In a new episode of Inside Africa, CNN highlights groundbreaking tech EarthRanger, one of the first technologies that has been built specifically by conservationists and ecologists to protect threatened wildlife in Kenya.
Kenya’s landscape is home to over 35,000 species of fauna and flora spanning land and sea. This unique combination earns it a place among the top ten megadiverse countries, which are crucial for preserving not just their own natural habitat, but also for contributing to global conservation efforts.
At least 30 different bird and mammal species are threatened with extinction in Kenya due to human activities such as poaching, habitat loss, and climate change. As one of a handful of women working as a senior wildlife vet for the Kenya Wildlife Service, Dr. Mukami Ruoro-Oundo has a vital role to play, tirelessly working to preserve and protect these ecosystems.
She tells CNN, “The role of a wildlife vet here in Kenya means that you have to be able to take care of the health of the animals around you. We are also very heavily involved in human wildlife conflict. […] We also carry out rehabilitation of wildlife, so this maybe sick, abandoned or orphaned wildlife that we will rehabilitate and then re-wild. We also carry out a lot of research by deploying technological devices such as collars, tags, and things like that on the wildlife in Kenya. We also act as policymakers.”
Jake Wall has dedicated his life to conservation. He is the Director for Research and Conservation for the Mara Elephant project and co-founder of EarthRanger, “A really bespoke technology, that’s developed organically and out of the need from the ground.”
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