In 1995 Friends of Tetepare was formed from a group of customary landowners to prevent commercial logging on the island. In 2002, the Friends of Tetepare and TOLOA (Tetepare Traditional Landowners Association) came together to form the Tetepare Descendants' Association (TDA). Their aim was to conserve Tetepare for the benefit of all descendants and future generations. More than 3000 descendants have since joined the TDA, making it one of the largest land-owning organisations in the Solomon Islands. The TDA is a registered Solomon Islands charitable organisation, with an office in the town of
Munda, and a field station and ecolodge on Tetepare Island. The TDA has established a
Marine Protected Area on Tetepare, which is a no-take zone. This is one of the largest contiguous Marine Protected Areas in the Solomon Islands. TDA rangers, marine monitors, seagrass monitors and turtle monitors work on the island to patrol and protect the MPA and the forest, and to monitor the health of the island's reefs,
seagrass meadows and forests, and to tag turtles and protect and relocate turtle nests during the nesting season from September to April. With funding and support from the
European Union, the TDA has created an ecolodge on Tetepare, which provides jobs for descendants from local villages and raises money to support the conservation program. The TDA also runs sustainable livelihoods programs for descendant communities and runs a scholarship program to help TDA members pay school fees for their children. The TDA has received support and funding from several international organisations and individuals including the
European Union,
World Wide Fund for Nature,
Conservation International,
Australian Volunteers International and NZ Aid. ==See also==