Mbe Mountains Annual Report 2015
Transcription
Mbe Mountains Annual Report 2015
WILDLIFE CONSERVATION SOCIETY MBE MOUNTAINS ANNUAL REPORT: 2015 February 2016 Jonathan Eban and Inaoyom Imong Summary From January to December 2015, a total of 54 patrols were completed in 375 patrol days covering a total distance of 2,538 km. 58 wire snares were confiscated, 80 expended shotgun cartridges were removed, and 1 hunting camp was destroyed. Encounter rate of wire snares and expended cartridges in 2015 decreased from 2014. Levels of hunting and other illegal human activities in Mbe Mountains have continued to decline since 2009, and are much lower compared to adjacent protected areas such as the Afi Mountain Wildlife Sanctuary and Cross River National Park. This could be attributed to improved patrol strategy employed, increased commitment of CAMM to the conservation of the Mbe Mountains with a new management committee of the association in place, and stronger community support enjoyed at Mbe. During the year gorillas were sighted on five separate occasions and chimpanzees once. Encounter rate of great apes, including direct observation and nest sites decreased in 2015 compared with 2014. This could be attributed to limited patrols in the in the western, more mountainous part of the mountains mostly used by gorillas as a result of a ban on patrols in the area by the Kanyang communities, who feel that they have donated the greatest area of land to the sanctuary, to protest the refusal of Abo Mkpang and Bamba communities to adjust the current boundary to expand the corridor between the Mbe Mountains and the Cross River National Park. As part of efforts to build the capacity of CAMM and improve the conservation of Mbe as well as provide livelihood alternatives for the people, WCS launched three new projects in 2015: construction of CAMM headquarters in Bamba, goat farming as an alternative to bushmeat hunting with 18 farmers so far trained, and a scholarship scheme to support secondary school students (with 19 beneficiaries). Introduction Covering an area of about 85km² the Mbe Mountains constitute an important habitat corridor between the Afi Mountain Wildlife Sanctuary to the west and the Okwangwo Division of Cross River National Park to the east. In 2006 the Conservation Association of the Mbe Mountains (CAMM) was established by nine landlord communities of Kanyang 1, Kanyang 2, Bamba, Abo Mkpang, Abo Obisu, Abo Ogbagante, Bokalom, Wula 1 and Wula 2, see Figure 1, and since then the Mbe Mountains have been managed as a community wildlife sanctuary by CAMM with support from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and the Cross River State Forestry Commission. WCS has been actively involved in the Mbe Mountains since 2005 working to strengthen the protection of the area and its wildlife by promoting community conservation. Much of this work has been funded by the Great Ape Conservation Fund of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. With technical assistance from Dr. Rich Bergl of the North Carolina Zoo, a CyberTracker-based monitoring project was introduced in the Mbe Mountains in 2009. A wellorganized protection program has now been established which has successfully reduced levels of hunting in the Mbe Mountains. This report presents summary data from 2015 and compares this data with data from previous years. More detailed information can be found in the WCS quarterly reports from Mbe which are available online at www.wcsnigeria.org Methods Patrols were carried out by two teams of 6-7 eco-guards led by the Mbe Project Manager and the Senior Eco-guard. Each team completed two 10-day patrols per month. During the last quarter of the year only two out of the three base camps in Mbe were used by eco-guards due 1 to the prolonged protest by the Kanyang community. Human activity and wildlife data were collected using CyberTracker and SMART (Spatial Monitoring and Reporting Tool) introduced in Mbe in December 2015 after successful pilot-testing at Afi. Figure 1: Map of Mbe Mountains showing the nine landlord communities Patrol Effort During 2015 a total of 54 patrols were completed in 375 patrol days covering a total distance of 2,538 km (Table 1). The drastic reduction in the number of patrols and number of patrol days completed is due to a change in patrol strategy from three teams completing 9-12 sevenday patrols per month to two teams completing four 10-day patrols per month. The change was necessary to improve eco-guard supervision and patrol monitoring. This also resulted in a decrease in the number of kilometers covered, but improved eco-guard supervision and patrol effectiveness. 2 Table 1: A comparison of patrol effort in the Mountains 2009-2015 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Number of patrols NA NA 41 98 158 115 54 Number of patrol days 343 438 405 698 830 615 375 1,451 2,205 2,196 2,494 4,768 3,818 2,538 Total distance (km) Hunting pressure A total of 80 expended shotgun cartridges were collected and 58 wire snares were confiscated. 1 hunting camp was destroyed (see Figure 2 for location of hunting signs recorded and Appendix 1 for details). Encounter rate of wire snares and expended cartridges in 2015 decreased compared to 2014. Hunting pressure in 2015 declined substantially compared to previous years (Table 2). This could be attributed to improved patrol strategy and increased commitment and support from CAMM. Hunters were encountered twice during patrols in 2015 and reported to CAMM as well as directly to the communities of the persons involved. Table 2: Comparison of encounter rate of hunting signs in the Mbe Mountains 2009 to 2015 Encounter rate per 10 km 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Wire snares 1.3 3.02 0.6 2.48 0.27 1.91 0.23 Gunshots heard 0.45 0.29 0.15 0.16 0.02 0.05 0.05 Expended cartridges 1.56 0.68 0.34 0.41 0.08 0.27 0.310 Hunting camps destroyed 0.05 0.02 0.05 0.03 0.002 0.01 0.004 Number of patrol days 343 438 405 698 830 615 375 1,451 2,205 2,196 2,494 4,768 3,818 2,538 1.1 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.4 Total distance covered (km) Rangers per 10 km2 Great Apes During 2015, a total of 68 great ape nest sites were recorded. 35 of these were gorilla and 17 were chimpanzee. 16 could not be identified as gorilla or chimpanzee and were recorded as unidentified great ape nest sites (Appendix 3). During the year, gorillas were sighted on five occasions and chimpanzees on once, all in the central area of the mountains (Figure 6), where most nest sites were also concentrated (Figure 7). There was a decrease in the encounter rate of great ape evidence in 2015 compared to 2014. This could be due to the lack of patrols in the western axis of the mountains around Kanyang village for a good part of the year following a ban on patrols by Kanyang community. The ban was imposed by Kanyang in protest against the refusal of Abo Mkpang and Bamba communities to adjust the boundary in their areas of the mountains to expand the corridor linking the Mbe Mountains to the Cross River National Park and perceived imbalance in the contribution of land to the sanctuary and inequity in the sharing of benefits among the nine landlord communities. The Kanyang people believe that they have made the greatest contribution of forest to the sanctuary but are not so recognized in the sharing of benefits. 3 1 2 3 4 Figure 2: Location of hunting signs recorded during patrols in the Mbe Mountains in 2015 4 Table 3. Encounter rates of great ape sightings & nest sites in Mbe 2009 to 2015 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Encounter rate per 10km 2014 2015 Gorilla groups seen 0.03 0.02 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.02 Chimpanzee groups seen 0.03 0.03 0.04 0.06 0.03 0.01 0.004 Gorilla nest sites 0.02 0.17 0.14 0.31 0.17 0.23 0.14 Chimpanzee nest sites 0.02 0.01 0.07 0.08 0.11 0.18 0.07 Unidentified great ape nest sites 0.23 0.32 0.25 0.45 0.35 0.53 0.06 Number of patrol days 343 438 405 698 830 615 375 Total distance covered (km) 1,451 2,205 2,196 2,494 4,768 3,818 2538 Figure 6: Location of great ape nest sites and sightings in Mbe 2015 Support to CAMM and communities During the last quarter of 2015 WCS organized a one day training on goat rearing and health management for 18 persons from the Mbe communities, except Kanyang I who did not send representatives due to their disagreement with other communities and CAMM over the Mbe boundary and issues of benefit sharing. The training was organized to equip participants with the skills to successfully manage the goat farming project being supported by WCS. The chairmen of management committee and general assembly of CAMM Mr Stephen Tawo and Chief Linus Otu also attended the training. Areas covered by the training include care and management of goats, disease identification control and channels for information sharing for intervention in the event of sudden outbreak of disease. Also this quarter, WCS launched a scholarship scheme to support students from Mbe communities. Twenty two students were selected from each of the nine Mbe communities and supported with ten thousand naira (N10,000). Student going into the final year (Senior Secondary 3) were selected for the scholarship to reduce the usually high financial burden on parents and guardians that 5 sometimes results in some students dropping out school fees and external examination fees cannot be afforded. With funding support from Paignton Zoo WCS is facilitating construction of a new CAMM office in Bamba, started during the last quarter of 2015. Laying of the foundations has been completed and parts of the walls raised. The building is planned to contain a sizable meeting hall, an office, a guest room and a store and kitchen as well as toilets. Work on the office will hopefully will be completed in the first quarter of 2016. When completed the building will greatly enhance the activities of CAMM, providing a conducive place of meeting and basic office equipment to facilitate administrative work by the management of CAMM. Two solar panels were also purchased for the CAMM headquarters in Bamba to provide power and enhance administrative work by CAMM. The Chairman of CAMM Management Committee, Stephen Tawo (left) and WCS Mbe Project Coordinator, Jonathan Eban (right), supervising construction of the CAMM office in Bamba In addition, WCS continued to provide close mentoring support to CAMM. CAMM was trained in writing funding proposals and assisted to develop and submit two funding proposals – one to the UN-REDD GEF Small Grants program, the other to the Direct Aid Program of the Australian Embassy. The proposal to the Direct Aid Program of the Australian Embassy has been successful with funding approved to CAMM to support conservation activities in the Mbe Mountains. Computer training, including Microsoft Office, email, and other social media, was also provided for the Management Committee of CAMM to facilitate administrative work in addition to ongoing training in the use of CyberTracker for law enforcement monitoring provided for the Mbe eco-guards and training in SMART for the Mbe project coordinator. In addition, through other funding sources, CAMM was supported to attend Cross River gorilla conservation planning workshops in Calabar organized by WCS and assisted to prepare presentations – helping to build their capacity. Conclusion Levels of hunting in the Mbe Mountains remain relatively low compared to adjacent protected areas likely as a result of a well-organized and supervised eco-guard program and stronger community support and increased commitment of the Conservation Association of the Mbe Mountains. 6 Left: Scholarship disbursement to beneficiaries by the WCS Mbe Project Manager and the Chairman, CAMM Management Committee, November 2015. Right: Cross section of participants in a workshop on goat farm management for Mbe communities, November, 2015 Recommendations CAMM should make more effort to resolve the pending boundary issue raised by Kanyang communities. CAMM should evict all farm owners who have encroached into the protected area. CAMM should employ more severe penalties for offenders to discourage illegal activities in the Mbe Mountains. Acknowledgements WCS is formally registered in Nigeria through an agreement with the National Planning Commission of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. WCS is grateful for the support and cooperation from the nine landlord communities surrounding the Mbe Mountains including Kanyang 1, Kanyang 2, Bamba, Abo Mkpang, Abo Obisu, Abo Ogbagante, Bokalom, Wula 1 and Wula 2. WCS is also grateful for the longterm collaboration and support from the Conservation Association of the Mbe Mountains (CAMM) including the General Assembly, the Board of Trustees, the Management Committee and the Technical and Stakeholders Supervisory Group. WCS acknowledges the key role played by the Cross River State Forestry Commission who is the legal custodian of all forests and wildlife in Cross River State. CyberTracker was first introduced in Nigeria by Dr. Rich Bergl of the North Carolina Zoo in 2009. Dr. Bergl has provided close technical support for the project since then, refining and improving the system further. We are immeasurably grateful to the Great Ape Conservation Fund of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and acknowledge the importance of the cooperative agreement signed between the USFWS and WCS for the conservation of Cross River gorillas in 2010. We are also grateful to all other donors who support our work in the Mbe Mountains including the Ape Conservation Fund of the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria (EAZA), Whitley Fund for Nature, Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation, Paignton Zoo, Palmyre Zoo, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Kolmarden Fundraising Foundation and Berggorilla and Regenwald Direkthilfe. 7 Appendix 1: CyberTracker Data from Mbe Mountains 2009 to 2015 2009 2010 2011 2012 No. of wire snares 189 666 132 619 No. of gunshots heard 65 64 32 41 No. of expended cartridges 227 149 74 102 No of farms 20 8 3 16 No. of hunting camps destroyed 7 5 10 8 No. of arrests 11 10 7 2 No. of gorilla groups sighted 4 4 12 13 No. of chimpanzee groups sighted 4 7 9 16 Gorilla nest sites recorded 29 38 31 77 Chimpanzee nest sites recorded 3 3 16 19 Unidentified great ape nest sites 1 29 7 17 Time taken (hours) 1,669 2,736 2,998 3,299 Total distance covered (km) 1,451 2,205 2,196 2,494 No of patrol days 343 438 405 698 2013 127 10 37 5 1 10 22 15 80 53 27 5,208 4,768 830 2014 731 21 103 12 4 14 11 5 106 69 29 4,292 3,818 615 2015 58 13 80 65 1 4 5 1 35 17 16 2,833 2,538 375 Appendix 4: List of poachers apprehended in Mbe Mountains (January-December, 2015) Date Infraction Offender(s) Village Items confiscated Outcome 09/7/2015 Gun hunting Solomon Obun Bamba One shotgun and Reported to Enu (aka- Ricardo) three live CAMM cartridges 09/7/2015 Gun hunting Goodness Obi Bamba Potter to Solomon Reported to CAMM 30/09/2015 Farming John Ushie Bamba One machete Reported to CAMM 1/10/2015 NTFP Richard Ator Kanyang II 14 heads of eru Reported to collection and a machete CAMM Appendix 3. Great ape nest sites recorded in the Mbe Mountains in 2015 Date Latitude Longitude Species Age No. of nests 16/01/2015 29/01/2015 15/02/2015 15/02/2015 21/02/2015 24/02/2015 24/02/2015 12/03/2015 15/03/2015 23/03/2015 17/04/2015 17/04/2015 27/04/2015 28/04/2015 12/05/2015 15/05/2015 18/05/2015 10/06/2015 7/07/2015 6.259277 6.26601 6.247002 6.292047 6.258777 6.279827 6.28113 6.25942 6.25815 6.25847 6.23773 6.23671 6.25985 6.24746 6.26774 6.2652 6.2831 6.260498 6.24775 9.091165 9.095182 9.066087 9.097778 9.092105 9.100778 9.100428 9.08922 9.07865 9.09086 9.06836 9.06682 9.07843 9.06610 9.08272 9.0878 9.09235 9.078217 9.08611 Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla 8 Fresh Recent Fresh Recent Recent Recent Recent Fresh Very old Recent Fresh Recent Fresh Recent Fresh Recent Old Fresh Fresh 4 4 3 2 6 3 9 6 2 5 3 3 7 2 10 8 3 13 7 Ground Tree nests Dung present 3 3 3 2 6 3 9 3 0 5 2 3 2 2 6 8 3 9 6 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 5 0 4 0 0 4 1 Yes Yes No Yes Yes No Yes No No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes 29/9/2015 29/9/2015 30/9/2015 1/10/2015 15/10/2015 16/10/2015 16/10/2015 16/10/2015 16/10/2015 12/11/2015 12/11/2015 16/11/2015 15/12/2015 15/12/2015 28/12/2015 28/12/2015 27/01/2015 29/01/2015 24/03/2015 24/03/2015 17/04/2015 15/05/2015 15/05/2015 10/06/2015 16/10/2015 12/11/2015 16/11/2015 25/11/2015 25/11/2015 26/11/2015 15/12/2015 18/12/2015 18/12/2015 15/01/2015 16/01/2015 28/01/2015 14/05/2015 12/06/2015 08/07/2015 09/09/2015 15/10/2015 17/10/2015 11/11/2015 11/11/2015 11/11/2015 11/11/2015 11/11/2015 25/11/2015 20/12/2015 6.261424 6.261522 6.268884 6.266876 6.232393 6.226867 6.261405 6.265352 6.265253 6.23295 6.23279 6.25735 6.25895 6.23317 6.23079 6.23295 6.240417 6.266872 6.237835 6.237694 6.23819 6.26673 6.26936 6.260711 6.22394 6.23292 6.2596 6.26679 6.26601 6.24714 6.23318 6.23224 6.23551 6.248427 6.254432 6.263835 6.2734 6.250503 6.26456 6.248923 6.23284 6.24022 6.2327 6.23218 6.23191 6.23194 6.23228 6.26207 6.23648 9.093618 9.092363 9.094927 9.092154 9.082293 9.074053 9.094315 9.09435 9.094583 9.07304 9.07255 9.08924 9.09355 9.07314 9.08292 9.08183 9.088115 9.091745 9.0660345 9.066345 9.06569 9.08823 9.08904 9.077953 9.07253 9.07325 9.08938 9.09068 9.09175 9.08879 9.07307 9.08027 9.08039 9.089223 9.092762 9.097115 9.09512 9.091424 9.08835 9.09104 9.08045 9.0845 9.08152 9.08166 9.08181 9.08194 9.08203 9.09292 9.07025 Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Gorilla Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Chimpanzee Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified Unidentified 9 Fresh Recent Recent Fresh Recent Fresh Fresh Fresh Fresh Fresh Fresh Recent Recent Recent Recent Fresh Fresh Old Recent Recent Fresh Old Recent Recent Old Fresh Fresh Fresh Fresh Fresh Recent Old Recent Fresh Recent Very old Recent Very old Very old fresh Fresh Old Old Recent Recent Very old Old Very old Very old 21 11 7 4 1 2 10 7 6 7 6 1 1 5 3 5 1 5 2 3 9 2 3 4 3 5 9 1 1 1 5 5 9 3 2 2 2 1 4 2 1 3 1 1 1 3 1 5 5 13 7 1 4 1 2 6 4 2 6 0 1 1 4 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 8 4 6 0 0 0 4 3 4 1 6 0 0 1 0 3 1 5 2 3 9 2 3 4 3 5 9 1 1 1 5 5 9 3 2 2 2 1 3 2 1 3 1 1 1 3 0 0 5 Yes Yes No Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No No No No No No No No No No Yes Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No