The global demand for ivory is driving heavily armed poachers from Chad and Sudan into Cameroon’s Bouba Ndjida National Park.
Poaching and trafficking are major drivers of biodiversity loss in Central Africa, and Cameroon remains a significant source, transit and export country for endangered wildlife and wildlife products.
Cacao cultivation is a major threat to the Congo Basin rainforest, with new research showing just where expanding cultivation ...
A survey has found populations of elephant, gorillas and chimpanzees in and around two national parks in southeastern Cameroon has remained relatively stable since 2016. Conservation officials ...
Dr Takoukam Kamla has now learnt how to spot African manatees more easily within the dark depths of the 4,500ha Lake Ossa, part of a sprawling wildlife reserve in south-western Cameroon.
The global demand for ivory is driving heavily armed poachers from Chad and Sudan into Cameroon’s Bouba Ndjida National Park.
Thanks to local fishermen, Kamla has now learnt how to spot African manatees more easily within the darkened depths of the 4,500-hectare Lake Ossa, part of a sprawling wildlife reserve in southwestern ...
The Central African Forest Initiative (CAFI) and the Cameroon government have signed a $60 million agreement they say will fund the development of cacao and coffee production, as well as protect ...