The study, which examined multi-species population counts in the seven main savanna national parks of central Africa, found that broader conservation efforts often led to decreased populations, likely because the lands were too large to manage effectively with the financial resources available.
| Mark Moritz |
The researchers’ analysis found that to effectively protect animals in those areas, significantly more funding would also be needed.
Their study was published Friday, Nov. 12 in the journal Conservation Biology.
The study evaluated population counts in four countries in central Africa, in regions where 25% of the land had already been set aside for conservation.
“The governments in these countries are overstretched, trying to do more than they are able to do,” said Paul Scholte, lead author of the study, visiting professor at ERAIFT-UNESCO in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and program director at Governance and Sustainable Management of Natural Resources in Comoé and Taï, two national parks in the Ivory Coast.