Difference between revisions of "Para-ecologist programmes"

From paraecologist.org
Jump to: navigation, search
(Para-ecologist programmes)
(Para-ecologist programmes)
Line 25: Line 25:
 
'''The Future Okavango'''
 
'''The Future Okavango'''
  
[[File:72_70_TFO_Logo.jpg|link=http://www.future-okavango.org]]|valign:top [http://www.future-okavango.org www.future-okavango.org]
+
[[File:72_70_TFO_Logo.jpg|link=http://www.future-okavango.org]]| valign="top" | [http://www.future-okavango.org www.future-okavango.org]
  
 
The Okavango basin in southern Africa with its variety of savannah woodlands and wetland ecosystems linked by the central lifeline of the Okavango River is a global hot-spot of accelerating change and land use conflicts. The river has its source in the rainy highlands of Angola and terminates in the Okavango Delta, the world's largest inland delta and the largest freshwater swamp south of the equator. The Future Okavango project analyses ecosystem functions and services within this trans-boundary basin of high international visibility and high potential transferability of results to other tropical and sub-tropical regions.
 
The Okavango basin in southern Africa with its variety of savannah woodlands and wetland ecosystems linked by the central lifeline of the Okavango River is a global hot-spot of accelerating change and land use conflicts. The river has its source in the rainy highlands of Angola and terminates in the Okavango Delta, the world's largest inland delta and the largest freshwater swamp south of the equator. The Future Okavango project analyses ecosystem functions and services within this trans-boundary basin of high international visibility and high potential transferability of results to other tropical and sub-tropical regions.
  
 
The Future Okavango project employs and trains three para-ecologists, based in Angola, Botswana and Namibia, respectively. The para-ecologist post in Angola (at the site Chitembo) has not been filled yet.
 
The Future Okavango project employs and trains three para-ecologists, based in Angola, Botswana and Namibia, respectively. The para-ecologist post in Angola (at the site Chitembo) has not been filled yet.

Revision as of 11:33, 18 March 2012

Para-ecologist programmes

This website started in March 2012. Content will be added nearly every day from now on.



Kakamega Environmental Education Program (KEEP)

72 280 Keep logo.jpg http://www.columbia.edu/cu/e3b/conservation/KEEP/index.htm

KEEP is a grass-roots organization, working to save one of the lastremaining rainforests in Kenya, through environmental
education and creation of awareness among local communities, and development and / or implementation of economic
alternatives to the exploitation of forest resources.


The New Guinea Binatang Research Center   

www.entu.cas.cz/png/paraecologists.htm

The New Guinea Binatang Research Center is a non-profit Papua New Guinean organisation devoted to
- training Papua New Guineans in biology on all levels, from field technicians through paraecologists to postgraduate students
- advancing biodiversity research in Papua New Guinea
- developing educational and nature conservation programmes, targeting grassroots audiences.


The Future Okavango

72 70 TFO Logo.jpg| valign="top" | www.future-okavango.org

The Okavango basin in southern Africa with its variety of savannah woodlands and wetland ecosystems linked by the central lifeline of the Okavango River is a global hot-spot of accelerating change and land use conflicts. The river has its source in the rainy highlands of Angola and terminates in the Okavango Delta, the world's largest inland delta and the largest freshwater swamp south of the equator. The Future Okavango project analyses ecosystem functions and services within this trans-boundary basin of high international visibility and high potential transferability of results to other tropical and sub-tropical regions.

The Future Okavango project employs and trains three para-ecologists, based in Angola, Botswana and Namibia, respectively. The para-ecologist post in Angola (at the site Chitembo) has not been filled yet.