The newly constructed school improves access to primary education and promotes conservation education in Manyara Ranch, an important wildlife corridor connecting Tarangire and Lake Manyara National Parks.
THE African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) has conducted the US Agency for International Development (USAID)-funded Tuhifadhi Maliasili project inception meeting, which will address socio-economic dynamics that hinder habitat connectivity and the long-term persistence of biodiversity in-
AWF facilitates livestock vaccinations at Manyara Ranch awf.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from awf.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
infections
Over 25,000 livestock belonging to over 1000 households within the Tarangire-Manyara ecosystem are being vaccinated against infections in efforts to protect the adjoining Wildlife corridor from possible eruption of diseases.
Consignment of PPR vaccines for livestock being presented by Pastor Magingi, the programme manager for the African Wildlife Foundation in Tanzania (C) to Monduli District executive director Kaiza Victor (L) at the Manyara ranch yesterday as Lemaly Sigir Ole Kibinti (R) who presented local communities in the area looks on. Photo: Correspondent Marc Nkwame
Administered through the Manyara Ranch, the 30,000 vaccine doses target to safeguard mostly goats and sheep in the precinct, from the deadly ‘Peste des Petits Ruminants,’ (PPR) virus which according to veterinary experts, usually cause sheep and goats plague.
Washington, DC 20003, USA
Manyara Ranch has on June 8, 2021 received 30,000 vaccine doses to protect its livestock from Peste des Petits Ruminants (PPR), also known as sheep and goat plague. The vaccines were handed over to the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) at the ranch offices by the Department of Livestock officials from the Monduli District Council for use on the ranch and for distribution to nearby communities.
The AWF-supported Manyara Ranch has been identified by the Tanzanian office of the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) as one of its implementers in FAO’s Livestock Vaccination Campaign.
PPR is a highly contagious animal disease affecting domestic and wild small ruminants. It is caused by a virus belonging to the genus Morbillivirus, family Paramixoviridae. Once introduced, the virus can infect up to 90 percent of an animal herd, and the disease kills anywhere up to 70 percent of infected animals. The PPR virus does not infe