Mongabay

The Women Leading a Quiet Conservation Revolution in a Nigerian Gorilla Sanctuary

AI-moderated

The morning in Ulom is filled with light and warmth. A dome of mountains, with green vegetation spread out like giant green walls, is visible at the edge of this serene village in Nigeria’s southeast. In the king’s palace, a women’s group kicks off its monthly meeting with prayers and choruses. Today’s meeting centers on river pollution, a significant issue being addressed as part of a broader initiative to save the Afi Mountain Wildlife Sanctuary (AMWS), a 100-square-kilometer (39-square-mile) wildlife hotspot situated near Ulom.

The Sanctuary and its Importance

The sanctuary was gazetted in 2000 and is inhabited by the critically endangered Cross River gorilla (Gorilla gorilla diehli), endangered Nigeria-Cameroon chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes ellioti) and drills (Mandrillus leucophaeus); porcupines; duikers; and dozens of bird, bat, and butterfly species. Afi is the shared heritage of 16 villages, including Ulom, broadly known as the sanctuary’s landlords. Together, these communities have set up initiatives and bylaws aimed at protecting the hotspot, often in collaboration with nonprofits and other stakeholders.

The women’s collective meeting here today is one signal of a growing surge of women’s conservation leadership across the host communities. Asu Margaret, the group secretary, reads aloud from a notebook. "In our previous meeting we discussed how to prevent wildfires in the Afi Mountains,” she says. "We rejected the felling of trees. We maintain the ban on timber dealers".

The Situation of Cross River Gorillas

Only about 300 Cross River gorillas are estimated to survive in the wild; roughly 100 of them live in a patchwork of interconnected protected areas that includes Afi, Mbe Mountains, among others. The conservation of these animals is crucial for the preservation of biodiversity and the ecosystem.

Conclusion

Female leadership in conservation is fundamental to the success of protecting the Afi Mountain Wildlife Sanctuary and its inhabitants. The collaboration between local communities, nonprofits, and other stakeholders is essential to ensuring the preservation of biodiversity and the ecosystem.

Source / Reference: Mongabay

Disclaimer: The content on this site, including news analyses, is generated by Artificial Intelligence algorithms using live climate data and reporting feeds from varied sources. While we use rigorous scientific sources (NOAA, NASA), AI can make mistakes or lack human context. Always cross-check sensitive local actions or claims. We disclaim any liability for autonomous actions taken based on automated content generated on this site.

Tags: conservation, gorillas, Nigeria, sanctuary, women, leadership

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