NewsFighting hunger protecting wildlife

Image
The Lion's Share Fighting hunger protecting wildlife

The wildlife-based tourism sector has been devastated by the effects of COVID-19. As tourism collapsed, related jobs and income were lost, conservation project funds were withdrawn, and as a result, poaching increased in many places around the world.

These three consequences of COVID-19 were followed by a further knock-on effect: widespread food insecurity.

 

Image
Member of the Kapawi, one of 12 communities in the rainforest of Ecuador where Fundación Pachamama is offering trainings in sustainable home-gardening methods to bolster food security. Photo: Jake Matthews, Fundación Pachamama
Member of the Kapawi, one of 12 communities in the rainforest of Ecuador where Fundación Pachamama is offering trainings in sustainable home-gardening methods to bolster food security.
Photo: Jake Matthews, Fundación Pachamama

Resilience in wildlife community grants


Recognising the way the pandemic altered the world, The Lion’s Share, and the Small Grant’s Programme, which is financed by the Global Environment Facility and implemented by UNDP, made a call for proposals in April 2020 to support communities dependent on wildlife-based tourism.

The nine successful recipients for the ‘COVID-19 Response: Resilience in Wildlife Community Grants’ were selected from over 1,600 proposals from local organizations across 106 countries. These projects have been working to build resilience in communities in wildlife-rich areas and support continued protection of threatened wildlife in their last strongholds.

Enhancing food security is at the core of these efforts. 
...to read on, please visit UNDP Exposure