We share the communities’ excitement about this development and look forward to helping support the groups with a range of activities over the upcoming years.
CCB has received a grant from the US Embassy for their Ambassador’s Fund for Cultural Preservation. The project sees CCB partnering with communities to investigate wildlife-based economic opportunities for diversifying livelihoods, building capacity for sustainable development and encouraging the preservation of the Western Kalahari wilderness area. This unique approach sees wildlife conservation working hand in hand with cultural preservation. The Kalahari San communities that share this landscape with cheetahs have a unique connection with the land. Since the start of the year, CCB staff have been working with the communities in the villages of Bere, Kacgae, East Hanahai and West Hanahai to form Indigenous Knowledge reference groups. These groups of volunteers, endorsed by the communities at large, include elders and members of the community who are particularly knowledgeable and passionate about the preservation of San indigenous knowledge (IK). Following the establishment of the groups in March, each IK reference group (one for each of the settlements) held their first meetings to map the course of activities to meet the goals of the project. Some areas of interest identified by community members are history, storytelling, dance, hunting, sculpting, music, and veld product identification and harvesting.
We share the communities’ excitement about this development and look forward to helping support the groups with a range of activities over the upcoming years.
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We are thrilled that livestock guarding dogs (LGDs) are becoming so popular amongst farmers in Botswana. We are contacted by so many farmers wanting trained LGD puppies though, that this need has been difficult to meet at times. This is especially true this past year, while our demo farm was locked down due to a nation-wide parvovirus outbreak.
As CCB prepares for the move to the our new farm, we need to establish an area where we are able to not only train our LGD puppies, but also provide for any healthcare related needs that arise. The new LGD facility will provide both housing for puppies undergoing training before their placement with farmers, but also a hygienic quarantine facility for new puppies coming in. The facility will be a useful addition to our demonstration farm initiative, and the quarantine facility will be critical to reducing the risk of disease transfer to our demostration farm. For this year’s mid-year fundraiser, CCB aims to raise the funds needed to build our new LGD Puppy Training and Care facility at the new CCB farm in Ghanzi. In 2021 you helped us raise $8,000 to provide food for the LTP playgroup in Kacgae – can you help us reach our goal this year? We are aiming to raise $15,000 before 4th August 2023 to help us build this exciting new facility. Features of the new LGD Facility
With Phase 1 of our new camp construction already financed and awaiting commencement, being able to have funding to enable the LGD facility to be constructed alongside the other developments will ensure that the new premises are ready for use as soon as possible. We thank you in advance of any support you can offer! Some of you may remember us reporting that in 2022 we were trialling advanced tracking technology ear tags on cattle to help alleviate human-wildlife conflict. This collaboration with Texas A&M University saw 20 ear tags placed on 10 cow-calf pairs on the Oasis cattle farm in Ghanzi – a farm that experiences high numbers of calf losses to unknown causes. We hoped that the ear tags would help improve knowledge of the way in which the cattle were using the large paddocks on the farm and how often and for how long mothers were leaving their young calves alone to fend for themselves. These data help us to understand where and when calves are vulnerable to carnivores and helps the farmers improve farm management to protect their most vulnerable livestock. The mOOvement ear tags used in 2022, relied on a LoRen network to transmit data from the ear tags to a base station by the homestead, from which the farmers and CCB staff can view the locations of the cattle in the paddocks in near real-time. Alerts were set if animals did not move for extended periods of time, so that immediate action could be taken if a calf was injured, stolen or killed. Even a mortality alert from the collar can be used productively, as you can identify what killed the animal if you get to the carcass quickly. Most carcasses are not discovered until vultures are seen flying overhead, by which time scavenging jackals and brown hyenas have fed on the carcass, eliminating any signs indicating the cause of death. Correctly identifying causes of death are very important for carnivore conservation, as carnivores sometimes get blamed for livestock deaths that have resulted from other causes like disease, injury, malnutrition and snake bite.
Unfortunately, after many months of troubleshooting the system, the mOOvement ear tags would not work. Investigations as to what hampered the system indicate that the most likely cause of death for the LoRen network was the unexpectedly high-water content in the dense acacia bush on the farms. Determined that the concept of ear tags had huge conflict alleviation potential, the CCB and Texas A&M team set about finding a solution! In the second week of March 2023, Dr Leslie Ruyle and a team of six students from Texas A&M visited the CCB Ghanzi Camp again, similar to their visit in 2022. The students were a mix of undergraduates and postgraduates from the fields of biology, agricultural sciences, engineering and social sciences. The team brought with them 10 new Ceres satellite ear tags and together with CCB’s research team they were placed on 10 cattle at the same farm. These new tags are satellite based and therefore not obstructed by vegetation and do not require Wi-Fi, cell phone reception or an antenna. These new ear tags send a location update every six hours and have an accelerometer to track cow movement speeds, as well as contract tracing to see interactions between cattle (which can be useful to track how closely cows protect their calves). We are very relieved and overjoyed that the new system is running perfectly and the farm owners and managers are thrilled at the new information the system provides. We are tracking carnivore-related conflict on the farm to see how these new ear tags work at improving knowledge about livestock and how that, in turn affects conflict levels with carnivores. The Kalahari San have traditions spanning millennia involving the sustainable utilisation of their natural resources. Whether it’s a tiny leaf barely sprouting out of the ground indicating a large underground tuber that contains water, or the thorny “devil’s claw” vine, whose seed pods make a tea that cures a variety of ailments; treasures like these veld products as well as culturally significant sites and historical sites are scattered amongst the western Kalahari conservation corridor more plentifully than the cheetahs or people who move through the area. And yet, the conservation of this landscape will benefit all the natural assets here, as well as the people, their indigenous knowledge, culture and histories. For several years, CCB has been supporting the Xwiskurusa Natural Resource Community Trust who oversee community developments in the villages of Kacgae, East Hanahai and West Hanahai, including helping them to update their Land Use Management Plan – an important document that paves the way on their future development path and helps them secure their leases on the semi-protected GH10 “Wildlife Management Area”. In order to update this plan, and to build a thorough understanding of the natural and cultural resources available to the communities, six expeditions were planned to survey sections of the 1.2 million hectares of the Wildlife Management Area.
Back in early 2022, we started the process with a six-day workshop held with 22 community members to train them in surveying and data recording techniques so that they would have the capacity to conduct these challenging surveys. On the 12th May, the first expedition team headed out to the bush on foot for the first week-long expedition. CCB staff assisted with logistical planning and supplying resources, including helping expedition members source food for the trip, donkeys to carry equipment, and burying drums of water in strategic places along their route so that they didn’t succumb to dehydration in what is sometimes referred to as the “great thirstland”. After over 12 months of hard work, planning, surveying, data collection, analyses and reporting, we are proud to report that the last expedition was completed in April. Incredible plant and animal life was recorded across the area, but some of the notable treasures discovered included a fossilised riverbed, mineral licks used by animals over such long periods that they have created caves, archaeological artifacts such as pipes made of bone, boulders where traditional hunters sharpened their spears for generations, leaving deep indentations in the rock and even graves of two adventurers whose plane crashed in the area in 1968. These discoveries were so remarkable that they sparked an investigation by a team from the Department of National Museums and Monuments who went on to declare a particular portion of the Okwa River Valley as a site of significant cultural heritage. This is an important development, as the area is currently under consideration for land use change to cattleposts and grazing lands, despite the communities ongoing lease of the area. The natural and cultural resource reviews have been a rigorous and demanding exercise for all involved, but has generated great excitement amongst participants, the communities and CCB alike. Following the final expedition, a debriefing meeting was organised for participants surveys in Kacgae, to reflect on the planning and execution of the surveys. Now the data has been captured, it will be used by the communities to update the land use management plan for GH10, which will serve as a roadmap for development for these communities for many years to come. |
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