CERCOPAN

Conserving Nigeria’s primates and rainforests

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Plundering the forest gets our goat

Category: Cercopan, Communities, Conservation, Monkeys, Nigeria, Rain Forests, Uncategorized | Date: Mar 04 2008 | By: admin

Whenever I try to explain my address to one of the many bike taxi’s in Calabar, I simply have to say “Dat monkey place” and the driver immediately knows exactly where to take me. In the local area we are definitely best known for our monkey rehabilitation and education work, but people are less aware that we also protect prime rainforest habitat. Protecting rainforest in Cross River is vital, not only to preserve the immense biodiversity of the region, but also to safeguard the livelihoods of human populations.

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View from CERCOPAN tree platform over the Iko Esai Community forest

In communities such as Iko Esai, that are heavily dependent on the forest for survival, conversion can have devastating consequences, particularly for the poorest families. As such residents are working with CERCOPAN to develop and implement a Land Use Management Plan (LUMP) to conserve their forest for both immediate use and the benefit of future generations. The 12,000 hectare forest area is home to elephant, red river hog, drill monkeys, bushbabies, guenons, buffalo and Situnga among many other species both large and small. In fact, only a few weeks ago I almost tripped over a Pangolin whilst using the light from a mobile phone to sleepily navigate my way to the camp toilet!

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Aerial photgraph of Iko Esai protected zones, Cross River National Park and surrounding areas

The Iko Esai Land Use Management Plan includes 4 zones; a core area (400ha), research area (2600ha), conservation area (12,000ha) and a sustainable management (for local timber extraction)/farming zone (approximately 8000ha). Whilst non timber forest products such as bush mango and snails can be collected in the research and conservation areas, all forms of exploitation in the core area are prohibited. This policy is upheld by Esira, Igwe, Obun and Gabriel, who patrol the area on a shift basis, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Each member of the patrol team was once an Iko Esai hunter who has been re-trained by CERCOPAN to protect the very species that he once sought to kill.

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Patrol members Esira and Igwe

It is very rare that hunters enter the core area, but even if they simply pass through, the chiefs council takes the matter very seriously. In fact, the last person caught walking within the core at night was fined two bunches of plantain, one crate of beer, two bottles of local gin and a goat! The monkey hunting ban is taken even more seriously as you can hear from the clipping from a speech made by the traditional ruler of Iko Esai that I have included below. Thankfully, not a single person has been found hunting or in possession of a dead monkey since the onset of the ban in 2006.

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Excerpt from a speech made by Chief Owai regarding the killing of monkeys

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Signs placed around the boundaries of the core area (the reverse reads “By order of Iko Esai”)

In the future, we hope to develop similar agreements with the communities immediately neighbouring Iko Esai. This move would offer the potential to protect over 40,000 ha of habitat bordering the entire western flank of the Cross River National park. The National Park is home to over 199 species, including Leopard, Chimpanzee and the most endangered of all African primates; the Cross River Gorilla. By providing a buffer to the park we would effectively help to protect all of these species and to maintain the integrity of this globally important conservation area.

6 Responses to “Plundering the forest gets our goat”

sheryl, washington dc, on 04 Mar 2008

That’s an incredible success story. I’m especially impressed that you’ve made educators and protectors out of hunters. I have a question, though. Is this the area where the Cross River gorillas are found?

s.

Whilst not found in the Iko Esai community forest, Cross River Gorillas are found in the adjacent Cross River National Park. They are found only in the mountainous areas surrounding the Cross River (between the Nigerian and Cameroonian border) and it is thought that there could be less than 300 remaining across eleven discrete sites.

Theresa Siskind St Petersburg FL, on 04 Mar 2008

Sweet Jesus, this would be conservation at it’s very best if the Cross River National Park was entirely protected. We never hear about the Cross River Gorilla (unless we look them up). They are so very beautiful…I learned A LOT from today’s inspiring post…is there anything WE can do with this conservation effort?

F. J. Pechir, on 04 Mar 2008

Thank you for the post and for the good news about conservation in that area! certainly you are doing an excellent good work!!

Lucia Cristiana, Brazil, on 04 Mar 2008

Great and wonderful work. Thanks.

cathy-california, on 04 Mar 2008

I continue to marvel at the successes you have had and wonder how you might share this info with other groups.

James Learner, on 04 Mar 2008

Fantastic news and great post. I love the sign! I don’t know this part of Africa at all but want to learn more and help you. Could you provide other links to resources about the places, the people, the animals to help me and others quickly learn more?

Hi James,
Sorry that it has taken so long for me to get back to you, our internet has been down for days. Glad you liked the blog, I would recommend checking out http://www.crossriverstate.gov.ng/ , which is the official Cross River State government website and our website http://www.cercopan.org. There is a little additional information on the Iroko foundation website http://www.irokofoundation.org/pages/crossriver.html. Just let me know if you have any specific questions that are not covered in these sites and I will try to answer them myself.

Best Wishes
Claire

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