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Heartland Image

Baobab and acacia trees dot the savannah and elephants and predators roam in the Maasai Steppe Heartland, home to Tanzania’s Lake Manyara and Tarangire National Parks. Habitat fragmentation is the biggest threat to this landscape, a problem that AWF is addressing through innovative land use initiatives with local communities.

Conserving Wildlife

Preserving wildlife migration corridors, dispersal areas and breeding grounds.

AWF solutions in Maasai Steppe:

Protecting Land

Pioneering new conservation efforts through land trusts and community partnerships.

AWF solutions in Maasai Steppe:

Empowering People

Working with Maasai pastoralist communities to improve sustainable livelihoods through ecotourism and other conservation enterprises.

AWF solutions in Maasai Steppe:

Engaging You!

You can be part of our mission to conserve African wildlife. Click on these Solutions to become involved!

AWF solutions in Maasai Steppe:

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Because the Heartlands cover truly vast tracts of public and private land, cooperation by many public and private parties is required for success. Here are some of AWF's partners in the Maasai Steppe Heartland:

  • Africare
  • Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO)
  • Jane Goodall Institute
  • Lee & Gund Foundation/Cultures of Resistance
  • Norad
  • Tanzania Land Conservation Trust (TLCT)
  • Tanzania Wildlife Division
  • The IUCN National Committee of the Netherlands (IUCN NL)
  • USAID / Tanzania
  • World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
More partners >
Resources and Documents

Philip Muruthi. African Heartlands: A Science-Based and Pragmatic Approach to Landscape Level Conservation in Africa. Technical Papers, 2005.

. AWF Heartland Conservation Process Oryx. African Heartland News, 2009.

Edmund Barrow. Community Conservation Approaches and Experiences From East Africa. Technical Papers, 1993.

Deborah Snelson. Community Conservation Training Initiatives in East Africa. Technical Papers, 1993.

M. Northon-Griffiths. Counting Animals. Technical Papers, 1978.

Ezekiel Dembe and Patrick Bergin. Defining the 'Conservation' in Community Conservation: Strategic Planning in Tanzania National Parks. Technical Papers, 1994.

Craig Packer, Ray Hilborn, Anna Mosser, Bernard Kissui, Markus Borner, Grant Hopcraft, John Wilmshurst, Simon Mduma, Anthony R. E. Sinclair. Ecological Change, Group Territoriality, and Population Dynamics in Serengeti Lions. Technical Papers, 2009.

J.J.R. Grimsdell. Ecological Monitoring. Technical Papers, 1978.

African Wildlife Foundation. Final Report: An Examination of the Achievements and Effectiveness of the Planning and Assessment for Wildlife Management Project. Technical Papers, 1996.

Philip Muruthi. Human Wildlife Conflict: Lessons Learned From AWF's African Heartlands. Technical Papers, 2005.

Kadzo Kangwana. L'Etude des Elephants. Technical Papers, 1996.

More Resources & Documents >

Serengeti Wildlife

"Serengeti Wildlife"
Serengeti National Park in northern Tanzania supports a stunning array of wildlife like gazelles, elephants, rhinos, flamingos, zebras, lions, and buffaloes.


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Creating Enterprises

View AWF's slide show on creating enterprises.


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Quick Facts

Area: 1,638,663 hectares (6,327 square miles)

Key landmarks: Tarangire National Park; Lake Manyara National Park; Simanjiro Plains

Maps: this region | Africa

Staff in this Heartland

Josephine Simon
Community Conservation Officer and Gender Specialist
Maasai Steppe Heartland, Tanzania


James Kahurananga, PhD
Program Director, Tanzania
Arusha, Tanzania


Bernard Kissui, PhD
Lion Research Scientist
Maasai Steppe Heartland, Tanzania


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Maasai Steppe Wildlife

Lion

Lions are found in savannas, grasslands, dense bush and woodlands.

 


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