The WWF is run at a local level by the following offices...
- WWF Global
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Emergency Drought Appeal
Imagine a generation of children who have not experienced rainfall since birth due to a prolonged dry spell.
Imagine a generation's livelihoods wiped away. Pastoralist communities who have lost all their livestock to drought.
Imagine an elephant population crash in our generation. Drought is killing juvenile and lactating elephant mothers in Southern and Northern Kenya more than all other threats combined.
Donations like yours give a huge boost to our emergency interventions targeting people, their livestock, and wildlife and many more like:
1. Trucking water to those who are on the brink of dehydration: It is heart-rending to watch people, wildlife, and livestock scramble for water. Sadly, it is a case of survival for the fittest. With water trucking, we can refill the dried-up water pans in various community conservancies and protected areas.
2. Mitigate human-wildlife conflict: Solar-powered boreholes in community conservancies will provide water for people, their livestock and wildlife, minimizing human-wildlife conflict or support the construction of water pans. During the rainy season, we will harvest runoff water.
3. Together let's open up wildlife corridors: Help us support the mapping of critical wildlife corridors and the establishment of community conservancies to secure wildlife habitats and to link different ecosystems. This will allow wildlife to escape to safe havens during prolonged drought and will help minimize human-wildlife conflict.
4. Land lease payments to community members opening up wildlife migratory corridors: Give incentives such as land lease payments to community members for opening up wildlife migratory corridors, for establishing community conservancies, and support communities to establish and earn from Nature-based Solutions (NBS) or Nature-based Enterprises (NBE).
5. Surveillance: During a drought crisis, identifying wildlife that are critically impacted by the dry spell in the vast parks, reserves, and community conservancies and mapping the hotspots affected spatially are crucial. Through aerial surveillance, we will be able to direct efforts to areas and species that are hard hit. On the other hand, surveillance aids in research that informs future climate resilience interventions.
We fund and support adaptation and resillience projects like the drilling of boreholes with solar-powered pumps and water pans.
We work closely with local communities and stakeholders in mitigating human-wildlife conflict through holistic habitat management, securing existing rangelands while at the same time improving livelihoods.
Together with communities, we are opening up wildlife corridors through community conservancies and incentive initiatives. Where communities who open up their land as migratory corridors benefit economically through a payment leasing system while wildlife are able to migrate from one ecosystem to another, increasing the community revenue while minimising human wildlife conflict.
We are engaging policymakers at the National and County levels to support and adopt sustainable practices. We have designed programs targeting flagship and threatened species like the African elephant. Taking care of them gives us an opportunity to take care of other species who benefit from them directly or indirectly.