Skip to main content
Skip to sub-navigation
About USAID Our Work Locations Policy Press Business Careers Stripes Graphic USAID Home
USAID: From The American People Telling our Story Suzie Cici sells smoked fish at a market in Yei, Southern Sudan - Click to read this story
Telling Our Story
Home »
Submit a story »
Calendars »
FAQs »
About »
Stories by Region
Asia »
Europe & and Eurasia »
Latin America & the Carribean »
Middle East »
Sub-Saharan Africa »

 

Tanzania
USAID Information: External Links:

Mozambique - A health worker weighing a baby  ...  Click for more stories...
Click for more stories
from Sub-Saharan Africa  
Search
Search by topic or keyword
Advanced Search

 

Success Story

Students learn about Tanzania's protected areas and conservation
Caring for Our Wildlife

A young rural mother and her baby received child survival interventions on International AIDs day in December 2004.
Photo: USAID/Kim Wylie
Wild zebras graze in Tanzania's game parks

According to African folklore, the baobab tree was once so vain that God tore it up and planted it upside down.

Tanzania is home to some of the world's largest herds of wild animals - buffalo, zebra, elephant. Nevertheless, some of the fish, birds, plants and mammals that are so integral to the survival of entire ecosystems are threatened with extinction. Over-fishing, over-grazing, deforestation and harmful commercial and agricultural practices all threaten the very existence of one of Tanzania's greatest resources - its rich biodiversity.

USAID has a long history of helping Tanzania conserve its outstanding wildlife heritage, particularly in the northern tourist destinations of Tarangire and Lake Manyara National Parks and the Ugalla Game Reserve in western Tanzania. Recently, USAID supported the development of Caring for Our Wildlife, a campaign to increase awareness among educators and students about animals and plants that populate Tanzania's protected areas and ecosystems. The campaign sparks interest in conservation by sharing out of the ordinary facts that spur students to learn more on their own.

Did you know that a termite queen can lay 1,000 eggs an hour for up to 20 years? Or that elephants spend up to 18 hours a day feeding? And according to African folklore, the baobab tree was once so vain that God tore it up and planted it upside down.

Tanzania's government now considers environmental education to be a priority, and it is being integrated into the formal education curriculum. The Caring for Our Wildlife campaign, which is written in English and Kiswahili and includes interactive lessons, will instill the youth of Tanzania with ideas for preserving natural resources and a desire to understand the world around them.

Print-friendly version of this page (40kb - PDF)

Click here for high-res photo

Back to Top ^

Fri, 31 Mar 2006 17:07:20 -0500
Star