The Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund has awarded $28,744,053 to 3049 conservation
projects for all species types with all IUCN classifications throughout the world.
Project managers that have decided to publish their projects, are illustrated on the map below.
Starry Night Harlequin toad
Local partnerships to ensure the conservation of three species of harlequin toads in the Key Biodiversity Area of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia.
View project
Manengouba long-fingered frog
Save the last population of the critically endangered Manengouba long fingered frog (Cardioglossa manengouba) in Cameroon.
View project
Elongated tortoise
Assessing population, habitat use, and threats of Critically Endangered Elongated Tortoise (Indotestudo elongata) outside protected areas in Bhutan.
View project
Reticulated giraffe
Promoting Mutual Pathways for Humans and Giraffes in Eastern Kenya.
View project
Ashy Red Colobus
Film Production for Grass-Roots Replication of Successful Community Conservation of the Threatened Primates of Kibale National Park
View project
Bengal slow loris
Ecological survey and community base conservation initiatives of Endangered Bengal slow loris in northeast Bangladesh
View project
Delacour's langur
The MBZ funds has been key for our NGO towards the rediscovery of a remnant population of the critically endangered Delacour’s langur (Trachypithecus delacouri) in the Yen Mo Limestone Complex, in Vietnam. Through drone surveys, 37 individuals across four groups were documented, primarily confined within the Yen Mo District Forest. This discovery marks the third-largest population of the species.
View project
Baker's Drepanolejeunea
Habitat Assessment and Persistence of the endangered, Luzon-endemic liverwort Drepanolejeunea bakeri Herzog in Mount Bulusan, the Philippines
View project
Senegalia venosa
In-situ Conservation of endangered Acacia Venosa in Hirmi Dryland areas of Northern Ethiopia
View project
Morris’s bat
Morris’s bat is an endemic species to Ethiopia. Morris’s bats significantly contribute to pest control, dispersing seeds and plant pollinations. Despite its ecological services, majority of the local communities poorly understood the contribution of the species. Results reveal that more than 75% of the respondents have little knowledge about the ecological services of Morris’s bat, including pollination, seed dispersal, natural fertilizers, ...
View project