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COVID-19 has been a 'double-edged sword' for conservationists


Watching over elephants at Kruger National Park, South Africa.
  -  
Copyright 
Unsplash
By 
  •  Updated: 20/05/2021
- 07:01
When COVID-19 was first declared a global pandemic in March 2020, the daily lives of millions around the world changed practically overnight.
For those working tirelessly to protect national parks and conservation areas, this presented huge challenges.
Visitor centres and tourist schemes that brought vital revenue had to be closed. Emergency wildlife incidents, such as poaching, were more difficult to prevent and investigate. Community education had to be stopped as limits were placed on who we could meet and where we could go.
In Africa, barely 20 per cent of countries believed they could continue with anything more than basic operations in protected and conserved areas (PCAs) for more than six months. While some s ....

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How Did the Pandemic Affect Ocean Conservation? - The Good Men Project


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How Did the Pandemic Affect Ocean Conservation?
Clickbait stories of happy animals returning to suddenly quiet habitats paint an overly rosy picture of COVID-19’s impact on the marine environment.
By David Shiffman
As we enter what’s hopefully the home stretch of the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s time to take stock of how it affected every aspect of our world, to consider what happened, what could be done different to avoid those problems in the future, and what’s next. ....

United States , Grantly Galland , David Shiffman , Simon Gulak , American Tropical Tuna Commission , Conservation International Hawaii , Atmospheric Administration , National Oceanic , University Of Miami , Sea Leucas , Conservation International , Rachel Golden Kroner , Good Men Project , Inter American Tropical Tuna , President Trump , Ulu Ching , Golden Kroner , Monitoring Has , Creative Commons , Premium Member , Premium Members , Social Interest , New Account , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , டேவிட் ஷிப்ப்மான் , அமெரிக்கன் வெப்பமண்டல டுனா தரகு ,

How did the pandemic affect ocean conservation?


NationofChange
How did the pandemic affect ocean conservation?
Clickbait stories of happy animals returning to suddenly quiet habitats paint an overly rosy picture of COVID-19’s impact on the marine environment.
As we enter what’s hopefully the home stretch of the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s time to take stock of how it affected every aspect of our world, to consider what happened, what could be done differently to avoid those problems in the future, and what’s next.
That might mean confronting some of our earlier conclusions. For example, at the start of the pandemic, we were bombarded with often false stories about suddenly quiet cities and waterways experiencing animals reclaiming what was once their habitat. “Nature is healing” stories like this seem to have created an overly rosy picture of the pandemic’s impact on the natural world. ....

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Wildlife protections, especially in Africa, cut sharply during pandemic -IUCN conservation group


Wildlife protections, especially in Africa, cut sharply during pandemic -IUCN conservation group
FILE PHOTO: A herd of elephants walk past a watering hole in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, October 14, 2014. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo reuters tickers
This content was published on March 11, 2021 - 08:11
March 11, 2021 - 08:11
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) - The COVID-19 pandemic is undermining nature conservation efforts, cutting park and anti-poaching patrols in more than half of Africa s protected sites, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) said on Thursday.
The collapse of international tourism due to efforts to slow spread of the coronavirus has led to heavy revenue losses for many wildlife parks, cutting budgets and threatening longer-term closures. ....

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Wildlife protections, especially in Africa, cut sharply during pandemic: IUCN conservation group


3 Min Read
GENEVA (Reuters) - The COVID-19 pandemic is undermining nature conservation efforts, cutting park and anti-poaching patrols in more than half of Africa’s protected sites, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) said on Thursday.
Rhinos graze in the Pongola Nature Reserve in Jozini, South Africa, October 6, 2018. REUTERS/Rogan Ward/File Photo
The collapse of international tourism due to efforts to slow spread of the coronavirus has led to heavy revenue losses for many wildlife parks, cutting budgets and threatening longer-term closures.
IUCN, a Swiss-based environmental network, said research released in a series of articles in its journal PARKS represents the most comprehensive review to date of the links between the pandemic and nature conservation. ....

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