
The evolution of ARC!
Africa Rainforest Conservancy Timeline
1991 The TFCG was registered in 1985 by a group of scientists led by Dr. Alan Rogers as a Tanzanian non-governmental organization with the mission to promote the conservation of highly bio-diverse forests. In the 1980s, the TFCG formulated the original proposal of what was to become the Udzungwa Mountain National Park, (see article How We Started a National Park), the only park in the Eastern Arc Mountains. Also in the 80s, the TFCG briefly owned a pristine forest in the Usambara Mountains, and lobbied the Sokoine University of Agriculture, Tanzania's forestry college, into making it a university research forest.
The TFCG Committee
In 1991, Tanzania Wildlife Fund vice president Carter Coleman joined the board of the TFCG and recruited scientists such as Jon Lovett, a botanical expert on the Arc, Richard Fuller, the resident representative of the United Nation's Food & Agriculture Organization, and Katia DeJarnette, the wife of the American ambassador to Tanzania, who renewed the group's registration with the government. The new board began laying the ground work for the first community conservation project in the Eastern Arc.
1992 Late in the year, the first community conservation project was initiated at the Lulanda forest in the southern Udzungwa Mountains. Scientists have described Lulanda as a "handful of diamonds," due to its small size (800 acres) and exceptional biodiversity. Lulanda is the last habitat of a coffee species, a frog and a genus of trees. Meetings were held with villagers to develop a grass-roots approach which addressed their needs and aspirations.
1993 Emmanuel Mdemu, who holds agricultural degrees from Tanzania and Canada, was hired as the manager of the Lulanda Project. He quickly established tree nurseries which produced 200,000 seedlings; demonstration farms for sustainable agriculture; a building for a maze milling machine, a device which greatly reduces the village women's workload and serves as a magnet that draws women for classes in child care and family planning. Mdemu collaborated with a government village nurse who has enabled over half the child-bearing women to obtain birth control and led the women's group. Mdemu also started the regeneration of rainforest in a critical gap between two fragments of the forest--a corridor of trees that will link the two forests and strengthen their gene pools.
1994 Andrew Perkin and Alex Hipkiss, British graduate students, and Aidano Makange, a Tanzanian with experience in agricultural extension, launched the Kambai Forest Conservation Project in the East Usambara Mountains, the most bio-diverse range in the Arc. The Kambai forest, totaling 12,980 acres, is bordered by four villages with a population of 4,700. The approach at Kambai was agro-forestry and education — to encourage villagers to plant trees to meet their fuel and timber needs, help them improve their farm yields and to sensitize them in the importance of preserving the natural forest.
Andrew Perkin with a Bush Baby
An experiment in regenerating forest with indigenous trees on barren mountaintop, the Ngulwi Afforestation Project, was launched in the West Usambara mountains where 90% of the natural forest has been cut for farmland. Prior to the Ngulwi project, little research has been done on what local trees will grow well in a denuded environment.
1995 The projects at Lulanda, Ngulwi and Kambai continued to grow, stressing village involvement in tree planting. 200,000 trees were planted in Lulanda, 50,000 in Kambai, 20,000 in Ngulwi.
G.A. Mwakatobe, a graduate of the Sokoine University with a BA in forestry, was hired as forest officer. Mwakatobe maintained communication between the three far flung projects and the managing board of directors in Dar Es Salaam--a tough job that entailed traveling thousands of miles, often by bus and foot. Nick-named Shaka Zulu for his zeal, Mwakatobe said, "Sometimes a forester must be a warrior."
1996 Charles Meshack, a Sokoine University forester, was hired to live full-time in Lulanda in order to involve the villagers with the project to a greater degree and teach environmental education in village schools. Alex Hipkiss moved from Kambai to Dar Es Salaam, to become Coordinator of the growing network.
1997 The TFCG's biannual newsletter, The Arc Journal, served as the official journal of the International Eastern Arc Conference, a gathering of scientists and conservationists sponsored by the United Nations.
1998 The Ambangulu Forest Conservation Project in the West Usamabaras was started with a grant from the Netherlands branch of the International Union of the Conservation of Nature. Ambangulu was recommended for priority action at the international Eastern Arc Conference, which noted that the forest may be the biologically richest site in all of Eastern Africa. Charles Moshe was hired as project manager.
The Lugoda-Lutali Forest Conservation project, also funded by the Dutch IUCN grant, is initiated in the southern Udzungwa Mountains.
2000 With a five year $1.5 million dollar grant from the Norwegian government, the TFCG initiated a joint project with Care International for a joint forest management project for the Ruvu and Pande Coastal forests.
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