Global Conservation helps fund a major expansion of Calakmul that also now boasts the first Mexican tropical forest reserve, joint-operations rangers crack down on illegal activity that has crime syndicates scared to enter the area, GC supports the Protection of Jaguars Throughout the Heart of La Selva Maya, critical resources are provided for the Amigos de Calakmul Community REDD+ Program, and communities meet to strengthen and support for their lands.
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Asia has lost over 95% of the Tiger’s historical range, and there are less than 4,000 tigers left in the wild. Excluding India and Nepal, the situation is even more dire. The largest forests remain in Myanmar, but these have been poached out, leaving empty forests where the Tiger once roamed freely. No Tigers remain in all of China, Cambodia, Laos, or Vietnam.
Global Conservation is focusing on two endangered national parks in Thailand, the last bastions for the 160 Tigers still surviving in the country.
Tigers are under constant threat from hunters, tiger poaching syndicates, illegal logging and clearing of forests, and the killing of critical prey for their survival. As well, the destruction and fragmentation of their habitat make finding a mate even more difficult.
The Indochinese tigers of Thailand, one of five subspecies, are now critically endangered, and Global Conservation has focused on deploying Global Park Defense to protect their two core habitats:
1) Eastern Forest Complex - Thap Lan National Park
2) Western Forest Complex - Thung Yai – Huai Kha Khaeng National Parks
Both are UNESCO World Heritage sites.
Working with WCS Thailand and the Department of Parks and Wildlife, Global Conservation has deployed Global Park Defense (GPD):
-Surveillance
-Communications
-SMART Patrolling
-Community Protection
GPD is used to protect these last intact forests of Thailand from both professional tiger poachers and illegal people entering the national parks for illegal logging of rosewood and land clearing. With large human populations in towns and villages throughout the national park and its borders and buffer zones, Protecting Tigers while protecting Livestock and Human Communities is the highest priority.
The deployment of Global Park Defense in Thap Lan National Park resulted in a significant reduction in wildlife poaching inside the park. After the deployment of over 150 Cellular Trailcams on all roads and trails into Thap Lan and the successful war against Rosewood Poachers over the past 5 years, Tigers have begun to return, and new cubs have been seen in recent years.
Based on the success of Thap Lan Global Park Defense, the national government purchased thousands of Cellular Trailcams for all its National Parks to provide real-time surveillance against illegal hunting and logging.
This story is a model for conservation efforts in national parks and UNESCO World Heritage sites in Asia and all over the planet.
Global Park Defence provides the technology, systems, and training for park-wide surveillance, SMART patrolling, rapid response, and legal support for arrests and prosecutions of illegal loggers and poachers to achieve ‘No Cut, No Kill’ protection.
With Asia’s rapid growth of human populations, protecting national parks is becoming more and more critical as they are the Last Bastions for the remaining Tigers.
By protecting the key National Parks, Tigers can rebuild their populations in Thailand and its neighbors to become healthy again.
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In a "historic" referendum, the Ecuadorian people vote to keep oil drilling out of the Yasuní National Park, a protected area of the Amazonian jungle where the Waorani indigenous people also live, along with one of the greatest holdings of biodiversity on Earth. GC also give an update on the involvement of the GPD program and touches on the importance of the incredible biodiversity within Yasuní National Park.
read moreUPDATE: Global Conservation Secures $100,000 Grant from the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust for TASA and Supports Turneffe Atoll with another $300,000 a year for Protection and Enforcement through the deployment of Marine Monitors on the North and South ends of Turneffe Atoll to provide 24/7 monitoring for real-time response to potential illegal activities, both day and night.
read moreGC shares news from our partner Panthera and where else we work to help save Endangered African Lions. We're helping to fight against the local extinction of two different populations of African lions.
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