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Results from the
FieldJust in its second year, the SeaWorld & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund has already contributed more than $800,000 to 75 projects across the U.S. and around the world. But increased grant-making and quantity of projects are not the definitive goals of the Fund or how it measures success. Conservation impact over the long term is what the Fund seeks to achieve. So how have the Fund-supported projects fared thus far? Field reports from four projects around the world follow. Jorupe Biodiversity Reserve American Bird Conservancy, Ecuador ![]() These juvenile gray-cheeked parakeets were originally confiscated from trappers. They have since been successfully released to the wild. Project overview: American Bird Conservancy and its Ecuadorian partner group Fundacion Jocotoco are establishing a new reserve in the Rio Jorupe watershed to protect 1,000 acres of Tumbesian tropical dry forest, an endangered habitat of global significance. There are 59 species of birds endemic to the region, including the endangered gray-cheeked parakeet whose population has been decimated by bird trappers. Establishing this reserve helps lay the foundation for an expanded conservation initiative that will include ecotourism, research programs, community education and outreach. The Jorupe Reserve will be the seventh in a series of nine planned reserves to protect key sites for bird conservation throughout Ecuador. Jocotoco's six current reserves occupy a total of 18,000 acres. Project results thus far: The Fund's $10,000 grant helped American Bird Conservancy and Fundacion Jocotoco successfully acquire the property of Galo Celi, a critical tract of intact and restorable dry tropical forest habitat in the Tumbesian region of southwest Ecuador. This acquisition, along with future proposed sites, will help protect the entire upper watershed of the Rio Jorupe and the diversity of wildlife it supports. Black Rhinos World Wildlife Fund Etosha National Park, Namibia, Africa Project overview: Namibia holds almost one third of all the black rhinoceros remaining in Africa and is the stronghold of the southwestern subspecies (Diceros bicornis bicornis). For the past several years, World Wildlife Fund has helped Etosha National Park improve its information base on rhinos, with the focus on achieving better population estimates and management plans. Project results thus far: With more than 95 percent of the total population found in Namibia and approximately 70 percent of the population found in Etosha National Park, rhino numbers are increasing steadily under a well-established and innovative conservation and management program, partially funded by the SW&BG Conservation Fund. This population has grown to such an extent that it is used as a donor group for other conservation areas. In Fall 2004, an aerial survey of Etosha National Park was conducted to produce a more accurate black rhino population estimate. The black rhino counts, made possible through the SW&BG Conservation Fund grant, indicated that Etosha National Park's population has increased to an estimated 700 animals. This annual census allows Namibia's government to make critical decisions for the biological management of the black rhino population |