National park in Malawi, southern Africa, sets benchmark for reducing human-animal conflict and restoring habitat for wildlife, and safari tourism grows

S
stenews
Sat, Jan 7, 2023 9:13 PM

National park in Malawi, southern Africa, sets benchmark for reducing
human-animal conflict and restoring habitat for wildlife, and safari
tourism grows
Daniel Allen, South China Morning Post
January 7, 2023

See link
https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-magazine/travel/article/3205809/national-park-malawi-southern-africa-sets-benchmark-reducing-human-animal-conflict-and-restoring
for photos.

From the air, Liwonde National Park appears as an undulating expanse of
mopane woodland. The gentle humps of the Chinguni and Kadangusi hills
dominate the foreground, giving way to the open, lush Chikalogwe Plain,
where herds of water buffalo, sable antelope and impala graze beneath
elegant Borassus palms.

The Shire (pronounced “shi-ray”) river – fringed by countless tributaries,
lagoons and oxbow lakes – meanders through the landscape, a fiery ribbon in
the late afternoon sun. It’s easy to see why Liwonde is rated by many as
Malawi’s premier safari destination.

The South African pilot banks his helicopter, causing a minor stampede of
hippopotamus. As the ungainly beasts run for the safety of the river,
attendant oxpeckers fly off in search of a new herbivorous host.

“I want you to see something,” says Mike Reid, in his distinctive Afrikaans
accent. “It really drives home the pressures the park is under, and also
the achievements we’ve made.”

The aircraft is soon hovering above the park’s fence line, close to one of
the main access gates. The contrast between the two sides is stark: the
interior is thickly forested, but the exterior is almost completely devoid
of trees, with plots of dry grass interspersed with patches of newly burned
ground, some of it still smouldering.

Clusters of single-storey, mud-brick buildings in various states of
construction dot the landscape, which stretches towards a shimmering,
similarly treeless horizon. Liwonde is a wildlife island in a sea of
humanity.

“There are nearly 800,000 people living in communities around Liwonde, and
most of them are subsistence-level smallholders,” says Reid. “The health of
the park is influenced hugely by the success, or otherwise, of efforts to
engage them and bring them on board with conservation efforts.

“Seven years ago, the level of human-wildlife conflict here was
unprecedented. Things had to change, and they have.”

One of southern Africa’s smallest countries, Malawi is a sliver of land
dominated by the Great Rift Valley and hemmed in by Mozambique, Zambia and
Tanzania. Located in southern Malawi, the 580 sq km (224 square mile)
Liwonde National Park is a sliver within a sliver.

Around 50km (31 miles) long and never more than 25km wide, it is flat, with
hills towards its southern tip. The Shire, which flows out of Lake Malawi
and eventually into Mozambique’s Zambezi River, bisects the park and
regularly floods.

African Parks is a Johannesburg-headquartered conservation NGO that takes
on direct responsibility for rehabilitating and managing protected areas
across the continent, working closely with governments and local
communities.

When it took over the management of Liwonde in August 2015, the perimeter
of the park was almost totally unfenced, while iconic and ecologically
important species such as lions and cheetahs had been driven off or hunted
out of existence.

There were two primary causes of human-wildlife conflict in and around
Liwonde. The lack of a fence meant elephants were free to raid farms, which
caused significant damage and deaths. In addition, people living in nearby
communities, where charcoal is still used for heating and cooking, would
enter the park on a daily basis looking to harvest trees for firewood, to
fish and to hunt for bushmeat.

Some poached elephants and rhinos. Seven people were killed in encounters
with dangerous animals in and around Liwonde in the first seven weeks after
African Parks took over management.

“The most effective solution to this crisis was to construct an electric
fence around the entire perimeter of the park,” says Lawrence Munro, who
works for African Parks as Liwonde’s operations manager.

“In the end we installed 142km of fence over 18 months. We also chased
elephants back into the park with aircraft and implemented daily boat
patrols to discourage illegal entry into the park by fishermen, who were at
risk of being attacked by crocodiles.”

Since 2015, under the management of African Parks, Liwonde has emerged as
perhaps the most sought-after wildlife destination in Malawi, setting a
benchmark for restoration initiatives across Africa.

This has not only meant reintroducing missing species, but also reducing
some animal populations – most notably elephants.

Cheetahs were released into Liwonde in 2017 and lions in 2018, followed by
the largest single translocation of black rhinos from South Africa, in
2019. In July 2021, African wild dogs were reintroduced after a 60-year
absence, and there are plans to reintroduce leopards.

The animals have acclimatised well to their new surroundings, giving birth
to pups, cubs and calves.

Liwonde has a carrying capacity of around 350 elephants; when numbers
exceed this, the natural resources of the park come under pressure and the
likelihood of conflict with local human communities increases.

With elephant poaching having dropped off significantly in the park since
2015 – there were no cases between 2018 and 2021 – a number of
translocations to other protected areas in Malawi have taken place. The
latest, in July 2022, saw 256 Liwonde elephants moved to the far larger
Kasungu National Park in a jumbo-sized effort.

In 2018, the government of Malawi extended African Parks’ mandate to
incorporate the adjacent 358 sq km Mangochi Forest Reserve, to the north of
Liwonde, increasing the footprint of protected land in the area by 60 per
cent and bringing the number of parks managed by African Parks in Malawi to
four.

Liwonde’s perimeter fence was extended to incorporate Mangochi and now
stretches for 244km.

Today, with the combined Liwonde-Mangochi protected area on the list of
Malawi’s “big five” (elephant, rhino, buffalo, lion and leopard) safari
destinations, post-pandemic tourism is booming. The park received 14,000
visitors in 2021, up from 8,800 in 2020. Just over half of the visitors
were Malawian.

Those who wish to overnight inside the park have a number of options,
including the beautifully located and supremely hospitable Chimwala Bush
Camp (operated by African Parks), where guests awaken each morning to the
haunting cries of the African fish eagle.

Demand is such that approval has been granted for the development of two
more camps, which will start this year, with a focus on the east bank of
the Shire.

At the Namalasa primary school, a stone’s throw from Liwonde National
Park’s southern boundary, the arrival of unexpected visitors draws a crowd
of excited pupils. As they run into the main yard, many are still clutching
their English books, which have bright covers and safari-animal-themed
titles.

The school, which was built with the help of African Parks, has around
1,300 students and serves eight local villages, with some classes
accommodating more than 200 children.
African Parks has also helped with the roll-out at Namalasa of the Happy
Readers programme, an integrated reading scheme for young children, with
English as a second language.

“Child literacy at Namalasa was just 6 per cent before Happy Readers
started,” explains Daniel Kapito, coordinator of the programme for African
Parks. “After six months, literacy had improved to an amazing 60 per cent,
through the efforts of the teachers here.

“There are now 13 local schools in the programme, and a child from Namalasa
has won a national reading competition.”

Other African Parks programmes involve water provision (through borehole
development), micro-irrigation schemes, chilli growing and “Honey with
Heart”, a social enterprise that empowers communities through the
production and sale of high-quality honey.

There is also a “goat pass-on project”, which teaches locals how to raise
and sell goats, supplying people with protein and income, and reducing
their need to catch wild animals.

In 2021, African Parks’ programmes around Liwonde helped communities to
raise more than US$12,000 from the sale of surplus produce – a not
insignificant amount considering the average monthly salary for a Malawian
agricultural worker is less than US$100. The programme not only supports
local livelihoods, but also conservation efforts inside the park.

“There has been a dramatic drop in illegal activities now that communities
can benefit from the legal opportunities that come from a well-managed
park,” says Munro.

However, while the poaching of elephants and rhinos has been drastically
reduced, snares and fishing nets – common poaching tools – continue to kill
and maim Liwonde’s animals indiscriminately. Bushmeat poaching and illegal
fishing remain a challenge, with 111 arrests made in 2021.

Last year, 3,815 snares were recovered, and five gin traps, 101 boats and
73 canoes were confiscated and destroyed, along with numerous fishing nets.

In November 2022, the nature of Liwonde’s poaching problem was highlighted
by the death of an entire pack of 18 African wild dogs, some of which had
been reintroduced to the park from South Africa and Mozambique in 2021.
They had been unintentionally poisoned by a poacher targeting birds or
small game.

“We expect the poaching threat in Liwonde to increase, related to the
growth of human populations around the park, as well as other variables,
which may include socio-economic, political and climatological factors,”
says Munro.

“Liwonde is a long and thin park, which means people can come in, do
something illegal, and leave in next to no time. We need to have very quick
reaction times, which makes the helicopter based here essential.

“At one point we had a room here with 30,000 confiscated snares in it,”
says Munro. “That shows you the scale of the problem. We now incorporate
them into concrete used in park infrastructure.”

Liwonde has 65 rangers to counter the poaching threat. Squads are deployed
on seven-day missions to the field, from where they feed information back
to a central operations room equipped with EarthRanger, a software system
for protected-area management.

They also cooperate with Malawian police and the Department of National
Parks and Wildlife outside park boundaries, and all are capable of making
arrests.

“Over the last two years we’ve seen more poachers stopping to fight, rather
than simply running away,” says Munro. “It’s hard to say why – maybe
there’s an element of desperation. Many are hunting meat, both for their
families and to sell on.”

African Parks has a record of rapidly turning around ailing protected areas
across the African continent. In Liwonde, though, no amount of rangers is
going to eliminate the threat and impact of human-wildlife conflict, which
means community relations will remain central to the park’s recovery.

“Over the next five to 10 years, the challenge for us will be to keep
strengthening our interventions in the villages and towns around Liwonde in
a way that fewer and fewer people have to rely on illegally extracted
resources,” says Munro. “We also need to move towards economic
self-sustainability for the park through increased tourism.”

https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-magazine/travel/article/3205809/national-park-malawi-southern-africa-sets-benchmark-reducing-human-animal-conflict-and-restoring

National park in Malawi, southern Africa, sets benchmark for reducing human-animal conflict and restoring habitat for wildlife, and safari tourism grows Daniel Allen, South China Morning Post January 7, 2023 See link <https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-magazine/travel/article/3205809/national-park-malawi-southern-africa-sets-benchmark-reducing-human-animal-conflict-and-restoring> for photos. From the air, Liwonde National Park appears as an undulating expanse of mopane woodland. The gentle humps of the Chinguni and Kadangusi hills dominate the foreground, giving way to the open, lush Chikalogwe Plain, where herds of water buffalo, sable antelope and impala graze beneath elegant Borassus palms. The Shire (pronounced “shi-ray”) river – fringed by countless tributaries, lagoons and oxbow lakes – meanders through the landscape, a fiery ribbon in the late afternoon sun. It’s easy to see why Liwonde is rated by many as Malawi’s premier safari destination. The South African pilot banks his helicopter, causing a minor stampede of hippopotamus. As the ungainly beasts run for the safety of the river, attendant oxpeckers fly off in search of a new herbivorous host. “I want you to see something,” says Mike Reid, in his distinctive Afrikaans accent. “It really drives home the pressures the park is under, and also the achievements we’ve made.” The aircraft is soon hovering above the park’s fence line, close to one of the main access gates. The contrast between the two sides is stark: the interior is thickly forested, but the exterior is almost completely devoid of trees, with plots of dry grass interspersed with patches of newly burned ground, some of it still smouldering. Clusters of single-storey, mud-brick buildings in various states of construction dot the landscape, which stretches towards a shimmering, similarly treeless horizon. Liwonde is a wildlife island in a sea of humanity. “There are nearly 800,000 people living in communities around Liwonde, and most of them are subsistence-level smallholders,” says Reid. “The health of the park is influenced hugely by the success, or otherwise, of efforts to engage them and bring them on board with conservation efforts. “Seven years ago, the level of human-wildlife conflict here was unprecedented. Things had to change, and they have.” One of southern Africa’s smallest countries, Malawi is a sliver of land dominated by the Great Rift Valley and hemmed in by Mozambique, Zambia and Tanzania. Located in southern Malawi, the 580 sq km (224 square mile) Liwonde National Park is a sliver within a sliver. Around 50km (31 miles) long and never more than 25km wide, it is flat, with hills towards its southern tip. The Shire, which flows out of Lake Malawi and eventually into Mozambique’s Zambezi River, bisects the park and regularly floods. African Parks is a Johannesburg-headquartered conservation NGO that takes on direct responsibility for rehabilitating and managing protected areas across the continent, working closely with governments and local communities. When it took over the management of Liwonde in August 2015, the perimeter of the park was almost totally unfenced, while iconic and ecologically important species such as lions and cheetahs had been driven off or hunted out of existence. There were two primary causes of human-wildlife conflict in and around Liwonde. The lack of a fence meant elephants were free to raid farms, which caused significant damage and deaths. In addition, people living in nearby communities, where charcoal is still used for heating and cooking, would enter the park on a daily basis looking to harvest trees for firewood, to fish and to hunt for bushmeat. Some poached elephants and rhinos. Seven people were killed in encounters with dangerous animals in and around Liwonde in the first seven weeks after African Parks took over management. “The most effective solution to this crisis was to construct an electric fence around the entire perimeter of the park,” says Lawrence Munro, who works for African Parks as Liwonde’s operations manager. “In the end we installed 142km of fence over 18 months. We also chased elephants back into the park with aircraft and implemented daily boat patrols to discourage illegal entry into the park by fishermen, who were at risk of being attacked by crocodiles.” Since 2015, under the management of African Parks, Liwonde has emerged as perhaps the most sought-after wildlife destination in Malawi, setting a benchmark for restoration initiatives across Africa. This has not only meant reintroducing missing species, but also reducing some animal populations – most notably elephants. Cheetahs were released into Liwonde in 2017 and lions in 2018, followed by the largest single translocation of black rhinos from South Africa, in 2019. In July 2021, African wild dogs were reintroduced after a 60-year absence, and there are plans to reintroduce leopards. The animals have acclimatised well to their new surroundings, giving birth to pups, cubs and calves. Liwonde has a carrying capacity of around 350 elephants; when numbers exceed this, the natural resources of the park come under pressure and the likelihood of conflict with local human communities increases. With elephant poaching having dropped off significantly in the park since 2015 – there were no cases between 2018 and 2021 – a number of translocations to other protected areas in Malawi have taken place. The latest, in July 2022, saw 256 Liwonde elephants moved to the far larger Kasungu National Park in a jumbo-sized effort. In 2018, the government of Malawi extended African Parks’ mandate to incorporate the adjacent 358 sq km Mangochi Forest Reserve, to the north of Liwonde, increasing the footprint of protected land in the area by 60 per cent and bringing the number of parks managed by African Parks in Malawi to four. Liwonde’s perimeter fence was extended to incorporate Mangochi and now stretches for 244km. Today, with the combined Liwonde-Mangochi protected area on the list of Malawi’s “big five” (elephant, rhino, buffalo, lion and leopard) safari destinations, post-pandemic tourism is booming. The park received 14,000 visitors in 2021, up from 8,800 in 2020. Just over half of the visitors were Malawian. Those who wish to overnight inside the park have a number of options, including the beautifully located and supremely hospitable Chimwala Bush Camp (operated by African Parks), where guests awaken each morning to the haunting cries of the African fish eagle. Demand is such that approval has been granted for the development of two more camps, which will start this year, with a focus on the east bank of the Shire. At the Namalasa primary school, a stone’s throw from Liwonde National Park’s southern boundary, the arrival of unexpected visitors draws a crowd of excited pupils. As they run into the main yard, many are still clutching their English books, which have bright covers and safari-animal-themed titles. The school, which was built with the help of African Parks, has around 1,300 students and serves eight local villages, with some classes accommodating more than 200 children. African Parks has also helped with the roll-out at Namalasa of the Happy Readers programme, an integrated reading scheme for young children, with English as a second language. “Child literacy at Namalasa was just 6 per cent before Happy Readers started,” explains Daniel Kapito, coordinator of the programme for African Parks. “After six months, literacy had improved to an amazing 60 per cent, through the efforts of the teachers here. “There are now 13 local schools in the programme, and a child from Namalasa has won a national reading competition.” Other African Parks programmes involve water provision (through borehole development), micro-irrigation schemes, chilli growing and “Honey with Heart”, a social enterprise that empowers communities through the production and sale of high-quality honey. There is also a “goat pass-on project”, which teaches locals how to raise and sell goats, supplying people with protein and income, and reducing their need to catch wild animals. In 2021, African Parks’ programmes around Liwonde helped communities to raise more than US$12,000 from the sale of surplus produce – a not insignificant amount considering the average monthly salary for a Malawian agricultural worker is less than US$100. The programme not only supports local livelihoods, but also conservation efforts inside the park. “There has been a dramatic drop in illegal activities now that communities can benefit from the legal opportunities that come from a well-managed park,” says Munro. However, while the poaching of elephants and rhinos has been drastically reduced, snares and fishing nets – common poaching tools – continue to kill and maim Liwonde’s animals indiscriminately. Bushmeat poaching and illegal fishing remain a challenge, with 111 arrests made in 2021. Last year, 3,815 snares were recovered, and five gin traps, 101 boats and 73 canoes were confiscated and destroyed, along with numerous fishing nets. In November 2022, the nature of Liwonde’s poaching problem was highlighted by the death of an entire pack of 18 African wild dogs, some of which had been reintroduced to the park from South Africa and Mozambique in 2021. They had been unintentionally poisoned by a poacher targeting birds or small game. “We expect the poaching threat in Liwonde to increase, related to the growth of human populations around the park, as well as other variables, which may include socio-economic, political and climatological factors,” says Munro. “Liwonde is a long and thin park, which means people can come in, do something illegal, and leave in next to no time. We need to have very quick reaction times, which makes the helicopter based here essential. “At one point we had a room here with 30,000 confiscated snares in it,” says Munro. “That shows you the scale of the problem. We now incorporate them into concrete used in park infrastructure.” Liwonde has 65 rangers to counter the poaching threat. Squads are deployed on seven-day missions to the field, from where they feed information back to a central operations room equipped with EarthRanger, a software system for protected-area management. They also cooperate with Malawian police and the Department of National Parks and Wildlife outside park boundaries, and all are capable of making arrests. “Over the last two years we’ve seen more poachers stopping to fight, rather than simply running away,” says Munro. “It’s hard to say why – maybe there’s an element of desperation. Many are hunting meat, both for their families and to sell on.” African Parks has a record of rapidly turning around ailing protected areas across the African continent. In Liwonde, though, no amount of rangers is going to eliminate the threat and impact of human-wildlife conflict, which means community relations will remain central to the park’s recovery. “Over the next five to 10 years, the challenge for us will be to keep strengthening our interventions in the villages and towns around Liwonde in a way that fewer and fewer people have to rely on illegally extracted resources,” says Munro. “We also need to move towards economic self-sustainability for the park through increased tourism.” https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-magazine/travel/article/3205809/national-park-malawi-southern-africa-sets-benchmark-reducing-human-animal-conflict-and-restoring