
The
Lion and Elephant Monitoring Programme
at Tembe Elephant Park
is in desperate need of funding to continue animal monitoring operations.
If you or your Company
are able to assist with funding towards conservation as either a
once off donation, or monthly grant towards the outstanding project
costs of R23k per month it will be an enormous help.
Please note: This is a
Non Profit initiative.
All funds raised go towards Elephant and Lion Monitoring as part of
conservation in Tembe Elephant
Park!
A
little about Tembe Elephant Park
It is a 30 000 hectare
(300 square km) park on the Mozambique border;
Promulgated Game
Reserve in 1983 at the request of the Tembe people;
Administered by
Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife;
Big 5 including black
and white rhino populations;
Protects unique and
endangered tropical sand forest;
Only KZN park which is
home to Suni antelope;
At the heart of the
proposed Usutu Tembe Futi Trans Frontier Park;
Approx 450 kilometers
of beach sand roads;
All animals are
disease free (Bovine or feline TB, Corridor sickness, feline aids,
Anthrax, Foot and Mouth).
Consider the
following:
Elephant
Monitoring
There are approx 220
indigenous elephant in Tembe
Elephant Park (which currently has a carrying capacity of
160 Elephant) which due to their high numbers, are destroying the
sand forest habitat.
Solutions to the
Elephant population dilemma are as follows:
-
Increase the size of the park –
Minimum of 2 years before this comes into effect;
-
Contraceptive dart the breeding
females – Phase I and II helicopter darting complete for 2008,
intensive monitoring of breeding herds now required to monitor
breeding herd behavior
The Elephant Monitor
(local community member) is required to:
-
Maintain identikits of ID’d
elephant and create new ones for newly identified animals;
-
Record movement and behavior of
ID’d animals and build up database;
-
Monitor the “Big Tuskers”;
-
Monitor the breeding herds for
any specific change in behavior once no new calves are born.
Lion Monitoring
Monitoring occurs
daily using Radio Telemetry methods. There are currently 15 Lions in
Tembe Elephant Park. 2 Males and 2 Females were introduced in 2002.
Cubs are darted and collared when they reach sub-adult age.
The Lion Monitor
(local community member) is required to:
-
“Sweep” the main camp daily
(using the radio receiver set to unique collar frequency) to
determine the presence of lions due to the related danger to
staff and Lodge guests;
-
“Sweep” the swamp reed beds in
the East of the park to establish if lions are present in order
to allow local communities access to the swamps to harvest
reeds;
-
Patrol the fence line to
monitor activity;
-
Record the movement and
behavior of the prides;
-
Make positive contact with
every lion at least once a week.
Funding
Already provided:
-
1 Vehicle - University of
Natal;
-
1 Vehicle - Ezemvelo KZN
Wildlife;
-
1 Vehicle - O.Osberg;
-
Telemetry equipment, GPS,
camera, computer, radios - Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife;
-
Collars (Elephant and Lion) -
Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife;
-
Printers and stationery -
O.Osberg.
Required:
-
Monthly Salaries required – R9
500;
-
Monthly Fuel cost R9 000;
-
Monthly Vehicle Maintenance –
R1 000;
-
Monthly Communications - R1
500;
-
Monthly Insurance – R1 500
Any and all
contributions are gratefully accepted.
Kind regards
Oscar Osberg
Cell: 0726 520 337
(+27 South Aftrica)
e-mail: oscar@sasportsafari.com
Post address:
Research Camp
Tembe Elephant Park
Pvt Bag X356
KwaNgwanase
South Africa
3973