Communities in the Dja landscape

Dja

landscape

This remote landscape includes the Dja Faunal Reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and biosphere reserve that spans over 526,000 hectares in southeastern Cameroon. The terrain is part of the Congo Basin rainforest, which is the world’s largest carbon sink and the last intact tropical rainforest.

With the support of the European Union, we and our partners are integrating conservation and community well-being through:

  • Anti-poaching support
  • Development of sustainable livelihoods (green cocoa production, valuation of non-timber forest products, fish farming)
  • Facilitation of ecological surveys and monitoring to inform park management and land-use planning

These activities work synergistically to advance conservation goals. Results have been promising. In 2022, hunting rates in the Reserve dropped by more than half.

POINT (12.9684857 3.1346043)
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We work with the people of Cameroon for wildlife. Our strategic, implementing and funding partners include:

Building a post-hunting wildlife economy

We increase income, food security, and sustainability by providing alternative livelihoods to bushmeat hunting, poaching, and unsustainable agriculture. We've trained people in improved cocoa farming, fish farming, and sustainable harvesting of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) like njansang and moabi. We also contributed to community resilience by improving market access and pricing and providing transportation for communities who gather NTFPs and cocoa.

Learn how business can help wildlife
cocoa

Participatory planning benefits people and wildlife

We bring together everyone in the landscape with a vested interest—including community members, government officials, and Indigenous people—to shape conservation strategy. With our technical assistance, the parties have created strategies that prioritized not only wildlife protection but also the improvement of local livelihoods.

Read: How a strategy comes together
Participatory planning meeting