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Madagascar

HIGHLIGHTS
 Go on a photo tour with WCS staff photographer
Habitat Types
Tropical humid forest
Deciduous dry forest
Spiny desert
Coastal and marine habitats; mangroves, coral reefs
Projects include:
- Establishment of Makira as a new protected area
- Creation and management of Sahamalaza Marine Biosphere Reserve
- Management of Masoala National Park
- Development of training curricula and support for national researchers
- Conservation finance mechanisms
- Policy framework and model programs on Integrated Coastal Zone Management
- Whale and cetacean conservation and management
- Tortoise Conservation Program
- Research and conservation of freshwater fish
- Ecotourism in protected areas
Partners Ministry of Environment Water & Forests, Ministry of Livestock, Fisheries and Agriculture, National Parks Service of Madagascar (ANGAP), Marine Institute (IHSM), University of Antananarivo, CI, WWFCARE, AMNH, Zoo Zurich, USAID
Contacts
Helen Crowley, PhD Country Program Director hcrowley@wcs.org B.P. 8500 Soavimbahoaka Antananarivo, 101 Madagascar
Graeme Patterson, PhD Assistant Africa and Madagascar Program Director Wildlife Conservation Society Africa Program 2300 Southern Boulevard Bronx, New York 10460 gpatterson@wcs.org
Support this program!
For further information on Madagascar also see:
www.wildmadagascar.org
www.mongabay.com
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WCS in Madagascar
With its extraordinary, yet highly threatened endemic biodiversity, Madagascar is a global conservation priority. Poverty and unsustainable resource use are leading to the depletion of the island's biodiversity capital and having dramatic impacts on the mostly rural population. However, as Madagascar enters the third phase of its national environmental action plan, there is a new vision for the sustainable development of the country. WCS is a key partner in this plan, which encompasses the involvement of communities and the establishment of protected areas in an integrated approach to development and conservation. WCS has worked in Madagascar for over 13 years in site-based programs and on species-based conservation. In the overall aim to inform sustainable resource use in Madagascar's unique terrestrial and marine environments, WCS' work is integrated in national and regional conservation planning and policy development initiatives.
The Human Aspect Until recently, the Malagasy rural population had limited land tenure rights, little access to information, and minimal support for alternative livelihoods. This has had devastating consequences for both the country's natural environment and its people's standard of living. The catalyst for the change now taking place in Madagascar was the development of new legal mechanisms to empower and support communities in management of their forest and marine resources.
Threats The majority of the biodiversity of Madagascar is found in the forests, which are also the direct source of livelihoods for over 90% of the country's population. Forests provide wood, non-timber forest products, and water for the rice-growing rural population. Madagascar has lost most of its forests and only around 15% of the land surface remains forested. This has been due, in recent times, to slash and burn agriculture, agricultural expansion, grazing, as well as uncontrolled wildfires. The poor infrastructure, particularly the lack of roads across the country also puts immense constraints on the ability for people to develop and have alternatives to destructive and unsustainable resource use.
WCS Activities WCS works in five key areas encompassing a range of biomes. In the north, Masoala and Makira forests, which represent over 10% of the remaining humid forests of Madagascar, are home to 50% of the country's biodiversity, and are the source of water for over 100,000 people. Nestled in Masoala peninsula, Antongil Bay is the largest calving and breeding ground for humpback whales in the Indian Ocean, and is home to rare species of sharks and reef fishes. The bay provides critical resources for half a million people and significant stocks for commercial fisheries. Sahamalaza is a marine biosphere reserve with important reef and mangrove systems and deciduous dry forests. This will soon be a new marine and coastal national park, supported by the local communities who are looking towards eco-tourism and management of the natural resources as a means to improve their livelihoods. The Spiny Desert of southern Madagascar is home to some of the island's most traditional communities, with whom WCS is working in key areas to conserve the radiated tortoise and its habitat. Both play a strong role in the traditional beliefs and livelihoods of the local people.
The key strategies that underpin the work of WCS in Madagascar are:
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Building capacity through long-term support to national institutions, community associations, local NGOs and Malagasy scientists
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Providing technical support to assist communities and the government to plan and implement conservation and sustainable natural resource use
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Supporting conservation of biodiversity through protected areas
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Developing long term sustainable finance mechanisms for communities and national institutions

Important Next Steps WCS works at a national level on several "cross-cutting" projects, which have results beyond a particular site and which help drive new policies. These include:
- Development and promotion of ecotourism in Madagascar
- Support to government institutions on setting national and regional conservation priorities
- Protected area management
- Support for a new policy on integrated coastal zone management and sustainable fisheries
- Development of conservation finance mechanisms for government institutions and local communities
- Development of conservation training curricula for universities and governmental institutions
- Continuing a Program of applied research in terrestrial and marine environments
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