Published: 08 February 2021
BONAIRE: - In December 2020 the Dutch Caribbean Nature Alliance (DCNA), through its contractors Nature2 and Coastal Zone Management, concluded the Management Effectiveness Project for all of the Protected Area Management Organizations in the Dutch Caribbean. The project, which was restarted after a two-year hiatus, tracks the effectiveness of the management actions implemented by Protected Area Management Organizations in the Dutch Caribbean.
A critical component of effective adaptive management and fundraising is the ability to demonstrate success and progress. For this reason, DCNA has developed a detailed data collection and analysis system, based on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) ‘management effectiveness framework’. This system not only captures baseline data but also acts as a tool for analyzing the conservation success, institutional progress and management effectiveness at each of the protected area
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Zoo Director Dr Baird
Fleming and Mayor Paula Southgate welcome the chimpanzee
troop back to their enclousure.
The chimpanzee
area has been closed to the public since work began in
February 2020. Construction was delayed during COVID-19
lockdown, but the chimps were introduced to their new
upgraded outdoor enclosure in mid-December.
Zoo
Director Dr Baird Fleming says the chimps coped well with
the change, so well that Sanda – already mother to
four-year-old Chiku – gave birth to her second daughter
just 24 hours after the chimps were given access to their
new space.
“Sanda’s successful conception and
pregnancy while the troop was off display, and the birth
This full-grown chameleon is barely the size of a sunflower seed
Madagascar, an island located off the southeast coast of Africa, is teeming with diverse wildlife.
Home to over 200 mammal species, 300 bird species, 266 species of amphibians, and 260 reptile species, it s hard to dispute the island s wealth of wildlife.
We can add another member to Madagascar s wildlife family, with the discovery of what scientists believe to be the world s tiniest reptile.
Meet
B. nana, a cute so-called nano-chameleon species found in a rainforest patch in northern Madagascar.
B. nana pushes the lower limits of how miniature some fauna species can get.