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Since 2019, Guinée Ecologie (BirdLife Partner in Guinea) has been involved in the restoration of mangroves in the country. From 2019 to 2022, more than 1,400 hectares of mangroves were restored in the Tristao Islands.
Belief-based killings is the second largest cause of vulture deaths, accounting for approximately 29% of vulture mortalities on the continent.
The marine waters of West Africa's coast are highly productive, supporting numerous seabird species. However, these birds are threatened by bycatch, overfishing, climate change, their habitat destruction, and invasive alien species (IAS) among others.
The New York Times Birding Project is a citizen science project with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and encourages people to contribute bird data using eBird and Merlin.
As part of the Migratory Soaring Birds (MSB) Project, a total of 182 poles were retrofitted in Ethiopia's Central and Eastern Regions in 2023
The EU PAPFor project aims to help the locals manage and protect the natural resources of the Gola Rainforest National Park.
The project aimed at addressing environmental degradation due to human activities and climate change, leading to negative socio-economic impacts on local communities.
The basin provides water for hundreds of thousands of people and includes a UNESCO World Heritage site and a Ramsar wetland of international importance.
How a passion for the ocean and threatened wildlife in Cabo Verde grew into a successful NGO and one of BirdLife's newest partners.
600 million people have no access to electricity in Sub Saharan Africa. As energy infrastructure, including renewable energy continues to be rolled out across the continent, the risk to biodiversity particularly birds increases. BirdLife International, the world’s largest Nature Conservation Partnership is addressing this challenge through various interventions, as Alex Ngari, BirdLife International’s Migratory Birds & Flyways Programme Manager for Africa, highlights:
An exciting new partnership between the Ecological Restoration Fund and BirdLife International and its UK partner, the RSPB, will help support extensive conservation and restoration work along the African-Eurasian flyway, helping to protect vital landscapes and the millions of birds that journey along this route.
A controversial decision to allocate a large proportion of the Yala swamp complex to a private agricultural company jeopardises the immense natural value of Kenya’s largest freshwater wetland, as well as the range of benefits it provides to thousands of people in its vicinity.