The AWF formerly referred to its protected landscapes as its "heartlands"; currently, the organization employs a "priority landscape" approach. These priority landscapes include:
Bili-Uele The Bili-Uele Protected Area Complex is found in the remote north of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, along the border of the Central African Republic. The region consists of savanna mosaic north of the
Uele River and lowland primary forest to the south. Both regions support the remaining undisturbed population of the
eastern chimpanzee. An estimated 35,000–65,000 eastern chimpanzees are found in this complex. Few organizations are working there.
Congo s The
Maringa-Lopori-Wamba Landscape in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo is one of the least developed and most remote parts of the Congo Basin. The inhabitants are among the poorest in Africa. Most people live by
slash-and-burn agriculture and rely on
bushmeat protein. Cash crops include maize, cassava and groundnuts. The growing population risks a revival of logging. Since 1973, a Japanese team has been researching the
bonobo population near the village of
Wamba in 1973. However, research was discontinued after political disorders started in 1991, followed by the
civil war in 1997, resuming only in the mid-2000s. The
IUCN Red List classifies
bonobos as an
endangered species, with conservative population estimates ranging from 29,500 to 50,000 individuals. The AWF has partnered with local and international groups to develop a sustainable land use plan for the MLW Landscape. The plan aims to ensure that the economic and cultural needs of the inhabitants are met while conserving the environment. The approach combines AWF's Landscape Conservation Process and the
Central African Regional Program for the Environment (CARPE) Program Monitoring Plan. A variety of tools are used, including surveys, interviews with local people, and
satellite image interpretation.
Etosha-Skeleton Coast The Etosha-Skeleton Coast landscape, in the northern part of
Namibia, is home to
Etosha National Park and its vast salt pan, woodland, and savanna ecosystems. The landscape is home to the
black-faced impala and the
oryx. To the west of the park lies the Skeleton Coast, where herds of elephants live. The African Wildlife Foundation is scaling up
social venture capital investments through its subsidiary, African Wildlife Capital (AWC), which invests in the Grootberg Lodge in the Khoadi-Hoas community conservancy.
Faro At the core of the Faro landscape in northern Cameroon is
Faro National Park, located close to the Nigerian border. This park hosts the largest population of hippos in Cameroon. AWF is lending support to counter-poaching park rangers in Faro and building a contingent of community scouts on the park's borders to provide a buffer between outsiders and the park.
Great Fish River The
Great Fish River Nature Reserve is located in
South Africa's Eastern Cape province. The 45,000-hectare reserve, which lies in the Great Fish River valley, is home to critically endangered
black rhinos.
Kazungula The floodplains of the Zambezi River are surrounded by a mosaic of miombo and mopane woodlands and grasslands that include important wildlife migration corridors.
Victoria Falls, the largest in the world, are between
Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park in Zambia and
Victoria Falls National Park in Zimbabwe. The Falls and surrounding area are designated a
World Heritage Site. However, the environment is threatened by the development of tourism and a lack of funding. The AWF has established the Sekute Conservation Area in this region in partnership with the Sekute Chiefdom, holding two elephant corridors' helped wildlife authorities settle four new white rhinos in Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park in Zambia, joining the last surviving white rhino in the country, a bull. On 17 January 2011, it was reported that two of the females
white rhinos had given birth to calves, which seemed healthy. The area is also home to endangered
black rhinos. In 2011, a cluster of modern new buildings for the Lupani community school were opened in Kazungula, built by the AWF at a cost of US$250,000. The new school has six classrooms, offices and five teachers' houses with three bedrooms each.
Kilimanjaro Disney released the movie
African Cats in April 2011. The Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund gave AWF a portion of the proceeds from the first week's ticket sales for use in protecting the Amboseli Wildlife Corridor. Their "See 'African Cats,' Save the Savanna" program served both to promote the movie and to raise money for conservation.
Limpopo ,
Gonarezhou National Park,
Zimbabwe The Limpopo Landscape includes areas of
Mozambique,
South Africa and
Zimbabwe. It includes savannas, woodlands, rivers and floodplains. Fauna include
sable antelope, rhinos, hippos, and many species of birds, insects and aquatic life. The AWF has started the Leopard Conservation Science Project in this landscape. The AWF is particularly involved in the
Banhine National Park in Mozambique, which covers . Until recently, this park had little or no infrastructure or staff to ensure that the environment was protected. The AWF has built a conservation research center, which it is marketed internationally. Fees from researchers will pay for staff to run the center and manage the park. The
Great Limpopo Trans frontier Park (GLTP) is a park that is being established to connect the
Kruger National Park in South Africa, the
Limpopo National Park in Mozambique, the
Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe, and other protected areas. It is almost the size of the
Netherlands and more than three times larger than
Yellowstone National Park. The GLTP is home to many of the species most popular with tourists, including lions, white and black rhinoceros, giraffes, elephants, hippopotamus and buffalos. The AWF says the mega park will result in "creating new jobs and fortifying a tourism base [that is] not yet meeting its full potential". The AWF is a major sponsor of the project that is setting up this park.
Maasai Steppe The Manyara Ranch Conservancy is near to
Lake Manyara in
Tanzania. This is a conservation and tourism project supported by the African Wildlife Foundation, the Tanzania Land Conservation Trust and the Manyara Ranch Conservancy. Rarely seen, but a common resident on the Conservancy is the
lesser kudu.
Mau Forest Complex Within Kenya's Rift Valley, sits the
Mau Forest Complex. It is the largest indigenous
montane forest in East Africa and serves as a
critical water catchment area for the country, providing a source of water for many of
Kenya's wildlife and people. African Wildlife Foundation, together with the
Kenya Forest Service, the Community Forest Association, and other stakeholders, is reforesting areas of the Mau Forest with indigenous trees.
Parc W s near
Kouré, Niger This region is located around the point where
Niger,
Burkina Faso and
Benin meet. It consists of three national protected parks that form a
UNESCO World Heritage Site, the trans-national
W National Park, as well as several adjacent reserves and buffer zones. The complex includes savanna woodlands, gallery forests and flooded plains where the
Mekrou and
Niver rivers meet. It is home to the largest population of elephants in the region and the only remaining
West African giraffes. Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA research shows that this is a subspecies that diverged from the
Rothschild's giraffe about 350,000 years ago. In Parc W, AWF and other International NGOs such as the
International Union for Conservation of Nature,
World Wide Fund for Nature and
Africa 70 play a central role in communication, education and organization of local communities and their leaders, and help collect socio-economic and technical data. AWF is helping fund tree nurseries in Niger and Burkino Faso for replanting to provide fodder for the giraffes. Conservation threats are human population growth and desertification. AWF partners in the region include the , (CENAGREF), Benin and the Ministries of the Environment in Burkina Faso and Niger.
Ruaha The Ruaha area will intersect with an agriculture corridor that the Tanzanian government wants to develop in southern
Tanzania. The proposed corridor will overlap many different ecosystems. AWF is scaling up social venture capital investments through its subsidiary, African Wildlife Capital (AWC), which invests in socially and environmentally responsible agricultural and other businesses—such as the Rungwe Avocado Co.—that must comply with conservation covenants to secure and maintain investment.
Samburu The
Grevy's zebra and reticulated giraffe live in the Samburu Landscape among the acacia grasslands. The challenges faced in Samburu are forest/habitat degradation due to logging and farming and cattle–carnivore conflict. AWF has addressed these challenges, including partnering with Starbucks Coffee Trading Co. to train coffee growers and working with Samburu warriors.
Virunga s in
Virunga National Park,
Democratic Republic of the Congo The
Virunga landscape is an area of volcanic highlands around the point where
Uganda,
Rwanda and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo meet. Virunga is home to the last 700
mountain gorillas in the world. It includes the
Mgahinga Gorilla National Park in Uganda, where AWF opened a visitor center in July 2006. The Virunga ecosystem shelters chimpanzees, golden monkeys, forest elephants, and many species of birds, reptiles and amphibians. The region is overpopulated and unstable. The AWF helped
Dian Fossey study Rwandan mountain gorillas in the 1960s. AWF President
Robinson McIlvaine later said that "There would be no mountain gorillas in the Virungas today ... were it not for Dian Fossey's tireless efforts over many years". McIlvaine initiated the formation of a consortium to protect the threatened Rwandan mountain gorillas while he was president of the AWF between 1978 and 1982. More recently, the AWF coordinated fundraising and construction of a lodge overlooking the
Bwindi Impenetrable Forest National Park. According to
Farley Mowat in his book
Woman in the Mists, in the late 1970s, Fossey asked McIlvaine to temporarily serve as secretary-treasurer of the
Digit Fund while he was AWF President. She had created the fund to finance patrols against poachers seeking to kill mountain gorillas. McIlvaine partnered with the
International Primate Protection League, the Digit Fund, and his own AWF, asking for funds to be made out to the AWF. The Digit Fund received none of the money. When McIlvaine suggested to Fossey that the Digit Fund could be folded into AWF, Fossey declined, and McIlvaine resigned as secretary-treasurer of the fund. The AWF is a co-sponsor of the
International Gorilla Conservation Program (IGCP) in Virunga, the others being
Fauna & Flora International (FFI) and the
World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). Among other activities, the IGCP works with Virunga Artisans, which markets the handmade products of artisans who live near the
Volcanoes, Mgahinga and
Bwindi National Parks. A census of mountain gorillas in the Virunga Massif in March and April 2010 showed that there had been a 26.3% increase in the population over the past seven years.
Save Valley During recent decades, cattle fences and livestock have been removed, with the resurgence of wildlife and a recovery of wild habitats. The Save Valley Conservancy, in Zimbabwe's southern lowveld area, forms part of the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park. AWF supports Save Valley Conservancy's anti-poaching efforts and works with government partners. ==Organization==