eulemur rubiventer, Hapalemur griseus, Lepilemur sp., Cheirogle sp., and Microcebus rufus) have been observed. These lemur populations have been isolated for approximately 25 years. The main objective of this project is to maintain and grow the extant population of Propithecus in the forest of Ialatsara by improving genetic exchange and increasing the availability of food resources. The Propithecus has been selected as a 112 target specie from the six extant lemur species in Ialatsara, because it is the least adaptable with respect to changes in the availability of food resources and ecological niche. It is also a very attractive species and therefore serves as the flagship species for Ialatsara and promotes tourism in this area. The present population of Propithecus consists of 44 individuals in eight groups. The improved protection of Propithecus will protect the whole forest site including other fauna and flora. The territory of a group of Propithecus varies between 50 and 80 ha, not depending of the size of the group. For the season of 2006 eleven births of Propithecus have been registered. Despite genetic constraints, which are under study, the population is growing. The age of reproduction is five years. The project will put in place two main activities: • Restoration of the degraded parts of the natural forest by the plantation of tree species used by the Propithecus as food sources. This will result in the restoration of 250 ha. • Replace pine forest by local / indigenous tree species with emphasis on species used by the Propithecus. This will result in the plantation of 25 ha forest. Beside these results, the project produces information about the methods of two national priorities of Madagascar: • Forest restoration. • Management of fragmented lemur populations. 113 Project number: 7 Project applicant: Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Project Name: Conservation of endangered lemur species and biodiversity of Manombo lowland rainforest, southeast Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €19,944 Summary Manombo forest is one of the last remaining lowland rainforests on the eastern coast Madagascar, ranging in elevation between 0 and 137 m, and covering 15,730 hectares in total and composed of the Manombo Special Reserve and the Manombo Classified Forest. Established in 1962, Manombo Special Reserve is comprises two parcels: 2,800 ha of lowland rainforest and 2,280 ha of remnant littoral forests. The Manombo Classified Forest is 10,650 ha in size, 5,235 ha which are contiguous with the rainforest parcel of the reserve. It is planned to integrate the entire Manombo forest into a single protected area. Manombo forest is home to eight sympatric species of prosimian primates. The primate community consists of black-and-white ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata editorium), whitecollared brown lemur (Eulemur albocollaris), lesser bamboo lemur (Hapalemur griseus), aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis), sportive lemur (Lepilemur sp.), eastern woolly lemur (Avahi laniger), mouse lemur (Microcebus rufus) and greater dwarf lemur (Cheirogaleus major). Manombo also has the most diverse species assemblage of snails of any lowland rainforest, including one of the largest land snails in the world. Recent studies revealed that 90% of the flora in Manombo is endemic to Madagascar of which 13 species are only known from Manombo. The recent discovery of a new endemic freshwater fish in the reserve in the genus Pantanodon (Poeciliidae) indicates the importance of the Manombo wetlands. The only other species in this genus was found near Mahambo, approximately 620 km north of Manombo. Lowland rainforest under 400 m has incurred the greatest percentage loss and highest ongoing rate of loss of all eastern humid forest altudinal bands, resulting from greater pressures for conversion to agriculture of this relatively more accessible and productive land. This forest type presents high levels of endemism and diversity but is reduced to a few fragments along the eastern coastal range, which serves to greater emphasise the high importance and serious threat to the Manombo forest. Significant threats to Manombo's unique biodiversity are related to its relatively small size and human activities in and around the park. The combined effects of anthropogenic threats and natural disasters such as cyclones increase the pressures on the endemic and rare species of the Manombo forest. Both Eulemur albocollaris and Varecia variegata are Critically Endangered and Daubentonia madagascariensis is Endangered according to the IUCN 2006 Red List. E. albocollaris is among the 25 most endangered primates in the world. Eulemur albocollaris is restricted to a few fragments of lowland rainforest of southeastern Madagascar of which Manombo is the only protected area. Varecia, although widespread throughout eastern Madagascar, has a patchy distribution and populations are disappearing as their habitats become increasingly fragmented. All the larger bodied lemurs are targeted by hunting for human consumption, largely for subsistence. Manombo forest and the threatened species found there are threatened by illegal logging, slash and burn agriculture and cattle pasture. The small lemur populations are also threatened because of the impacts of cyclones. For example, cyclone "Gretelle" in 1997 caused severe damage to these forest fragments causing many large trees to fall and hence changing habitat structure, reducing food availability and causing direct mortality. Manombo Special Reserve is administered by the National Park Authority (ANGAP), while the Classified Forest is administered by the Direction of Waters and Forests (DGEF). Both these organisations are struggling with low levels of resources, both human (only one Water and Forests agent for the entire District of Farafangana) and financial. Jonah Ratsimbazafy, 114 the Scientific Coordinator of Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Madagascar programme has conducted research on the Varecia population at Manombo since 1997. Research has covered studies on the behavioural ecology of this species with emphasis on the feeding strategies of this southernmost population of black-and-white ruffed lemurs, recovery of the lemur populations and their habitat following the 1997 cyclone and the impact of invasive plant species. While conducting research, the team has sought to develop a trusting relationship with local communities and with the authorities to encourage and assist them with conservation of the protected area. For example, we have supported the creation of 5 villager associations for the conservation of the endangered biodiversity of Manombo. We have also trained five local people to help monitor and study the lemurs and their habitats. Outreach activities have included environmental festivals in 5 villages and environmental education in local schools. These conservation activities were reinforced and integrated into the Durrell Wildlife Madagascar Programme since Jonah joined our team in 2002. We are seeking funding to further develop activities to support the effective conservation of Manombo forest, through collaboration with local villages, with ANGAP, with Water and Forests and with the local commune. This project will develop activities to support the effective conservation of Manombo forest. This will include completing inventories, censuses of primate populations, mapping habitats, working with local stakeholders and authorities, developing local capacity, developing participatory monitoring and building capacity to encourage local community participation. 115 Project number: 8 Project applicant: Association Européenne pour l'Etude et la Conservation des Lémuriens (AEECL) Project Name: Community based natural resources management: Reinforcement of infrastructure in Sahamalaza to improve the living conditions of the local communities to enable them to sustainably manage their natural reserves Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Summary The most prominent threat to the Critically Endangered blue-eyed black lemur (Eulemur macaco flavifrons), endemic to the Sahamalaza area in northwestern Madagascar, is habitat destruction due to slash-and-burn agriculture, the result of which is a severe fragmentation of the taxon's population. Therefore two major conservation issues are to be addressed immediately: it must be ensured that further fragmentation of the remaining lemur habitat in Sahamalaza will not take place, and the negative effects of the isolation of small subpopulations must be minimised. To halt the ongoing habitat destruction in the region, the Association Européenne pour l'Etude et la Conservation des Lémuriens (AEECL) and its American partner organisation WCS, with the involvement of representatives of local communities from the Sahamalaza Peninsula and representatives of several environmental institutions, have implemented a community-based natural resource management programme in December 2000. Two objectives of this programme were identified: to maintain and strengthen natural processes and the condition of terrestrial and marine ecosystems; and to improve natural resource use techniques in order to improve the standard of living of the local human populations. An action plan (Natural Resources Community-Management Plan) was proposed and is currently being implemented. It has since been the reference framework for the AEECL/WCS consortium's interventions in the Sahamalaza region. Twenty-one Local Community Associations (LCA) were set up in four communes as well as several social and professional associations grouping young people, women, farmers, fishers, and craftspeople. An LCA is defined as a village-level association to which the law grants the power to manage natural resources within its territory. Thereafter, a local agreement (dina) on the conservation of the environment was developed and formalized for each of the LCA that was set up. Moreover, in each village (fokontany) a Village Forest Protection Committee was set up. The committees work in liaison with the forest department's representative in Analalava to check permits issued by the representative for any logging and to look after the work. As part of the CBNRM for Sahamalaza, in 2005 AEEL/WCS funded a training in irrigated rice farming that was carried out in partnership with the NGO Voahary Salama, specialised in farmers training. From the training benefited 27 people from Sahamalaza. Yields were 13.55 t/ha and 17.14 t/ha, respectively, in pilot rice fields A and B, against 3 t/ha in local rice fields where traditional techniques were used. The support to the local communities in the Sahamalaza area now needs to be intensified in order to enable the local people to effectively manage their natural resources in a sustainable way. For this, two main objectives are foreseen for the three-year period of April 2006 - April 2009: 1.) Training of local communities in environment-compatible income-generating activities (IGA), such as rice farming during the rainy season, bee keeping, popularising rice farming, tree nursery, guiding tourists; 2.) Reinforcement of community infrastructure focusing on education and health, such as employing of teaching staff and paramedical staff, building or rehabilitation of schools and clinics, the setting up of a community-managed pharmacy and the supply of school materials and stationeries. Moreover, feasibility studies on wells and irrigation dams will be carried out. The communities have already identified the sites for the wells and the dams. With regard to the training of local communities in income-generating activities, during the project period 2006-2009, different courses will be offered according to the demand of the different communes. Priorities for 2006 are sustainable rice farming during the rainy season 116 as well as bee keeping. Regarding the community infrastructure, the staff of AEECL/WCS, together with the local authorities and the representatives of the four communes of Sahamalaza, has identified a list of priorities for 2006-2009, including 12 school buildings with 15 teachers altogether (to be paid during two years), 11 communal pharmacies, as well as a number of agricultural materials to be administered by the communes and rented to local farmers. The project will be evaluated by the Sahamalaza field coordinators, Guy Hermas Randriatahina (AEECL) and Naly Ramasinoro (WCS), who will provide EAZA with biannual progress reports. Success can directly be measured, e.g. through counting the number of children with access to primary education, or the increase in rice harvest from fields tilled with new methods. In the long term, the measures undertaken in this project will contribute to a more effective management of the natural resources in Sahamalaza by the local communities, which will have a direct effect on biodiversity conservation in this area of Madagascar. 117 Project number: 9 Project applicant: ANJA Project Name: Anja, a Voluntary Protected Area (VPA) developed and managed by the village association ANJA MIRAY (AMI) Funds provisionally allocated: €18,000 Summary The flagship species of this project is the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta). Anja is one of the most northern known sites for this species. The community-protected area of a few hundred hectares is managed since 1999 by the association "Anja Miray" (AMI). The site is only a few hundred meters from the great trunk road RN7, where most tourist groups travel by road between the capital Antananarivo through Madagascar's beautifully landscaped highlands with rice terraces and agricultural fields towards the dry savannahs in the southwest. This assembly of significant natural and cultural assets allows the visitor an easy glimpse into Madagascar's biodiversity and passed times of nobles, kings and wars. However, what it still lacks is audio-visual interpretation. Diversified site interpretation for enhanced visitor enjoyment and local economic development will be the two main measurable outputs. This EAZA project could become a model for Madagascar's decentralized conservation efforts, where -in the true sense of the subsidiarity principlestakeholders, the most directly concerned local communities, finally become shareholders with rights, duties and responsibilities. The ANJA Protected Area is a very successful example of a community initiative under the law of GELOSE or Community based natural resources management. The site is now widely known for its "rock climbing" colonies of makis (Lemur catta), easy to enjoy from spectacular vantage points sunbathing early morning on giant rock boulders or jumping from branch to branch in the forest islands. The forest represents a relict of dry highland forest, more or less naturally protected by this special geomorphologic formation. In the many eco-niches, within a few hundred meters of a leisurely walk, the visitor can marvel at and muse about groups of catta lemurs, a variety of big and small chameleons, lizards, geckos, frogs, snakes including the boa, tenrecs, birds, butterflies, many geophytes and epiphytic orchids, succulent plants such as Pachypodium densiflorum, Aloe spp., Calanchoe, spp. In the caves are relicts of ancient habitations and burial sites to be discovered. In short, one could say, the site is so small but exceptional, that it could compare well with a zoo without fences! "Small is beautiful." Today no tourist group on its way to the south fails to stop there for a few hours. The casual visitor is heartily welcome by French- and some English- speaking village guides and taken on short natural or cultural circuits; e.g. the maki circuit, the succulent plants and orchid circuit, the medicinal plant circuit, the cultural circuit through caves and ancient burial sites for nobles, or simply a hike to the top of the giant rock domes, called the "sisters" with a spectacular view on the Andringitra massif, ancient reminder of prehistoric Gondwana. The Community Association Anja Miray (AMI) Anja Miray stands for "community in solidarity" which started in 1999 with 50 members. Today there are over 120 members of which 20 are women. Started on self-help bases, Anja Miray is motivated by private visitor contributions, technical assistance by local NGO's such as the World Mountain People Association and regional and international conservation development projects. With such help a visitor reception and information centre, circuits, a campsite, the attached information leaflet, T-shirts, etc. have been developed. There are plans for a fishery project and other diversifications and improvements. The association, although continuously developing and improving its ecotourism enterprise, is still lacking information-, education- and visitor information to be shared with "hungry" tourists. This is an often-made observation and remark by tourists. This EAZA project proposal aims at filling this gap by responding to an expressed need and at the same time contributing to development aspirations by villagers by diversifying the 118 local economy, based traditionally on paddy rice farming and subsistence agriculture. Goals, objectives and output The goal is to compile the wealth of natural and cultural information in text, photo and film and make it available for visitor enjoyment through printed and electronic audio-visual media. Specifically the project aims at producing an updated version of leaflet for visitor distribution, a printed booklet and a video on DVD to be made available for better awareness creation and publicity of this special self-help based village initiative, to be offered for sale to visitors on site. If attached to a zoo or other sponsoring organisation, a website could also be developed. If the project is successful, the signaling and multiplier effect for comparable community initiatives and sites could be important, becoming a great model for Madagascar. Conversely, the successful project could also become a very nice window for in situ conservation efforts by a European zoo. Budget The costs for the production of printed material (postcards, flyers, calendars, posters, booklets) and a documentary film of about 30 minutes, reproduced on CD/DVD, are estimated to be in the region of 18,000 Euro. 119 Project number: 10 Project applicant: Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Project Name: Participatory ecological monitoring competitions as direct incentives for threatened species conservation in Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €19,908 Summary Madagascar is renowned as one of the top biodiversity countries with a remarkable level of species endemism. There is growing realization within Madagascar of the advantages to the country of conserving this biological heritage both as a means of attracting international support and funding and also for the growing tourism industry. In addition, most biodiversity resides in forests and wetlands that also provide important ecosystem services, in particular water for downstream agriculture and habitations. Madagascar is one of the poorest countries in the world with a per capita income of €190 and its rapidly growing population is 70% rural, relying heavily on natural resources to maintain their livelihoods. For example, forests provide food, construction wood, cooking fuel and medicinal plants. Despite the direct and indirect value of forests to many sectors of society at different levels, there has been rapid deforestation at a rate of 40% since the 1950s and 9% from 1990 to 2000. Forests were cleared for agro-industry during colonial times but the greatest current pressure is from slash-and-burn cultivation for small holders. The deforested plots tend to lose fertility in a few years and farmers move on to clear new land. Many wetlands have been transformed into rice fields. In addition, unsustainable logging, pollution of wetlands and hunting are further contributing to put many species at risk of extinction. Benefits from conserving biodiversity are often perceived at the international or national level, but it is the local people, often the rural poor struggling to assure their livelihoods, that usually sustain the highest opportunity costs. There may be some existing local benefits from conservation, such as ecological services like watershed protection, or employment or revenue sharing from eco-tourism. However, not all sites and not all members of society can benefit from these, and sites with exceptional levels of local endemism may succumb to logging and deforestation pressures because of insufficient local incentives for conservation. It is perfectly understandable that a villager sees a lemur as just another source of protein to supplement their diet unless we can reinforce the perceived value of having lemurs or other threatened species near the village. Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Madagascar Programme has pioneered an innovative approach to provide direct incentives to local communities for conservation of endangered species through participatory ecological monitoring competitions. These schemes have been implemented in Alaotra from 2001 and in Menabe from 2004. They have proved extremely popular at the local level and are showing very promising results as an effective means to encourage strong participation and interest of local communities leading to enhanced conservation of endangered species and their habitats. Participatory ecological monitoring competitions have been initiated by Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust at three sites in Madagascar: Menabe, Alaotra and Baly Bay. Expansion to Nosivolo and Manombo is planned. All five sites are of key importance for conservation of threatened species (see Appendix for details). EAZA funding will be used for participatory monitoring competitions at one or more of these sites depending on specific needs once funding is confirmed in 2007. The following activities are undertaken at each site: • Develop conservation targets with local communities, specifying the conservation area and monitoring criteria (presence of endangered species, cleared or burned areas, cut stumps, percentage of villagers member of community management association etc); • Train ecological monitoring teams from villages; • Undertake monitoring along transects; • Publicise results and prize amounts in participating villages and regionally; • Distribute prizes in the form of materials for development project chosen by 120 villagers. This project aims to contribute to a more equitable distribution of costs and benefits of biodiversity conservation by channelling some of the "willingness to pay for the existence value of biodiversity" of the more developed world "the biodiversity consumers" back the local communities in biodiversity-rich but less developed countries "the biodiversity producers". Through this scheme, the EAZA institutions will be able to connect their visiting public directly to the local communities living next to and conserving endangered species. They will effectively be sponsoring local people to protect village reserves. 121 Project number: 11 Project applicant: Association pour le Sauvegarde de l'Environnement (ASE) Project Name: Inititiation of an environmental education and community training centre for sustainable livelihoods and biodiversity conservation in Ankilibe, Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €19,800 Summary The southwestern region of Madagascar in the periphery of the Tulear urban area has a wide diversity of habitats and is one of the richest areas of floral diversity in the world. These habitats include succulent spiny forest areas on the calcareous plateau, spiny forest on white coastal sands, humid zones (lakes and ponds) that are supplied with fresh water from an underground river that seeps out of the plateau, mangroves, and the main section of the fourth largest coastal reef system in the world. These habitats are home to several locally endemic plant and animal species that are found nowhere else in Madagascar. All of these ecosystems are interconnected and, as such, the degradation of one leads to the degradation of the others. Deforestation of terrestrial areas provokes sedimentation in the mangroves and on the reefs. Over harvesting of reef and mangroves resources forces families to seek alternative livelihoods form forest transformation. A local non-for-profit NGO named the ASE (Association pour le Sauvegarde de l'Environnement) has plans to develop a community-training and environmental education centre just south of the Provincial Capital of Tulear near to the rural village of Ankilibe. These plans have been developed jointly with with the Tulear Association of Scouts (Tily Eto Madagascar), the Antsoaky Arboretum, and technical staff working with Parcs Nationaux Madagascar (ANGAP) and WWF. The centre will serve as the first environmental education facility in the region serving both urban and rural school groups from in and around Tulear, the local population, and visiting tour groups. More importantly, the centre will serve as a training facility that seeks to introduce more sustainable livelihoods in the local Vezo/ Tanalanga fishing communities in the southern Tulear whom have drastically over-harvested and severely degraded the marine resources and terrestrial habitats upon which their present livelihoods depend. Given the present tendencies of land and marine degradation, many people are starting to migrate out of the region to other more fertile areas where the same cycle of resource degradation begins again. In the light of the concerns for sustainable natural resources management and sound environmental management that maintains the unique biodiversity in southwestern Madagascar, this programme aims to pilot the development of alternative activities that benefit both local livelihoods and biodiversity conservation in the adjacent natural terrestrial habitats as well as to restore essential ecological functions for the marine and coastal fisheries. The overall objective of the programme is that "present land and marine degradation tendencies are reversed and coastal habitats and ecosystems are restored through sustainable natural resource management and livelihoods of local communities in the southern Tulear coastal area". Support from EAZA will be used to fund three of the six coherent and integrated components of the programs. They are: • • • A regional training centre is established for educational programs on environmental management, alternative energy technologies, cultural history, alternative livelihoods development, and ecotourism opportunities (a centre that is open to local communities, school groups, and regional NGOs); Mangrove restoration techniques that contribute to the restoration of seafood stocks are developed and are being actively implemented in the communities of Ankilibe and Sarodrano; A programme for terrestrial habitat restoration and fuel wood plantations is initiated in the communities of Ankilibe and Saordrano. 122 Programme funding from other sources will be used for the following three components: • • • Techniques are developed for alternative pirogue construction and more efficient fishing techniques; Community marine conservation areas are established (no-go zones) to improve fish stocks as well as to diminish the pressure on the marine habitats and provide opportunities for marine ecotourism development; and The tremendous ecotourism potential of the region is developed for the benefit of the local communities of Ankilibe and Sarodrano. The principal strategy, and challenge, for the success of the project will be to engage regional actors and programs in making investments in this training program. Given the proximity to Tulear, the justification of the project, and the existence of a Steering Committee and on-the-ground personnel, this strategy can work. In addition, formal collaborative agreements will be established with the Antsokay Arboretum and PNM-ANGAP in the development of this programme in order to further ensure ongoing development and sustainability. The project is scheduled to run for three years from July 2007 through to June 2010. Support from EAZA has been earmarked for the first year (July 2007 – June 2008) to develop the training centre and initial programs on mangrove and terrestrial natural habitat restoration and fuelwood planting. 123 Project number: 12 Project applicant: Vogelpark Walsrode, Allwetter Münster, Zoo Landau, Zoo Duisburg Project Name: Project "VORONOSY" – conservation project for the biodiversity of Bombetoka Bay (Mahajanga / northwest Madagascar) and its mangrove islands with special emphasis on the water-bird fauna and the blue-eyed ibis (Threskiornis bernieri) Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Summary The 148,200 ha Bombetoka Bay, close to the mouth of the Betsiboka River, is situated in northwest Madagascar, 20 km south of the provincial capital of Mahajanga. About twenty mangrove islands are located within the bay. Bombetoka Bay is one of Madagascar's most important and species-rich water bird sites without any conservation measures yet in place. The situation of the endemic blue-eyed ibis (Threskiornis bernieri) is increasingly critical. The species' distribution is restricted to a few yet intact mangrove areas along the Malagasy western coast. A constantly decreasing number of only approximately 1,000 pairs may be left. The total extinction during the next decade cannot be excluded, unless effective conservation measures are taken. In addition to habitat destruction by the felling of mangrove stands, the collection of chicks for consumption (the meat is highly appreciated and there are few alternatives apart from fishing) by the local human population is a serious threat. The blue-eyed ibis is an important flagship species, because the efforts to protect it from extinction will offer the chance to simultaneously protect the mangrove habitat and its great variety of inhabitants. The islands in Bombetoka Bay harbour the probably largest still existing population of blue-eyed ibis and were thus chosen for this programme. In March 2005 VORONOSY, an association for the protection of water birds in Bombetoka Bay, was co-founded by a small group of scientists and keepers of the Parc Botanique et Zoologique de Tsimbazaza (PBZT). The goal of VORONOSY is the establishment of a conservation area for T. bernieri and other endangered water birds in Bombetoka Bay. The association is steered by its honorary president, Mario Perschke, who oversees the joint Malagasy-German breeding programmes at PBZT. An official collaboration contract was signed between all involved parties, including Malagasy government officials, in September 2005. The conservation project for Bombetoka Bay consists of different modules, including: 1) the sensitisation of the local communities 2) humanitarian aid activities linked to the local communities' efforts to protect their natural resources 3) delimitation and supervision of the protected area 4) the establishment of ecotourism at the site. Five villages, the inhabitants of which are currently posing a considerable threat to the water bird sites through the collecting and consumption of chicks, are included in the conservation project. These five villages will be the main targets for sensitisation activities and humanitarian aid projects. For the first stage it is planned to distribute and put up posters in the villages situated in the project area, informing about the conservation area's position, the threats to the blue-eyed ibis and the benefits for the local people of conserving the mangrove forests. The schools will receive special attention. Posters with nature and species conservation topics will be designed and displayed, especially concerning the mangrove habitat and its inhabitants. In addition, the teachers have declared their willingness to include these topics into their curriculum. All teachers are already members of VORONOSY. Regional associations of fishermen have been formed in the five villages concerned. These associations have declared themselves responsible for "guarding" the mangrove islands under protection; in turn they will receive practical help to increase their catch. One boat motor that can be used on a rotating basis by members of the local association will be 124 donated to each village to enable the fishermen to easier reach the fishing grounds. The local associations will be responsible for the maintenance. During the birds' breeding season the donated boat motors will not only be helpful for fishing but should in the first place be used for regular control cruises of the mangrove islands. The members of the respective local association will practise these control cruises alternately and will afterwards submit detailed reports. To ensure professional continuance a permanent guarding-group of 8 wardens will be established. For each village one person will be appointed to organise, document and control the conservation actions. After the reserve's official certification and taking over of administration of the islands by the association, the erection of a large publicity board at the Route Nationale 4 is planned. For passing tourists this board shall refer to the sightseeing value of Bombetoka Bay's water bird fauna. The establishment of a tourist office is planned. One room to accommodate visitors to the site has already been constructed and is serving visitors since March 2006. A defined entrance fee will be asked for from every visitor, the money will be transferred to the fund of the respective local association. Boat cruises for tourists can be offered alternately by the members of the local associations who have to transfer a defined percentage of their income from these cruises to the association. These and other revenues will be managed jointly by the association and the commune. The financial profits will be beneficial to the community projects and to the purchase of fuel for the supervision of the conservation area. It is emphasised that with this approach the local human population and the endangered bird fauna of Bombetoka Bay will equally benefit from the conservation project at hand. 125 Project number: 13 Project applicant: Centre Valbio Project Name: Increasing support for biodiversity conservation around Ranomafana National Park Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Summary This project is based in the peripheral zone surrounding Ranomafana National Park in the eastern rainforest of Madagascar. The National Park's peripheral zone suffers from attrition through slash and burn agriculture, and forests become degraded and/or impoverished through extraction of resources such as bamboo, pandanus, wood, etc. This project aims to build on previous experience in environmental education around Ranomafana to expand successful conservation strategies, to develop audio-visual tools and products adapted to meet the needs of a largely illiterate adolescent and young adult population, and to develop the capacity of existing facilities to meet the environmental education challenges posed by a poor and poorly educated rural population with limited access to information. Although much can be done through environmental education in schools, not all children go to school. For example currently only 55% children attend seven years of schooling, with only 15% completing secondary school. This means that there are a large number of children and adolescents who are lost from the education system. There is thus a need to find ways of reaching young people who have left the school system. Young people with little education, low chances of employment and time on their hands, tend to be a risk for both the social and physical environments, as well as being at risk themselves. In Ranomafana, despite being a tourist location because of the National Park, and a place which has seen many kinds of intervention over the years, the practise of using catapults is common and endemic birds are often targeted. It is not unusual to see both small birds such as sunbirds, as well as large ones such as raptors, being shot at with catapults. The main users of catapults are young and adolescent boys and young adults. Thus, we aim to develop a bird conservation campaign to reduce this behaviour and increase the awareness of the importance of birds. We propose to carry out the following activities: To develop six Conservation Clubs in rural villages both west (Betsileo culture) and east (Tanala culture) of the National Park. These Conservation Clubs will target both school attendants and those who have left school (or who never went) to develop training in environmentally sound activities to convert youngsters into advocates for the environment. We propose to organise an informationexchange and training workshop for Conservation Club (total 15) Leaders to develop their capacity to manage and develop the clubs. We are also planning a bird conservation campaign, to reduce the pressure on local endemic birds from boys with catapults. This campaign will involve working with Conservation Clubs and schools as well as elaborating a range of educational materials including a large panel for situation in the middle of Ranomafana village for more general outreach. Centre ValBio already works with nine schools in the peripheral zone and we propose to expand this to include a further six schools. These will receive rainforest classes, and various forms of support for teachers and pupils. Each school will also develop a tree nursery to be able to take part in the reforestation programme and to learn about ways to grow endemic trees and fruit trees. We seek funds to employ an additional conservation education assistant and reforestation agent to work with the six new schools. In order to maximise the number of local people who can benefit from environmental education, a new set of tools is needed as existing ones (information sheets, booklets) are mostly aimed at literate audiences. Thus we are seeking support for production of audio-visual materials and a generator to be able to take films and presentations to rural areas without electricity. In addition to Centre ValBio, there are two other environmental education sites in Ranomafana village – easily accessible for the local population. We propose that the Museum and Kainja Maitso are developed by producing new panels and regular temporary exhibits and by hiring an animateur to interpret and explain the education initiatives and to train the existing staff. This should convert these sites into learning centres with a high proportion of repeat visits as people return to see new displays and gather new information. Through these approaches this project aims to 126 target previously neglected groups (illiterate and poorly-educated adolescents and young adults), and reduce negative impacts on the national park and its peripheral zone by converting them and other local people from environmental destructors to environmental advocates. 127 Project number: 14 Project applicant: Wildlife Conservation Society Project Name: Radiated tortoise conservation and forest management through community empowerment in southern Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Summary The radiated tortoise, Geochelone radiata, is one of southern Madagascar's most enduring – and once ubiquitous – symbols. A flagship species for conservation, this animal plays an important role in the unique spiny forest ecosystem where it originally existed in extremely high densities. The local people, from the Antandroy and Mahafaly tribes have historically protected the species through "fady" (taboo) against the killing or harming the animal. In spite of this, the tortoises have been extirpated from the northern and eastern edges of its historical range (a range contraction of 25% between 1975 and 2000). Until recently the animal was considered at low risk further into its range in the "deep south" of Madagascar. However, recent studies confirm that the species has suffered recent major losses in important areas once believed to be its strongholds. In August 2005, an international meeting of the Population and Habitat Viability Assessment (PHVA) group produced an alarming prediction that without immediate and significant intervention, a viable population of radiated tortoises will likely be extirpated from the wild within one tortoise generation, that is, 45 years. By far, the major threat to Radiated tortoises is unsustainable hunting for human consumption in local and national markets. The large and increasing scale of this entirely illegal activity is a relatively new phenomenon. With support from EAZA, Wildlife Conservation Society will broadens its conservation programme in southern Madagascar throughout the current range of the tortoise. The project will focus on working with local communities who are committed to protect their forests and the tortoises, to offer alternative livelihood activities and to support them in their conservation efforts. The project will also work with local and national authorities to build awareness about conservation and the protection of tortoises and their habitat. 128 Project number: 15 Project applicant: Missouri Botanical Gardens Project Name: Promoting ecotourism and environmental education at two priority areas for plant conservation, Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €11,290 Summary Madagascar is famous throughout the World for its fauna – most particularly its lemurs. However, less well known, is that Madagascar's flora is also exceptionally diverse and original including at least 14,000 species of higher plants of which around 95% are found nowhere else. Sadly this botanical wealth is extremely endangered and many plant species are now on the brink of extinction, indeed, some are feared to be already extinct. For more than a decade the Missouri Botanical Garden has been building a database on the Malagasy flora and during the last 3 years we have used this to identify Madagascar's priority areas for plant conservation. Of course, it is not enough merely to identify these areas therefore recently we began coordinating the conservation of a number of sites that are extremely threatened and likely to be lost in the near future without our invention. At each site we aim to achieve the sustainable management of natural resources by local stakeholders so as to provide resources for the adjacent human population while retaining the full range of biological diversity. In particular, we are acting to facilitate a range of management activities by a committee composed of local stakeholders. The activities are related to five main work objectives: improving decision making; efficient administration and project management; poverty reduction; developing a conservation mentality among the local community; and the sustainable management of natural resources. At two of our conservation sites the activities include developing ecotourism to provide funds for site management and for poverty reduction. These sites are Analalava Forest and Ankafobe Forest. Analalava Forest is a 200 ha fragment of degraded low elevation humid forest close to Foulpointe on Madagascar's east coast. Despite its poor condition, it is of high conservation importance because it is the only forest remaining in the area and supports a rich biodiversity that includes several plant species found nowhere else (e.g. Chaetocarpus rabaraba), five lemur species (including the threatened White-fronted Lemur, Eulemur albifrons), the sucker-footed bat (Myzopoda aurita) and apparently new species of reptiles and amphibians. Ankafobe Forest is a complex of several small and degraded forest fragments located in valleys on the Tampoketsa (high plateau savanna) of Ankazobe in Central Madagascar. It important for supporting much of the remaining population of one of Madagascar's most threatened trees - Schizolaena tampoketsana. Both these sites have suffered enormously in recent years because of fire and the selective exploitation of timber and were considered likely to be totally destroyed without immediate action. Although both Analalava Forest and Ankafobe Forest are degraded we feel that with careful interpretation they can provide much of interest for tourists. Moreover these sites, unlike many more pristine habitats in Madagascar, are close to tourist centres and have easy access. Thus, we feel ecotourism is a viable income-generating activity. Therefore, at each site we will work with their management committee to develop a modest tourism infrastructure (including interpretation centre, trails, signs, and trained guides) and to attract visitors by means of signs and posters and by hosting open days for tourism agencies. Careful consideration will be given to minimizing all possible negative impacts of tourism on ecosystems and local communities. The interpretation centres at both sites will be simple, easy and cheap to maintain, attractive, and constructed from local materials using local labour. Successful ecotourism at these sites will help enormously in convincing local stakeholders that these forests are more valuable as forests than as timber or converted to arable land or pasture. Although our primary objective with this project is income-generation, an important secondary objective is to exploit the tourism facilities to provide environmental education for local people - in particular, school children. Thus, in addition to the signs aimed at 129 enhancing the visit of tourists we will also include a second series of interpretive materials designed to inform this second group of people. The interpretation centres will also double as a meeting room and library for the local community and will accommodate a nature club for local children. 130 Project number: 16 Project applicant: Antongil Conservation Project Name: Antongil Conservation Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Summary Madagascar is a priority for fauna and flora conservation. Antongil bay, in the northeast of the island, hosts one of the last big areas of plain tropical forest of Madagascar. Habitat of an endemic fauna, as Madagascar serpent eagle and red ruffed lemur, this forest is one of the richest in palms and orchids in the world. It does not avoid to the ecological problems of the country, and its future is seriously in danger due to an unsustainable utilisation of its resources. Slash-and-burn cultivation is without any doubts the utilisation the more devastating. Degraded soils put in cultivation lose quickly their fertility, driving farmers to burn other lands. Cutting of precious wood and domestic use wood as well as hunting and fishing pressures on wild fauna are added to this problematic technique. In this context, in 1999 Augustin Sarovy, an ecotouristic guide of Maroantetra region and passionate by nature, decided to create an NGO dedicated to Antongil forest conservation, "Antongil Conservation". This NGO works on an area located along Antainambalana River, to the main Antongil bay town, Maroantsetra. Because forest is a vital resource for villagers, and its destruction would make their situation more difficult, it is fundamental for the NGO that the situation would be solved in collaboration with concerned populations. So as to increase local population awareness of the importance to conserve their environment, Antongil Conservation first of all set out to inform villagers. Thus, the NGO realises environmental education workshops with villagers, presents radio programs explaining biodiversity role and links between biodiversity and human people. An environmental music group has been created, today known across the whole region. Lastly, Antongil Conservation initiated a big annual festival, "The lemur festival", on the theme of links between humans and nature. Moreover, understanding quickly that long term villagers' survival depends on natural resources, Antongil Conservation decided to search out with villagers alternatives to unsustainable use of the forest, alternatives which are bringing local development and improvement of well-being. Among them: improvement of water management and reduction of slash-and-burn cultivation by setting micro-dams and irrigation channels, food bank, handicrafts valorisation… In the same objective, Antongil Conservation also takes part of research programs on specific biodiversity of the region, so as to better define necessary conservation actions. Today, Antongil Conservation works in more than 17 villages. It is recognized by the government, and considered as a real actor of environment protection. In the continuity of the work realised for five years, in 2007 Antongil Conservation would like to develop two angles: • reduction of forest fires due to slash and burn cultivation by direct help to villagers; • the conservation of 1600 ha forest. Reduction of forest fires due to slash and burn cultivation Putting in place an irrigation system for paddy field ensures yield increase, and by this way reduces the needs of new lands to be cultivated. This is the reason why Antongil Conservation would like to pursue its programme of water management by building new micro-dams in Andasibe and Sahatsara villages. Theses micro-dams will irrigate respectively 8000 and 3500 ha of paddy fields. Because it is essential to support actions directly linked to welfare of populations, the ONG also propose to sink two wells in Ambodivoangy village, on top of the micro-dams. They will meet a need of drinkable water, and improve sanitary conditions of villagers. 131 Conservation of Farankaraina forest In addition, the Malagasy government entrusted Antongil Conservation with the conservation of a 1600 ha forest, located at 10 km to the east of Maroantsetra. This forest is suffering several pressures from villagers, that is why it is necessary to undertake quickly a protection and valorisation programme by: • Direct measures of protection: guards, marking the boundaries of the area… • Set up of sustainable alternatives to resources exploitation with villagers living near Farankaraina forest: seedbeds, handicraft development… • Putting in place a centre for flora and fauna studies. It will be a rehabilitation site for captive lemurs and reintroduction of red ruffed lemurs, endemic species of this region, formerly living on this site and today probably disappeared. This centre will be able to receive searchers which do not belong to the NGO. • Creation of an ecotouristic centre. Funds collected by this activity will finance actions of protection of the site, as well sustainable development projects in the 2 villages near Farankaraina forest. Actions not directly linked to conservation are nevertheless very important because by improving living conditions, theses actions strengthen links between Antongil Conservation and villagers, for a better reception of awareness message given by the NGO, and a bigger collaboration between the different actors. 132 Project number: 17 Project applicant: Gondwana Conservation and Research Project Name: A pilot study for the conservation of Dyscophus antongili and D. guineti, two tomato frogs from eastern Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €16,350 Summary The amphibians of Madagascar show an incredible diversity, being represented by at least 250 species (and many others still waiting to be discovered and described), distributed among six major – almost exclusively endemic - lineages. So far, the highest percentage of the species live in rainforest environments, and are therefore vulnerable to the ongoing deforestation process and collecting for the pet trade. Current strategies of conservation aim to identify priority areas and research and to include these areas into nature reserves. Anyhow, only a few species have so far beneficiated of conservation actions specifically dedicated. This has been highlighted during the workshop "A Conservation Strategy for the Amphibians of Madagascar", Antananarivo 18-21 September 2006. During this meeting it became evident that the Malagasy frogs have the potentiality of being a true icons for the wildlife conservation, second only to lemurs! The present project focuses on two species that have the potentiality to become real icons for the amphibian conservation of Madagascar, being widely known and represented in panels and books, and often kept in captivity in zoos and private collections. The tomato frogs, Dyscophus antongilii and D. guineti, are large frogs, up to more than 100 mm, and with a bright red colour. Dyscophus antongilii is the only Malagasy amphibian included in CITES-Appendix I, and its trade is now totally arrested. It is currently known from the Maroantsetra and Ambatovaky area, NE Madagascar. In Maroantsetra (the most known presence locality) D. antongilii is a rather common species. Different from many other frogs of Madagascar the Dyscophus species do not include stream species, since they breed in stagnant water. In most cases, the breeding sites are represented by rice fields and ditches, and many populations are even present within the town. Surprising enough, despite being of the commercial interest and the high conservation priority of D. antongilii, there are only a few conservation-related publications and no field research has been carried out so far. Virtually nothing is known about the distribution of this species around this coast town and whether it occurs within the boundaries of the Masoala National Park (next to Maroantsetra), despite the fact that the tomato frog is often used as an attractive species on brochures and information sheets. Dyscophus antongilii was also known from several villages south of Maroantsetra and at other sites on the eastern coast, witnessed by museum specimens. Survey work carried out in last years by our team indicate that some of the D. antongilii populations around Maroantsetra are likely declining for still unknown causes. This phenomenon needs therefore to be investigated especially taken in considerations the worrying population lowering and extinctions that interest the amphibians worldwide, and that are mostly caused by the occurrence of an emerging pathology, the chytridiomicosis. Furthermore, the inclusion of D. antongilii within the CITES I has interrupted its commercial collecting. Consequently, the chromatically similar D. guineti was collected at increasing rates, especially to “replace” the true tomato frog D. antongilii in the trade. This had the effect of threatening some of the populations of D. guineti, that likely should be included in CITES II to warrant a control of its commercial exploitation. The project aims therefore to gather data of distribution, abundance, and threat on the Masoala Peninsula for D. antongilii, and verifying the presence and trade level of D. guineti 133 at some sites on the east coast. The project has also the explicit objective of focusing for the first time conservation actions on two well-known frog species of Madagascar, and using them as icons for boosting the amphibian conservation. It will by then be possible to draw an efficient conservation strategy for the two Dyscophus species, easily recognised by tourists. At the same time the study work will allow to reach the important goal of identifying an area within Maroantsetra, where to propose a protected breeding site of D. antongilii. The data collected during the survey will also be used to screen the presence of pathogens in the studied populations, especially of the chytrid fungus, and eventually propose recovering actions. The field-work will be mainly conducted by local people, belonging to the Antongil Conservation, a small but highly efficient NGO based in Maroantsetra, that will deal with the survey on the Masoala peninsula, and with personnel from the two major zoological parks in Madagascar; Parc Botanique et Zoologique de Tsimbazaza (Antanananarivo) and Ivoloina Zoological Park (Tamatave). 134 Project number: 18 Project applicant: Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Project Name: Developing capacity for community co-management of the new Lac Alaotra protected area, central eastern Madagascar Funds provisionally allocated: €19,944 Summary The Alaotran gentle lemur Hapalemur griseus alaotrensis is found only in the marshes of Lac Alaotra, the largest lake (20,000 ha) in Madagascar located in the central eastern highlands. It is the only primate taxon in the world that lives exclusively in a wetland habitat. The species is classified as "Critically Endangered" in the 2006 IUCN Red List due to its extremely reduced geographical range (only occurring in the remaining 23,000 ha of Alaotra marshes) and the rapid decline in population. The main causes of its decline have been transformation of its marsh habitat to rice fields, widespread and repeated burning of remaining areas of marsh and hunting for local consumption. Lake Alaotra is the largest lake in Madagascar. It is also an area of great importance for water birds with a particularly high diversity including species from both western and eastern Madagascar and with significant populations of Malagasy endemics such as Meller's duck (Anas melleri). A small carnivore was recently discovered in the marshes, which is likely to be a new species Salanoia sp. Lac Alaotra is not only a centre of great biological importance but is also the main area of rice production in the country and an important supplier of fish to the capital city and other urban centres. Around 500,000 people live around its shores placing increasing pressure on natural resources and the wetland ecosystem. Thus, the biodiversity of the lake is threatened to vanish if actions are not taken. Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust - Madagascar Programme has worked with partners, particularly the regional Water and Forests service and the Fisheries service in addition to the key villages around the lake, to raise awareness of the lemur, the biodiversity of Alaotra and the ecological and economic importance of their wetland home since 1996. The entire watershed of the Alaotra basin, 722,500 ha, was declared a Ramsar Site in 2003 which ensures Government commitment to maintain biodiversity and ecosystem functions of the wetland. Following the declaration by the President of the Republic of Madagascar that protected areas would be tripled to cover 6 million hectares or 10% of the country at the World Parks Congress in Durban in September 2003, Alaotra has been identified as a priority for creation of a new protected area in which sustainable use for fishing and harvest of marsh products will be promoted while also protecting habitats and endangered species. Over the past two years we have facilitated a participatory process to gain support for creation of the protected area and to agree on the limits and type of management. This process has taken longer that we expected, but has led to strong support for the creation of the protected area and good integration of conservation priorities into regional development planning. It has been agreed that the new protected area will be managed collaboratively between community groups and government authorities. A co-management structure is being created called "Alaotra Rano Soa". The marshes are currently in the process of being divided among community associations who manage areas of marsh in their village ancestral territory according to a management contract with the State. All fishermen on the lake now belong to a village-level fishers association. These associations are grouped into a federation to agree on and monitor sustainable fishing regulations. There are currently 16 fishing associations and 9 fish traders associations grouped in 2 federations (E and W). 28 marsh management associations are grouped and supervised by 3 inter-commune federations. The co-management structure will enable these community users to participate in orientation and management of the protected area through their local associations and federations. In order to ensure effective management it will be important to assist community organisations to develop their capacity to enable them to be effective, fair, 135 equitable and transparent. This project aims to build capacity of community organisations and assist with their participation in a co-management structure for the protected area. This will be achieved through: • • • Training of local communities, organisations and associations in: o Good governance o Ecological monitoring Enabling adaptive management of the protected area: o Meetings and workshops to present and discuss the results of the monitoring o Assisting partners in communicating about the protected area o Raising awareness through local outreach tools (posters, radio etc) Assisting with the development of management plans and reports. The monitoring and evaluation of the programme will always include local communities and the results will be made known to them. The results of the ecological monitoring should show significant changes such as more gentle lemurs found during the census, more and better fish catches, fewer marsh fires etc. Through marsh and fishing associations, local communities will be involved in and benefit from the project. The creation of the protected area will maintain the biodiversity and productivity of the wetland ecosystem on which they depend for their primary sources of income. 136 Project number: 19 Project applicant: Madagascar Fauna Group Project Name: Betampona forest protection programme Funds provisionally allocated: €15,610 Summary Madagascar is one of the world's most renowned zones of biological diversity with astonishing levels of species endemism, but population growth and slash-and-burn agriculture (tavy) have led to severe deforestation and forest degradation (leaving less than 10% of the original forests). Only by addressing the needs of the growing population and thereby reducing the rate of forest destruction can there be any hope of preserving the unique flora and fauna of Madagascar. Madagascar Fauna Group (MFG) have worked for 17 years with local Malagasy government and environmental groups to help conserve critically endangered species by attempting to address the core issues affecting them. MFG has worked since 1988 in association with ANGAP (the National Protected Areas Association for Madagascar) to protect the Betampona Natural Reserve. Despite its small size (2227 ha) Betampona is home to at least 89 species of bird, 80 amphibian species, 71 species of reptiles and has also been recognised as one of the most biodiverse of Madagascar's ecosystems for its plant species (Chris Birkenshaw, Missouri Botanical Gardens, pers. comm.). The value of the reserve is immeasurable in terms of a last refuge for many species and one of the last areas of pristine lowland rainforest in Madagascar. Several of these flora and fauna species are new to science and as yet undescribed, others are known only from Betampona and many are critically endangered. Invertebrates have only just begun to be studied and already many new species are being discovered. It is unquestionable that there are still many more treasures to be found in Betampona. Sadly, as the rich diversity of Betampona is still being discovered and documented, the reserve faces growing pressures each year as the surrounding human population struggles to make ends meet in an ever-degrading landscape. Tavy and deforestation for timber and firewood have caused the relatively large tracts of forest surrounding Betampona to disappear over the past 20 years and the villagers are left with few alternatives other than illegally cutting wood within the reserve limits. The reserve is reaching a critical stage where it could very quickly disappear if it is not properly protected. The reserve itself is nominally surrounded by a "Zone of Protection" that is supposed to buffer the reserve against the encroaching tavy. In effect the Zone of Protection is not respected and the land is burnt and cultivated up to the very limit of the reserve and, in some cases, beyond. Tavy and illegal wood cutting is eating away at the reserve and, if left unchecked, will eventually destroy this last vestige of beautiful lowland forest in the region. The proposed project aims to address this worrying situation by encouraging reforestation of the Zone of Protection and communal areas within the village to provide a sustainable supply of construction timber and firewood as well as providing greater food security for the villagers or means for becoming more financially independent through sale of crops. Subsidised plants will be provided to villagers at minimal cost to encourage adoption of the scheme and training will also be provided by the MFG Education and Agro forestry teams to encourage the adoption of more sustainable farming techniques: simple methods such as soil stabilisation and composting can significantly increase the lifetime of a cultivated area of land thereby reducing the new areas of pristine forest needing to be cleared each year. The proposed activities will not only reduce the need for villagers to illegally cut timber within the reserve and provide them with an alternative income but will also provide a physical buffer against cyclone damage to the forest edge. Sustainable methods of income generation such as beekeeping will also be encouraged and small grants (micro-credit) will be available to villagers to start up such initiatives. Villages will be assessed on an annual basis following the "Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust" model of competitive reward to 137 encourage ongoing participation and "prize money" will be awarded to fund communal projects such as school improvements or installation of irrigation systems. The specific project aims are to: • • • • • Increase surface area of forested land in the Betampona Reserve Zone of Protection: area of reforestation will be measured directly by GPS mapping before and after the completion of this project; Increase surface area of forested land in the villages and immediate surroundings of the Betampona Reserve; Increase the financial security of villagers participating in the programme; Increase awareness of the need to sustainably manage resources such as timber and firewood and provide advice and training to allow villagers to meet that need; Improve and increase the MFG's relationship with ANGAP and all seven villages bordering the Betampona Reserve to help valorise the reserve in the eyes of locals and ensure that the villages are directly benefiting from its presence. 138 Project number: 20 Project applicant: Wildlife Conservation Society Project Name: Freshwater fish conservation through habitat protection and community based natural resource management in Nosy Be Funds provisionally allocated: €20,000 Summary Nosy Be, an island off the northwest coast of Madagascar, is one of the most developed tourism locations in Madagascar and it is known for its beaches, coral reefs, ylang-ylang and sugar cane plantations. Less well known is that the remaining natural habitats of this island are of the highest conservation value. The forests of Lokobe Reserve are some of the last remaining low altitude rainforests in Madagascar and the crater lakes of Mont Passot support a significant number of native freshwater fish, one species which critically endangered and three others that are threatened on the mainland of Madagascar. Freshwater fish are the most critically endangered group of vertebrates in Madagascar and with the absence of exotic species Nosy be offers a significant opportunity to preserve intact freshwater communities. To date, very little of Madagascar's wetlands have been conserved and, along with their resident fauna and flora, they are one of the habitats under greatest threat. In this project EAZA will support the development of a conservation programme of the Mont Passot lakes in collaboration with local people living around the lakes and on the slopes of the ancient volcano. With support from the EAZA funds WCS proposes to work with local communities, the Ministry of Environment, Water and Forests and the local private sector to ensure that the best possible management plan is designed and implemented for the Nosy Be lakes. In addition, the project will work with the local tourism operators to promote the area as an ecotourism site and ensure that benefits of the potentially significant international tourism to this area are captured to support local community development and to support conservation of freshwater fish and their habitats. 139