978-3-031-24880-1.pdf

This open access book. provides a synthesis of six projects, across ten countries, each of which have been sustained for two or more decades, and which illustrate how success can be achieved regardless of systems of governance, of a nation’s wealth, or of culture. Detailed narratives are presented o...

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Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2023
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Online Access:https://link.springer.com/978-3-031-24880-1
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spelling ftoapen:oai:library.oapen.org:20.500.12657/61885 2024-04-28T08:02:44+00:00 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf 2023-03-17T15:21:09Z application/pdf https://link.springer.com/978-3-031-24880-1 eng eng Springer Nature Springer Nature Switzerland SpringerBriefs in Environmental Science ONIX_20230317_9783031248801_37 https://link.springer.com/978-3-031-24880-1 2023 ftoapen 2024-04-03T16:51:43Z This open access book. provides a synthesis of six projects, across ten countries, each of which have been sustained for two or more decades, and which illustrate how success can be achieved regardless of systems of governance, of a nation’s wealth, or of culture. Detailed narratives are presented on the key personalities that have conceived, conducted and concluded long-term projects: personal stories of vision, failure, frustration and persistence ultimately leading to success. The case studies vary widely in their geography and goals. The single-handed commitment to re-discover the last surviving populations of Giant Sable in the miombo woodlands of central Angola, through the capture, translocation and establishment of robust breeding herds of this magnificent antelope, contrasts with the massively funded, three-decade programme with over one hundred participants that reversed the annual loss to predation by feral cats of 455 000 seabirds from a sub-Antarctic island. Similarly, the foresight of Zimbabwean and Namibian ecologists to place rural communities at the centre of conservation programmes by giving value to wildlife populations and benefits to local people, transformed a land degradation problem to a socio-ecological solution. Across ten countries, building capacity in botanical collection, documentation and herbarium management expanded into a global project to place the knowledge base of Africa’s flora onto an electronic data system accessible to researchers and conservation planners in even the most remote corners of the continent. None of these projects enjoyed immediate results. Each required leadership skills that combined vision, a generosity of spirit, fortuitous timing and the exploitation of unexpected opportunities. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic OAPEN (Open Access Publishing in European Networks)
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language English
description This open access book. provides a synthesis of six projects, across ten countries, each of which have been sustained for two or more decades, and which illustrate how success can be achieved regardless of systems of governance, of a nation’s wealth, or of culture. Detailed narratives are presented on the key personalities that have conceived, conducted and concluded long-term projects: personal stories of vision, failure, frustration and persistence ultimately leading to success. The case studies vary widely in their geography and goals. The single-handed commitment to re-discover the last surviving populations of Giant Sable in the miombo woodlands of central Angola, through the capture, translocation and establishment of robust breeding herds of this magnificent antelope, contrasts with the massively funded, three-decade programme with over one hundred participants that reversed the annual loss to predation by feral cats of 455 000 seabirds from a sub-Antarctic island. Similarly, the foresight of Zimbabwean and Namibian ecologists to place rural communities at the centre of conservation programmes by giving value to wildlife populations and benefits to local people, transformed a land degradation problem to a socio-ecological solution. Across ten countries, building capacity in botanical collection, documentation and herbarium management expanded into a global project to place the knowledge base of Africa’s flora onto an electronic data system accessible to researchers and conservation planners in even the most remote corners of the continent. None of these projects enjoyed immediate results. Each required leadership skills that combined vision, a generosity of spirit, fortuitous timing and the exploitation of unexpected opportunities.
title 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf
spellingShingle 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf
title_short 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf
title_full 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf
title_fullStr 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf
title_sort 978-3-031-24880-1.pdf
publisher Springer Nature
publishDate 2023
url https://link.springer.com/978-3-031-24880-1
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation SpringerBriefs in Environmental Science
ONIX_20230317_9783031248801_37
https://link.springer.com/978-3-031-24880-1
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