Dear BERGers,
This is just a quick reminder that we have our first BERG meeting this Wednesday (20
January) at 4pm with Jessica Hartel (University of North Georgia) giving a talk about
chimpanzee conservation (please find the abstract below this email).
Please use the below link to join all our meetings this semester (I will resend this link
at the start of every week for those who don't have it in their calendar):
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Abstract of Jess's talk:
"Landmines in the forest: Assessing and mitigating the threats of snares to wild
chimpanzee conservation in Uganda
Uganda’s Kibale National Park is home to one of the largest populations of eastern
chimpanzees. Historically, high poaching rates in the park have produced equally high
snare injury rates in chimpanzees and other wildlife – approximately one-third of Ugandan
chimpanzees have permanent snare injuries. Snares threaten the integrity of a chimpanzee’s
daily life and health as well as their conservation as a species. Since 1987, the Kibale
Chimpanzee Project (KCP) has been working in the Kanyawara region of the park to expand
our knowledge of chimpanzee behavioral ecology while also implementing and maintaining
many successful conservation initiatives that focus on this threat. Since 1997, our Kibale
Snare Removal Program (KSRP) has deployed more than 5000 patrols and removed over 10,000
snares throughout the park, leading to a reduced rate of snare-setting in the Kanyawara
home range and therefore a decline in the frequency of snare-related chimpanzee injuries.
To complement this effort, in January 2020, we established the Chimpanzee Health,
Intervention, and Monitoring Program (CHIMP), which is managed by an onsite Ugandan
wildlife veterinarian. CHIMP adopts a One-Health approach to 1) improve chimpanzee health
monitoring, 2) mitigate (anthropo)zoonotic disease transmission, 3) elevate veterinary
emergency response to disease outbreaks and snare injuries, and 4) engage local
communities in public awareness campaigns relating to chimp conservation. While CHIMP is
still in its infancy, its establishment has been extraordinarily timely given the
additional COVID-19 pandemic conservation challenges. All of our conservation efforts are
in collaboration with the Uganda Wildlife Authority and the Jane Goodall
Institute."
We very much hope to see you on Wednesday!
Best wishes,
Pawel and Sarah
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