Artwork stating 'Education Destroys Barriers', 'We Demand Treatment', and 'I Need A Chance'

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  • Entre succès et nouveaux défis : entretien avec un coordinateur des aires protégés en Afrique

    Au Sénégal, l’aire du patrimoine autochtone et communautaire (APAC) Kawawana est née en 2008 de l’initiative de pêcheurs autochtones Jola en Casamance. Cette aire côtière et maritime de 9 665 hectares est entièrement gouvernée, gérée et conservée par les communautés locales. En presque dix ans, ils ont réussi à restaurer une biodiversité presque disparue. Mais avec l'épidémie de Covid-19 elle a dû faire face aux braconniers peu contrôlés par l'Etat et ces espaces naturels sont affectés par le changement climatique.

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  • Training on pasture recovery is a win-win for Brazil's cattle ranchers and forests

    Providing cattle ranchers in Brazil with training and monthly technical assistance in sustainable pasture restoration reduces carbon dioxide emissions while increasing productivity and revenue for ranchers.

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  • Indigenous knowledge and science team up to triple a caribou herd

    A collaboration between two First Nations communities, scientists, private businesses, and the Canadian government are recovering caribou populations in British Columbia. Because of their work, they have been able to triple the number of caribou in their herd over the last decades. While their methods of protecting the animals are controversial, they’ve been able to protect more than 7,000 hectares of additional land for caribou habitat.

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  • In Burundi, one-time combatants who razed forests now raise seedlings

    Communities that experienced decades of war worked together with the government, military, and police on a vast national reforestation program that planted at least 150 million trees over four years. The groups conducted a census and established nurseries where they grow saplings of the appropriate trees to plant.

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  • Opium production down as communities in Mexico's Golden Triangle turn to forestry

    Four communities in Durango, Mexico, turned to sustainable forestry practices to earn their livings and stop dependence on illegal crop production.

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  • On a Honduran island, a community effort grows to protect its precious reefs

    Bay Islands Conservation Association is an environmental organization in Rotán, Honduras, working with local communities to balance tourism and the safety of the natural environment. It does so through science and data collection, supporting and informing authorities, and educating the communities.

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  • Lessons from a 74-year-old farmer who switched to organic sugarcane farming

    After realizing that his soil was becoming more saline after repeated uses of chemical fertilizer, a farmer in India made the switch to organic farming with the hopes of saving his crops. By switching to organic farming he has a lower crop yield than he would by using chemicals, but he is hopeful others will see the benefits of this method.

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  • Farmers rediscover benefits of traditional small grains in Zimbabwe

    With the help of community projects and organizations, farmers in Bikita, Zimbabwe, are transitioning back to growing traditional small grains after hybrid maize crops led to disappointing results.

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  • Artificial nests for barn owls help farmers befriend these natural rodent killers

    Farmers and scientists in Assam, India, are creating artificial nest boxes for barn owls to help conserve and increase the population while reducing farmers’ use of chemicals to control pests.

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  • Women on storm-hit Philippine island lead Indigenous effort to restore mangroves

    When Typhoon Haiyan hit the island of Busuanga in the western Phillipines it brought imminent destruction. It prompted residents, especially the women of the island, to rehabilitate the mangrove forests. Apart from storing high amounts of carbon, mangroves acts as buffers against storms and protect the coast. The indigenous women of the island monitor the growth of the mangroves.

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