Wildlife Alliance Explained

Wildlife Alliance
Type:501(c)(3)
Founded Date:1995
Founder:Dr. Suwanna Gauntlett
Location:New York and Cambodia
Key People:Dr. Suwanna Gauntlett, founder and Chief Executive OfficerNick Marx, Director of Wildlife Rescue and Care
Area Served:Cambodia
Focus:Forest and Wildlife Conservation
Method:train and equip park rangers to fight crimes against nature, improve the management of protected areas, support sustainable development initiatives, empower countries to enforce transboundary wildlife regulations
Revenue:$4,469,627 (2011)

Wildlife Alliance is an international non-profit forest and wildlife conservation organization with current programs in Cambodia. It is headquartered in New York City, with offices in Phnom Penh.The logo of the organization is the Asian elephant, an emblematic species and the namesake for the Southwest Elephant Corridor that Wildlife Alliance saved when it was under intense threat of poaching and habitat destruction in 2001. It is today one of the last remaining unfragmented elephant corridors in Asia. Due to Government rangers' and Wildlife Alliance's intensive anti-poaching efforts, there have been zero elephant killings since 2006. Dr. Suwanna Gauntlett is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Wildlife Alliance, and one of the original founders of WildAid.[1] [2] The organization is governed by a board of directors and an international advisory board that provides guidance on strategy, fundraising, and outreach.

History and background

Wildlife Alliance was founded in 1995 under the name Global Survival Network, and reorganized in 1999 as WildAid. The organization restructured itself again in 2006, dividing the organization's programs between two organizations – a new separate WildAid conducting the Active Conservation Awareness Program, Shark Conservation, and Galapagos Islands programs and Wildlife Alliance conducting field operations in Southeast Asia and Russia.

Programs

Wildlife Alliance's major ongoing programs are:Cardamom Forest Protection Program – Ministry of Environment rangers patrol 1,400,000 hectares of the Cardamom Rainforest Landscape in partnership with the Royal Government of Cambodia, making the Cardamom Mountains Rainforest the best protected rainforest in Southeast Asia.[3] [4] Twelve ranger stations are manned with 14 rangers per station; 4 Ministry of Environment Judicial Police rangers, 8 Royal Gendarmerie Rangers, and 2 Wildlife Alliance staff. The rangers conduct daily patrols stopping land grabbing, dismantling illegal logger and poachers camps, seizing illegal timber and vehicles, stopping people clearing the forest, seizing bulldozers, excavators and other forest clearing vehicles, removing snares, saving live wildlife. Before the program started, 38 elephants and 29 tigers had been killed.[5] Thanks to successful ranger patrolling, there has been zero elephant poaching in the Cardamoms since 2006.

Zoning and Demarcation – Wildlife Alliance facilitates clear delineation of strictly protected forest zones versus community land where farmers can develop agriculture. The combination of a participatory planning process and the installation of visible posts on the ground has greatly helped in reducing land grabbing and deforestation.

Care for Rescued Wildlife – Since 2001, Wildlife Alliance's Care for Rescued Wildlife program has ensured that all rescued wildlife unfit for immediate release is given expert treatment, natural enclosures, a healthy diet, and trained veterinarian care for as long as necessary. Working at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre, the staff have built large natural enclosures and designed excellent care protocols for the now 1,500 animals in their care. Wildlife Alliance has also created a Wildlife Rehabilitation Station in Koh Kong Province where animals that are deemed suitable for release into the wild are relocated to a forested enclosure in an appropriate area of habitat. Utilizing a soft release method, when the animals are ready for release, the door to the enclosure is left open and the animals are free to leave at will. Wildlife Alliance continues to provide hands-off assistance and supplementary food at the enclosure location for as long as it is necessary. In 2013, Wildlife Alliance established its Angkor Wildlife Release Program in cooperation with Apsara Authority and the Forestry Administration. To-date several threatened and endangered species have been released into the forest around the temples: four pairs of endangered pileated gibbons who then gave birth to seven babies, Silver Langurs, red muntjacs, elongated tortoises, common palm civets, leopard cats, smooth-coated otters, green pea-fowl, oriental pied hornbills, great hornbills and red hornbills.

Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team (WRRT) – A law enforcement unit devoted solely to combating the illegal wildlife trade, led by the Cambodian Forestry Administration judicial officers, supported by the Royal Gendarmerie of Cambodia Military Police, with technical and financial support from Wildlife Alliance. The team has a national mandate to stop the illegal wildlife trade in all provinces, in urban centers, on roads, in markets and restaurants, and along the border. As of 2020, the Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team has rescued more than 77,000 live animals, arrested 3500 traffickers, and seized several tons of wildlife parts for traditional medicine and bushmeat for restaurants.[6] As a result, the work of WRRT has gained recognition as Asia's foremost wildlife law enforcement units, receiving the ''Best Wildlife Law Enforcement Unit in Asia Award'' from the United Nations Environment Programme in 2015.[7] [8] WRRT also cracks down on the transnational illegal wildlife trade that involves Thailand, Vietnam and African countries.[9] In 2018, WRRT was involved in the seizure of a shipment of 3.4 tons of ivory originating from the Mozambique port of Nacala.[10] In 2020, in response to the COVID-19 outbreak and its links to the wildlife trade,[11] Wildlife Alliance launched the

  1. StopEatingWildlife
campaign to fight the supply, demand, and consumption of wildlife meat by making Cambodian consumers more aware of the health risks of eating wildlife and how the trade supports the brutal snaring crisis of Cambodia’s wildlife.[12]

Community Agriculture Development Project – The Community Agriculture Development Project in Sovanna Baitong focuses on improving the livelihoods of smuggled wildlife into /Vietnam and Chin220 families who were previously destroying the rainforest through slash-and-burn cultivation and hunting wildlife. With the technical and financial assistance of Wildlife Alliance, villagers are managing an Agriculture Store and Community Agriculture Association that oversees agriculture production, marketing of goods, health care, education, natural resource conservation, a savings program and a micro-credit system. More than 85% of the families now earn well above the initial goal of monthly revenues and many households have reached middle-income status.

Community Based Ecotourism – Wildlife Alliance has established Community-Based Ecotourism (CBET) projects in both Chi Phat and Steung Areng. The organization has provided technical assistance in facilitating the community’s planning process, design of the management system, decision-making processes, roles and responsibilities of the management committee and service groups, agreeing on procedures and how income will be allocated.[18] Wildlife Alliance has also provided the initial investment to retrofit and upgrade homestays and guesthouses, purchase trekking equipment, kayaks and mountain bikes, and create 200 km of rainforest trekking trails with 4 night camps. It has built a community center with guest reception, bookings, cashier, restaurant, and rental service for trekking equipment. Families have stopped 100% forest slash-and-burn practices and are now earning sustainable income from international tourism.[13] Visitors come from all over the world to go on treks in the Cardamom rainforest, enjoy river kayaking or mountain biking, and stay at community guesthouses. Due to its success, the well-established Chi Phat CBET has won multiple international awards, including the Dubai International Award for Best Practices to Improve the Living Environment in 2014.[14]

Kouprey Express In 2001, Wildlife Alliance launched a national awareness campaign to stop Cambodian consumers from eating wildlife and buying wild animals for exotic pets. In 2005, the organization created the Kouprey Express Mobile Environmental Education Project (KE) [15] to address the lack of effective environmental education in Cambodia, raising awareness among communities living in and around protected areas, and providing guidance on how to live sustainably without depleting natural resources. The KE travels throughout the country to work with students, teachers and community adults. It delivers interactive educational classes in the mornings and provides edu-entertainment night shows in the evenings for the community. Consisting of a school-based curriculum that builds capacities of both students and teachers, a national awareness campaign, and whole community engagement, the KE highlights the many factors which threaten rainforests, wildlife and our climate: intense poaching, land grabbing, illegal logging. The education unit also addresses water quality, waste management and recycling.

Affiliations

Wildlife Alliance is partnered with the FREELAND Foundation and the Russian Phoenix Fund. Wildlife Alliance is also a member of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Wildlife Enforcement Network, Global Sustainable Tourism Council, Wildlife Conservation Network and the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The organization has conducted fieldwork in Asia in cooperation with Fauna and Flora International, Conservation International, Traffic (conservation programme), and other international conservation organizations. In 2009, Fauna and Flora International and Wildlife Alliance famously conducted an operation that destroyed 18 safrole oil factories in the remote Cardamom Mountains,[16] a key ingredient in the production of MDMA.[17] A single raid in June 2009 destroyed enough oil to produce 44 million ecstasy tablets, causing a disruption of supplies to the UK market.[18]

Significant landmarks

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Suwanna Gauntlett - Founder and CEO Wildlife Alliance. www.wildlifealliance.org. en-US. 2018-08-13.
  2. Web site: Asia's 2018 Heroes Of Philanthropy: Putting Wealth To A Good Cause. www.forbes.com.
  3. Web site: Plundering Cambodia's Forests. www.aljazeera.com.
  4. Web site: Cardamom Forest Protection Program. www.wildlifealliance.org.
  5. Web site: A Decade of Zero Elephant Poaching in the Cardamom Rainforest Landscape, Cambodia. www.asesg.org.
  6. Web site: Wildlife Police.
  7. Web site: Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team (WRRT).
  8. Web site: Wildlife Alliance's Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team Named Winner of the United Nations' Asia Environmental Enforcement Award.
  9. Web site: Major shipment of suspected lion bones opened. 2 March 2020.
  10. Web site: Wildlife Alliance 2018 Annual Report.
  11. Web site: 'Wet markets' likely launched the coronavirus. Here's what you need to know.. 15 April 2020. National Geographic Society. https://web.archive.org/web/20200416053358/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/2020/04/coronavirus-linked-to-chinese-wet-markets/. dead. April 16, 2020.
  12. Web site:
    1. StopEatingWildlife
    . 13 May 2020. Wildlife Alliance.
  13. Web site: Livelihoods.
  14. Web site: WILDLIFE ALLIANCE: COMMUNITY-BASED ECOTOURISM IN THE CARDAMOM MOUNTAIN RANGE, CAMBODIA.
  15. https://www.wildlifealliance.org/education/ Kouprey Express Mobile Environmental Education Project (KE)
  16. Web site: Latest raid on 'Ecstasy Oil Factories' in Cambodia. 15 December 2009.
  17. Web site: REGULATION (EC) No 273/2004 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 11 February 2004 on drug precursors.
  18. News: Ecstasy 'disappearing' from British clubs. BBC News. 20 June 2010.