09-12-2015 - White-backed Vulture
Monitoring Vulture Species in Botswana to Understand the Ecology, Cause of Decline, and Mitigate Conservation Threats
View White-backed Vulture project
Small Grant Login
The Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund has awarded 760 grants constituting a total donation of $7,684,910 for species conservation projects based in Africa.
Monitoring Vulture Species in Botswana to Understand the Ecology, Cause of Decline, and Mitigate Conservation Threats
View White-backed Vulture project
Is reforestation an effective conservation strategy for the Blue-eyed Black Lemur (Eulemur flavifrons)?
View Blue-eyed black lemur project
The use of plantations and forest corridors by the endangered southern woolly lemur: a strategy for their conservation
View Southern woolly lemur project
This project is prioritising and protecting Nigeria’s most threatened trees. Red List assessments are identifying the species most at risk of extinction. Seed collecting expeditions are sourcing propagation material to set up conservation collections. Training was provided to NGOs and forest community groups, giving them the skills to protect Nigeria's threatened trees.
View Nigerian kola, Sigerekun (Yoruba) project
Red List Assessment and preparation of a global Action Plan for conservation of water-starworts (Callitriche)
View Water-starworts project
Conservation status of the Critically Endangered Mahé Boulder Cricket (Phalangacris alluaudi)
View Mahé Boulder Cricket project
The focus of the project is encouraging conservation attention for Bizarre-nosed Chameleon and for its land-living. Identified as a marsh-dependent species, Calumma hafahafa might not a tropical forest interior species. The species concentration areas give the idea to be close to marshes surrounded by a ring of forests. Marshes actually drive changes in Bizarre-nosed Chameleon abundance. It is a result of habitat choice.
View Bizarre-nosed Chameleon project
Community-Based Marine Turtle Conservation in Liberia
Marine Turtle Conservation along the Liberian Bassa coastline was initiated in 2012. The progress of the project is encouraging as hunters and poachers living in communities surrounding the beaches are now protecting the species. Sea Turtle monitoring is active and on-going in Little Bassa, Duo, Samuel Brown Town, Sand Farm and Bassa Point Township -- stretching 22.7 kilometers.
View Green turtle project
Sheep for longclaw: Integrating livestock farming with conservation of Sharpe's Longclaw in Kinangop
View Sharpe's Longclaw project
Updating the conservation strategy of the greater big-footed mouse in the dry forest of Ankarafantsika National Park, Madagascar
View Greater big-footed mouse project