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During more than three decades of conservation work, WWF has always had more projects in Africa than in any other part of the world. In the early days, like most other conservation organizations, WWF focused on monitoring and protecting endangered species, and supporting park management and research activities. Since then, however, the focus has broadened, and WWF has been developing a variety of strategies to accommodat accommodate the diversity of the continent's conservation needs.
An example of WWF's broader conservation focus can be found in Madagascar, where traditional healers work with a team of Malagasy students to catalogue the wealth of medicinal plants found in the country's northern forests. And in one innovative clinic, a western trained doctor and a traditional healer treat the sick, drawing on both ancestral plant cures and western medicine. Many activities are designed to serve as demonstration projects that can be imitated elsewhere, but WWF is very conscious that it is still learning important lessons. In the words of Claude Martin, Director General of WWF International: "We do not claim to have come up with definitive solutions. Nevertheless, we feel confident that we are moving in the right direction, and that we have sown seeds that will develop, multiply, and, in time, achieve lasting results."
August '94 ©1986 WWF symbol copyright ® WWF registered trademark owner |
Copyright 1996, The World Wide Fund For Nature