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Mongabay News on MSNClimate change tests the resilience of people and desert-adapted wildlife in Namibia
I want my children to see a rhino with their own eyes — not only in Etosha [National Park],” says Sofia /Nuas, a member of the Sesfontein Conservancy Committee, located in Namibia’s arid northwest.
This is exactly what the government of Namibia has done in a radical experiment to save wildlife — and the people who share their land.
Namibia’s wildlife was saved from the brink of extinction. How? The government paid poachers to become protectors.
Wildlife conservationists, scientists and researchers in Namibia and Southern Africa have warned of impending legal action to halt the culling of wildlife as a "mitigation strategy" to address ...
Namibia, a largely desert country with a population of 2 million, has such an abundance of game and wildlife that often cheetahs and baboons are regarded as nuisances by farmers and shot.
As rare rains sweep across northern Namibia, its landscapes spring to life, with flowers blooming in the desert, wildlife returning to the water-soaked bush — and a rhino population that carries on ...
Explore Namibia, known for its wildlife and huge desert dunes, on a 13-day journey with the Living Desert Travel Club in Palm Desert, Calif.
The export of 22 wild-caught elephants from Namibia to the United Arab Emirates in March has raised concerns over their welfare and stoked criticism of how Namibia manages its wildlife. Fifty ...
This is exactly what the government of Namibia has done in a radical experiment to save wildlife — and the people who share their land.
This is exactly what the government of Namibia has done in a radical experiment to save wildlife — and the people who share their land.
Imagine the U.S. government saying to the people living around Yellowstone, "You know what? All those wild animals in the park — the grizzlies, the bison, the wolves — they belong to you ...
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