Cash for Conservation: Threats and Promises of Paying Communities for Their Biodiversity

Monday, July 12, 2010 - 10:35 in Earth & Climate

EDMONTON, Alberta--Nyungwe National Park in Rwanda is one of the largest expanses of montane rainforest in East Africa. It is also one of the most endangered: poaching, forest fires, mining and human settlements are all threatening to tear apart this key water catchment in one of the continent's most densely populated countries.Last year, a group of ecologists at the University of East Anglia (U.E.A.) began a radical experiment: offering cash payments to communities who help conserve it. Week by week, rangers patrol the area and count snares, tree-felling, mining and other destructive activities; the communities with the fewest infractions will grow richer in the next two years. [More] Rwanda - University of East Anglia - East Africa - Endangered species - Edmonton

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