Adopt a Zebra

Adopt a Zebra

Make a symbolic Zebra adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and support WWF's conservation efforts. Adopt Now!

Wave Forward

Read about WWF's work to conserve our planet's vital marine environments and learn what you can do to help

Learn more.

Conservation Firsthand

Conservation Firsthand

Join WWF experts as they share their on-the-ground experiences in the places we're striving to save.
Learn more

Take Action

Travel

Join WWF's Conservation Action Network and speak out for wildlife and wild places around the globe. Learn more

Travel

Travel

Travel With WWF

Visit our travel section and choose from many amazing trips! Learn more

SUPPORT WWF

chasepromo

Sign up for a WWF Visa, and Chase will contribute $50 for each new WWF account opened and activated online.
Learn more

Digg

Coastal East Africa

Projects - Protected Areas

Giant Coconut Crab, Island of the Doves, Quirimbas, Mozambique.
© WWF-Canon / Tanya PETERSEN

  • Eastern Arc Forests: WWF, The Nature Conservancy and Stanford University are working together to assess the value of ecosystem services in Tanzania’s pristine Eastern Arc Mountains to incorporate those values into policies and resource decisions.

  • Great Ruvuma Landscape: We are working with local communities and partners in southern Tanzania and northern Mozambique to establish community based conservation reserves and biodiversity corridors in order to safeguard the largest unfragmented wilderness in Africa - 66718 acres - and benefit the people who live there.
  • Jozani Chwaka Bay NP: Declared in 2006, the Jozani Chwaka Bay contains sea and mangrove areas on Zanzibar.
  • Kiunga Marine National Reserve : We work with local fishing communities within this marine reserve to use sustainable fishing gear, protect vulnerable turtle nesting beach sites, and promote health interventions with local partners. Other projects include establishing beach management units, collaborating with eco-tourism groups, establishing no-take zones for fishing grounds to allow for regeneration, and establishing reef connectivity through molecular genetics of coral reefs and other reef organisms.
  • Lake Chiuta/Amaramba Freshwater Reserve: Straddling the border between Mozambique and Malawi, this area contains a unique assemblage of wildlife, fish and waterbird species. Based on local demand, we are working with local communities to establish a wildlife and lake reserve to protect the threatened fish and animal populations. 
  • Lake Niassa Freshwater Reserve: One of the most biologically important lakes in the world, this proposed Mozambican reserve will work to safeguard over 1,000 fish species – 95 percent endemic to the lake, including hundreds of species of cichlids. The protection of this freshwater ecosystem is vital to livlihoods, tourism development and biodiversity conservation.
  • Pemba Channel Conservation Area: Declared in 2006, it is a large area to the west of the entire island of Pemba, Tanzania.
  • Primeiras and Segundas : Since 2004, we have been working with partners to create the Primeiras and Segundas Reserve - the future largest marine protected area in Africa and the Indian Ocean.
  • Quirimbas National Park: We helped establish this marine protected area (MPA) in Mozambique in 2002 and supports the people and species through various projects, including creating community fishing councils, promoting sustainable resource management and working with local farming communities to reduce human-elephant conflict.
  • Rufiji-Mafia-Kilwa Seascape Program (RUMAKI): We work to monitor, conserve and restore critical habitats and ecosystems for the Rufiji-Mafia-Kilwa Seascape to study the impacts of climate change by monitoring coral reefs, mangroves and sea grass beds.  We are protecting the marine ecosystem and fishery at mafia Island, where the government officially designated 74132 acres as a marine park. We support various projects on Mafia, including: collaborative fisheries management,  establishing beach management units and protecting marine turtle nests.
  • Sadaani NP: Declared in 2006.
  • Selous Game Reserve: We are working with local communities in and around Tanzania’s Selous Game Reserve in Wildlife Management Areas where local communities actively participate in wildlife conservation and management.

 

 

 

 

email page    Please leave this field empty

Where In The World?

Click the globe

More on Coastal East Africa

WWF Experts

Philipp Goeltenboth

Managing Director
Coastal East Africa

"By working with local communities and heads of state, we can conserve a wilderness where large animals will continue to thrive as they did centuries ago."

Read more