To reduce unsustainable hunting and trapping of wildlife (bushmeat) in timber production forests of West and Central Africa, by identifying wildlife indicators for use in forest certification and national forest regulations, and by developing wildlife management systems with timber companies and local communities.
INCENTIVES, SUSTAINABLE USE, ECOSYSTEM CONSERVATION, IN SITU, SPECIES CONSERVATION
Specific Tools
TRADE, CERTIFICATION, MONITORING, CEPA, RESEARCH TRAINING
Countries
Ghana, Cameroon
Project Outputs
1. Wildlife indicators identified in 2 rainforest regions (west and central Africa), which can be used to verify timber certification systems
2. Species composition, patterns and nature of bushmeat use in timber concessions documented.
3. Wildlife management plans developed in 2 case study forests (1 per country), to develop best practice with timber companies.
4. Cost-effective and scientifically rigorous wildlife monitoring system established, and impact of forest management plans assessed.
5. Capacity building through training timber company guards & government rangers, and through MSc studentships.
6. Knowledge and awareness of timber certification and wildlife management increased among government, private sector, research and local communities, and timber consumers.