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Page 1: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation ProgrammeProject portfolio snapshotsProject portfolio snapshots

Page 2: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

A development programme �nanced by the

Federal Republic of Germany

through KfW Development Bank

Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme

Project portfolio snapshots (December 2018 version)

Page 3: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

INTEGRATED TIGER HABITAT CONSERVATION PROGRAMME CURRENT PORTFOLIO*

Aaranyak

0 600300Kilometers

WWF

DoFPS Bhutan

WCS

FFI

WWF

ZSL

*as of December 2018

NCF

FFI

MFD

Tiger Conservation Landscapes

ITHCP projects

Wildlife AsiaWTI / WildTeam

Page 4: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Objective: Increasing tiger populations through improved management and monitoring of �ve transboundary tiger sites in Nepal and India, with foci on law enfor-

cement, biological monitoring, and sustainable development for local communities in the surroundinglandscape.

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Improved on-site law enforcement in Sukla, Parsa, Bardia,Banke and Nandaur reduces tiger poaching over the 3-year period

Current tiger population: ~198-> Expected increase to: ~238 tigers

• Improved management e�ectiveness in 5 PAs (Sukla andParsa Wildlife Reserve, Bardia and Banke National Parks and Nandaur Wildlife Sanctuary) supports the monitoring and conservation of tiger populations over the 3-year period

• Human-tiger con�ict prevention and mitigation measuresestablished across Sukla, Bardia, Banke and Nandaur PAreduces the negative impacts of living with tigers over the3-year period.

• Access to improved and alternative livelihoods for com- munity members living around the Sukla, Bardia, Banke

and Nandaur PAis improved over the 3-year period

Project investments:• Construction and repair of roads, guard posts and watch towers in the core area of all �ve Pas• Improvement of PA acilities (solar power sources, drinking water, toilets and communication systems)• Establishment of rapid response units in each PA, fully resourced with vehicles, communication, detection and evidence handling equipment• Installation of GSM camera-based early warning systems for illegal activity, long range wi-� system for CCTV cameras to stop poachers

Sustainable livelihoods:• Development of homestays, trekking tourism and tiger tracking (with support of loft loans scheme)• Installation of predator-proof corrals and insurance scheme against HTC• Alternative fuels, alternative fodder crops to reduce grazing• Development of and training on alternative livelihoods (e.g. essential

oils production)

Zooogical Society of London (Nepal-India)Code 1327 - Partners: International NGO; National /Local NGOs & Government Agencies.

>Tiger Conservation Landscapes n° 40, 41, 42, 43<

INDIA

Project Lead: Zoological Society of London (ZSL)Project Partners: Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation (DNPWC, NP); Uttarakhand Forest Department (UKFD, IN); National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC); Himalayan Nature (HN); Panthera; Wildlife Conservation Trust (WCT); Wildlife Institute of India (WII)

Nandaur WildlifeSanctuary (IN)

Sukla PhantaWildlife Reserve (NP)

Bardia National Park(NP)

Banke National Park(NP)

Parsa WildlifeReserve (NP)

0 70 14035Kilometers

NEPAL

INDIA

CHINA

NEPAL

IUCN-KfW funding: 2.6 million EUR

Map Sources: Zoological Society of London, IUCN, Protected Planet, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN,GeoBase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordnance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, © OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community

35 70 140Km

0

Main Protected Areas

Project Areas (5)

Bu�er zones of main PAs

Other Protected Areas

CHINA

Page 5: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Objective: By the end of 2018, at least 60% increase in tiger number in two Tx2 Recovery sites of Chitwan-Parsa-Valmiki complex

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Mechanism to achieve zero poaching of tigers in Chit- wan-Parsa-Valmiki Complex in place by the end of 2018

Current tiger population: ~29-> Expected increase to: ~46 tigers

• Tiger and prey base habitat restored and managed incore, bu�er zone and critical sites within Chitwan-Parsa-Valmiki complex by the end of 2018

• Prevent and decrease human tiger con�ict across theChitwan-Parsa-Valmiki complex by the end of 2018

Project investments:• Three guard posts in poaching-prone sites• Vehicle for Rapid Response Teams with tran-quilization gun and other equipment for HTC• SMART Patrolling & monitoring equipment (camera-traps,motorbike, phones, GPS, laptops)• Three wildlife watch-towers• 100 km new �re line (added to existing 40 km)• Management of 50ha of grassland each year• Three new waterholes• Plantations along river corridors

Sustainable livelihoods:• Training in sustainable livelihoods (for youth in particular)• Micro-credit scheme and development of cooperatives• Promotion of eco-tourism• Alternative energy: 179 new biogas plants and training througha revolving fund• Cattle vaccination programme, stall-feeding development• Insurance schemes and Rapid Response Teams for HTC• Predator-proof corrals

WWF Germany/Nepal/India (Nepal-India)Code 1309 - Partners: International NGO; National /Local NGOs & Government Agencies.

>Tiger Conservation Landscape n°40<

NEPAL

INDIA

Parsa WildlifeReserve (NP)

Valmiki TigerReserve (IN)

Chitwan National Park (NP)

NEPAL

INDIA

CHINA

Main Protected Areas

Project Area

Villages and settlements neighbouring relevant PAs

Bu�er zones

IUCN-KfW funding: 2 million EUR

Map Sources: World Wide Fund for Nature, IUCN, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, GeoBase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordnance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia,© OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community

Project Lead: World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) GermanyProject Partners: WWF Nepal; WWF India; WWF Tiger Alive Initiative; National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC); Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation (DNPWC, NP); Department of Forest (DoF, NP); Central Investigation Bureau (CIB, NP); Directorate of the Nepal Army; Wildlife Crime Control Bureau (WCCB, NP); Terai Arc Landscape (TAL) Program; National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA, IN); Forest department, Government of Bihar (IN)

5 10 20Km

0

Page 6: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Objective: By the end of 2018, at least 60% increase in tiger number in two Tx2 Recovery sites of Chitwan-Parsa-

Valmiki complex

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Mechanism to achieve zero poaching of tigers in Chit- wan-Parsa-Valmiki Complex in place by the end of 2018

Current tiger population: ~29-> Expected increase to: ~46 tigers

• Tiger and prey base habitat restored and managed in core, bu�er zone and critical sites within Chitwan-Parsa-

Valmiki complex by the end of 2018

• Prevent and decrease human tiger con�ict across the Chitwan-Parsa-Valmiki complex by the end of 2018

Project investments:• Three guard posts in poaching-prone sites• Vehicle for Rapid Response Teams with tran-quilization gun and other equipment for HTC• SMART Patrolling & monitoring equipment (camera-traps,motorbike, phones, GPS, laptops)• Three wildlife watch-towers• 100 km new �re line (added to existing 40 km)• Management of 50ha of grassland each year• Three new waterholes• Plantations along river corridors

Sustainable livelihoods:• Training in sustainable livelihoods (for youth in particular)• Micro-credit scheme and development of cooperatives• Promotion of eco-tourism• Alternative energy: 179 new biogas plants and training througha revolving fund• Cattle vaccination programme, stall-feeding development• Insurance schemes and Rapid Response Teams for HTC• Predator-proof corrals

0

Objective: Achieve 50% increase in tiger population in the project area in the next 10 years by reducing human disturbances in the habitat and thus increasing the tiger and prey population.

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Protection and recovery of tiger population throughLaw Enforcement

Current tiger population: ~13-> Expected increase to: ~20 tigers

• Evaluate conservation e�ectiveness through long-termmonitoring of tigers, prey, and threats

• Improve livelihoods and conservation education toreduce pressure from local people on tigers, their preyand habitat.

Aaranyak (India)Code 1334 - Partners: Government agencies, international non-pro�ts, national non-pro�ts

>Tiger Conservation Landscape n° 37<

Project investments:• Seven new antipoaching camps and watch towers (West side)• Equipment (vehicles, GPS, binoculars, phones, bikes...)• Two Community Tiger Conservation Interpretation Centers with exhibition and shop for local products and community meeting / training hall• Laptops & printers

Sustainable livelihoods:• Biogas reactors• Improved cooking stoves• Three tree nurseries• Reconversion of poachers to new livelihoods (piggery, �shery, mushroom farming, agroforestry) • Improved cattle and vet support• Fodder • Jobs at patrols • Alternative fuels • Awareness through �lm on Manas

BHUTAN

INDIA

Royal Manas National Park

Manas National Park

Manas Reserved Forest (RF)

Daodhora RF

BatabariRF

DihiraRF

SubankhataRF

IUCN-KfW funding: 1 - 1.5 million EUR

Project Area

Bu�er zones

Target Protected Areas

Other Protected Areas

Village boundaries

0 5 10 20Km

BHUTANNEPAL

CHINA

INDIA

BANGLADESH

Map Sources: Aaranyak, IUCN, Protected Planet, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, GeoBase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordnance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, © OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community

Project Lead: Aaranyak Project Partners: Awely; Panthera; Wildlife Conservation Trust; Forest Department Bodoland Territorial Council

Page 7: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Objective: To ensure tigers in Bhutan’s Royal Manas National Park(RMNP) persist in the future and serve as a source population for tigers within the wider Indo-Himalayan region

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Reduced poaching of tiger and their prey species by 90%in RMNP

• Increased tiger population size and their prey basethrough habitat restoration and improvement by 50%

Current tiger population: ~15/20 -> Expected increase to: ~30 tigers

• Reduced grazing pressure in the park by 50% by 2020.• Trans-boundary regional cooperation to protect tigersformalized.

• 40% of communities increase livelihoodsfrom eco-tourism (and other livelihood activities, jobscreated) by the end of the project period.

• 50% reduction of local communities dependence onnatural resources from within tiger habitats• Reduced Human Wildlife Con�icts by 90%

Dept. of Forests & Park Services BhutanCode 1341 - Partners: Government Agencies. grassroots organisations and international non-pro�t

>Tiger Conservation Landscape n° 37<

BHUTAN

INDIA

Royal Manas National Park

Manas National Park

Project investments:• Anti-poaching kits and training of �eld sta�• Watchtowers and forest outposts (two)• Communication sets • One 4 WD vehicle• Material for monitoring tigers and their prey population• Grassland management and restoration (machines, seeds..)• Equipment for Forest Protection and Surveillance Unit

Sustainable livelihoods:• Provision of low-voltage electric fencing• Provide small-scale bio-gas digesters to reduce forest destruction• Provide improved cattle breeds to farmers• Supply improved variety of feed and fodder• Institute insurance schemes to compensate for loss of cattle• Provide high value horticultural crops less vulnerable to wildlife damage• Community Based Eco-tourism Established• Provide CGI roo�ng to replace bamboo and wooden shingles

BHUTANNEPAL

CHINA

INDIA

BANGLADESH

IUCN-KfW funding: 0.5 - 1 million EUR

Map Sources: Dept. of Forests and Parks Services Bhutan, IUCN, Protected Planet, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, Increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, WWF, Geobase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordinance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, © OpenStreetMap contributions, and the GIS User Community

Project Lead: Global National Happiness Commission through Department of Forests and Park Services, Ministry of Agriculture and Forests, Royal Government of BhutanProject Partners: Royal Mans National Park; Geog Administration of Trong, Phangkhar, Jigmecholing, Ngala, Norbugang, Tarithang and Umling; Ugyen Wangchuk Institute for Conservation and Environment (UWICE); Wildlife Conservation Division and Forests Protection and surveillance unit; Bhutan Foundation; WWF Bhutan.

Project Area

Bu�er zones

Multiple Use Zones

RMNP core area

Other Protected Areas

5 10 20Km

0

Page 8: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

0 140 28070Kilometers

0 140 28070Kilometers

Objective: Stabilize the population of Sumatran tiger by the end of project, through implementation of the NTRP in �ve tiger core areas in four priority TCLs accounting for >70% of the remaining population. This will be achieved through supporting: 1) Intensive protection of �ve core PAs holding the main tiger source populations; 2) Sustainable landscape management across >69’000 km2 of prime tiger habitat; and 3) Community livelihood bu�er zone initiatives at PA borders.

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Tiger and prey populations are stabilised in core areas of 4 target PAs by 2018

Current tiger population is ~ 85

• E�ective landscape-level management in 4 priority Tiger Conservation Landscapes, covering >69,000 km2 maintains tiger forest habitat integrity and reduces illegal wildlife trade

• Community-based bu�er zone management secures borders of 4 PAs and tiger populations, whilst simultaneously delivering tangible local livelihood bene�ts

Fauna & Flora International (Sumatra)Code 1485 - Partners: International and national NGOs; Grassroot organisations; Government department

>Tiger Conservation Landscapes n° 5; 10; 11 & 14<

Project investments:• Material for monitoring tigers and prey population (e.g. 150+ camera-traps)• SMART Patrolling & monitoring equipment (drones, motorbikes, speedy-boat, 4x4 vehicle, GPS, laptops, uniforms)• 5 New ranger posts• Upgrade of 10 current ranger posts• New partnerships against wildlife crime, with informant networks

Sustainable livelihoods:• Establishment of 13 new Village Forests that secure >2,000 km2 forest in the buffer zones of the PAs• Creation of management plans for these Village Forests• Support local communities and companies to design and implement strategies to improve agricultural productivity and income while reducing deforestation• Provision of local jobs in relation with community patrolling• Other livelihood options focussed on community-based natural resource management and governance will be identified in collaboration with target communities, who will select the final option/s• Establishment and training for personnel of human-wildlife conflicts mitigation teams• Comprehensive conservation awareness programme for 30 villages

IUCN-KfW funding: 2 million EUR

Project Lead: Fauna & Flora International (FFI)Project Partners: Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS); Zoological Society of London (ZSL); Leuser Conservation Forum (FKL); Ministry of Environment and Forestry Indonesia (MoEF);Panthera; HarimauKita Forum; Lingkar Institute; Institut Conservasi Society; Kelopak; Wahana Pelestarian dan Advokasi Hutan Sumatera; Gita Buana

Main project Protected Areas

Project Areas

Other Protected Area (WWF ITHCP project)

SUMATRA

Ulu MasenProtected Forest

MALAYSIA

Kalimantan(INDONESIA)

Sumatra(INDONESIA)

Map Sources: Fauna & Flora International, Wildlife Conservation Society, Zoological Society of London, Leuser Conservation Forum , Protected Planet, World Wide Fund for Nature, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, Intermap, Increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, Geobase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordinance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, © OpenStreetMap contributions, GIS User Community

0Km

70 140 280

Gunung LeuserNational Park

Kerinci SeblatNational Park

Rimbang BalingWildlife Reserve

Berbak SembilangNational Park

Bukit Barisan SelatanNational Park

Page 9: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

10 205

Objective: Rimbang Baling continues to serve as a tiger source site and critical linkage for tiger movements in Central Sumatra actively co-managed by local communities.

Highlights (project outcomes):

• By 2019, tiger, habitat and prey loss are reduced through a multi-stakeholder Integrated Tiger-Habitat Protection Sys- tem (ITHPS) in Rimbang Baling

Current tiger population: ~20 --> Expected increase to: ~35 tigers

• By 2019, Rimbang Baling comes under an e�ective, nationally recognized collaborative multi stakeholder ma- nagement framework, with operational management plan

• By 2019, a representative number of RB core zone and selected immediate border communities actively support and bene�t from the RB co-management systems

Project investments:• Two guard posts built and equipped with renewable energy• 350 camera-traps for monitoring• GPS, rucksacks, tents, audio recorders• Vehicles• Four agroforestry demo sites• Ten villages sanitation and waste facilities• Three villages hydro plants and/or solar farms• Ecotourism equipment• One community and education centre• One radio station to prevent wildlife con�icts

Sustainable livelihoods:• Participatory management plan • Village development plans• Strenghtening existing ecotourism, bene�t sharing, micro-�nance,governance

• Renewable energy deployed• Optimisation of rubber plantations• Improved options for agroforestry• Training on reducing energy and waste

Rimbang Baling Wildlife Reserve

IUCN-KfW funding: 1.5 - 2 million EUR

Sumatra(INDONESIA)

MALAYSIA

Kalimantan(INDONESIA)

WWF Germany / WWF Indonesia (Sumatra)Code 1311 - Partners: International NGO; National /Local NGOs & Government Agencies.

>Tiger Conservation Landscape n°6<

Bukit Bungkuk Nature Reserve

SUMATRA

Map Sources: World Wide Fund For Nature, IUCN, Protected Planet, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, Increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, WWF, Geobase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordinance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia © OpenStreetMap contributions, and the GIS User Community

Project Lead: World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) GermanyProject Partners: WWF Indonesia (WWF ID); YAPEKA; INDECON; WWF Tiger Alive Initiative; The Nature Conservation Agency (BBKSDA); Directorate for Conservation Areas and the Advancement of Protection Forests; Directorate for Biodiversity Conservation; Forestry Planning Agency; Forestry O�ces at the Provincial and Regency Levels; Tourism O�ces at the Provincial and Regency Levels; Regency, sub-Regency, and Village O�ces

Main Protected Area

Project Area

5 10 20Km

0

Other Protected Areas

Page 10: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Objective: Enhance the health and protection of identi�ed bottlenecks of key corridors through direct community based interventions to reduce the human pressure, participatory mitigation measures for human-wildlife con�icts, enhan--cement of protection measures & awareness raising of local communities towards habitat management and protection

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Poaching and other wildlife crimes reduced by at least 70% in the entire project landscape by 2018

Current tiger population is ~ 190 --> Expected increase to: ~ 240 tigers

• Dependence on fuel wood for cooking is reduced by 30% in 67 villages in the project landscape by 2018

• Water availability in wildlife habitats and grazing pastures for wild ungulates increases in various regions of the corridor landscape

• At least 1000 local villagers voluntarily adopt di�erent Alternative Livelihoods thus reducing their dependency on adjoining forests in critical areas of the two corridor landscapes by 2018

• Adverse impacts of Human-Large Carnivore Con�ict on wildlife and local communities reduced by at least 40% by 2018.

• Increased local support for conservation activities garnered through capacity development and focused sensitization in 85 select villages

Maharashtra Forest DepartmentCode 1487 - Partners: Governmental agencies; National NGOs; Grassroots organisations

>Tiger Conservation Landscapes n° 51; 52; 53 & 54<

Project investments:• Equipment for frontline and conflict mitigation staff (camera traps, drones, cages, tranquilisation guns, cameras, first-aid kits...)• Installation of 1.5 kilometer long anti-crop raiding fences in 6 select villages • Development of Acoustic alert/deterrent systems for prevention of crop-raiding in 4 villages • Construction of parapet walls on open wells• Installation of 25 solar powered bore well fed water holes• Purchase of four 4x4 vehicles, one for patrols, three for human wildlife conflict mitigation• Purchase of one minibus for patrols

Sustainable livelihoods:• Introduction, development and training on a wide variety of Alternative livelihoods to villages situated in critical bottleneck of corridors through 106 different Self Help Groups (SHGs)• Alternative livelihoods can include e.g. electric work, hospitality, tailoring, plumbing, small industrial works, NTFP trades, fisheries, bamboo craft...• Installation of 8’000 improved cook stoves in 124 villages to reduce forest use• Development of plantations to reduce forest use in 20 villages (17’000 plants)• Awareness programmes for rural children and teachers• Provision of a number of local jobs

IUCN-KfW funding: 2 million EUR

Map Sources: Maharashtra Forest Department, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, Intermap, increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, GeoBase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordnance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, © OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community

Project Lead: Maharashtra Forest Department (MFD)Project Partners: Wildlife Trust of India (WTI); Widlife Conservation Trust (WCT); Wildlife Research and Conservation Society (WRCS); Tiger Research and Conservation Trust (TRACT); Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS); Satpuda Foundation; Eco-Pro Bramhapuri; Khoj; Save Ecosystem and Tiger (SEAT); Nature Conservation Society (NCSA) Amravati; Hirwal; Society for Environment and Wild Animals (SEWA); Youth for Nature Conservation Society (YNCS) Amravati; Disha Amravati; Organization for Wildlife, Akot (OWL); Wildlife & Environment Conservation Society (WES) Amravati; Vidarbha Nature Conservation Society (VNCS)

0Km

30 60 120

INDIA

Wan WildlifeSanctuary

NarnalaWildlife

Sanctuary

Melghat TigerReserve

GugamalNational Park

Bor TigerReserve

Pench TigerReserve

Tadoba TigerReserve

TipeshwarWildlife

Sanctuary

Koka WildlifeSanctuary

Umred Karhandla Wildlife Sanctuary

Main Protected Areas

Project Area (Vidharba Landscape)

Bu�er zones of main PAs

Functional corridors

Village areas

Nawegaon-NagziraTiger Reserve

Page 11: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Objective: Assist in the recovery of the tiger, its prey and their habitat in the MM Hills – Cauvery WS landscape by undertaking direct community-based interventions (...) strengthening overall park management capability (...) and helping foster local community support to conservation (...)

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Ensuring short-term stability and enabling long-term recovery of tiger and prey populations in the landscape, and improvement of habitat status; increase in the extent or intensity of habitat use by tigers & prey

Current tiger population is ~ 12-14 --> Expected increase to: ~ 20 tigers

• Building sta� capacity and improving park management e�ectiveness to proactively reduce threats, and enhance understanding of legal provisions for better conservation law enforcement

• Undertaking direct community-based interventions to reduce key conservation threats, build local support to conservation, and help maintain / enhance connectivity of the Doddasampige-Edyarahalli corridor between MM Hills Wildlife Sanctuary and Biligiri Rangaswamy Temple Tiger Reserve

• Improving public support to wildlife conservation by enhancing awa- reness and understanding of conservation issues among local

communities, media and decision makers

Nature Conservation FoundationCode 1345 - Partners: National NGOs; Grassroot organisations; International NGO; Government department

>Tiger Conservation Landscape n° 67<

Project investments:• Speed calming measures and outreach on the road passing through the corridor• Provision of drinking water to ten anti-poaching camps (pumps & storage tanks)• Provision of key-equipment to park management sta� (including deve-loped natural history & wildlife law apps and translated versions of wildlife protection laws) • Development of two nature information centers, for education and capa-city building purposes • Development of an educational �lm on biodiversity in the landscape

Sustainable livelihoods:• Provision of liqui�ed petroleum gas (LPG) stoves to 1.000 families• Establishment of a new mobile veterinary service to provide fast care to wild animals (reduction human-wildlife con�icts) and livestock (vaccination)• Access to drinking water: creation of solar/wind powered pumpsets& provision of storage tanks to lift drinking water from wells

IUCN-KfW funding: 0.5 - 1 million EUR

Map Sources: Nature Conservation Foundation, Protected Planet, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, Increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, WWF, Geobase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordinance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, © OpenStreetMap contributions, and the GIS User Community

Project Lead: Nature Conservation FoundationProject Partners: Wildlife Trust of India; Karnataka Forest Department; Snow Leopard Trust - India Program; Panthera; Vanya; Vana Jaagruthi, Aranya; Kaanana; Sahyadri;other institutions and individuals.

INDIA

SRI LANKA

Main project Protected Areas

Project Area

Other Protected Areas

Villages

Hasanur Ghat road passingthrough corridor

5 10 20Km

0

INDIA

Malai Mahadeshwara(MM Hills)

Wildlife Sanctuary

CauveryWildlife Sanctuary

Biligiri RangaswamyTemple (BRT)Tiger Reserve

SathyamangalanTiger Reserve

BandipurNational Park

MudumalaiNational Park

Page 12: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

0 20 4010Kilometers

Objective: Secure the Tanintharyi-Lenya Forest Corridor for tiger numbers to recover and grow

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Tiger and prey populations are stabilised and show initialsigns of recovery in the Tanintharyi-Lenya Forest Corridorby 2018.

Current tiger population unknown. Baseline to be established at the beggining of project.

• > 400,000 ha Tanintharyi-Lenya Forest Corridor is e�ecti- vely protected from land use change and conversion by 2018.

• Community-based bu�er zone management secures pro- posed protected area borders and tiger populations, while

providing alternative local livelihoods.

Project investments:• Four new ranger posts• Sign posts• Research equipment (e.g. camera traps)• HCV toolkit development• Vehicles• Seven computers & printers

Sustainable livelihoods:• The development of sustainable livelihoods through aconsultative approach and the development of a small grants programme. This will focus on sanitation, access to water, com-munity forestry, small holdings for crop and vegetable production as well as livestock raising• Community managed eco-tourism camp site on the Nawun river• Land use maps and management plans;• HTC protocol & training

Fauna & Flora International (Myanmar)Code 1338 - Partners: International NGO; National /Local NGOs & Government Agencies.

>Tiger Conservation Landscape n°20<

MYANMAR

Project Lead: Fauna & Flora International (FFI)Project Partners: Nature and Wildlife Conservation Division (NWCD), Forest Department, Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry (MOECAF); World Wide Fund for Nature – Myanmar Programme; Lenya Karen Youth Organisation (LKYO)

THAILAND

Main Proposed Protected Areas

Project Area

Other Myanmar Protected Areas

Other Thailand Protected Areas

Traditional Use Zones (result of ITHCP community assessments)

Areas excluded from proposed PAs for villages, plantations, existing encroachment, mining or military (result of ITHCP community assessments)

Villages and settlements neighbouring relevant PAs

10 20 40Km

Proposed LenyaNational Park

Tagyet Reserved Forest

Proposed Tanintharyi National Park

Parchan Reserved Forest

(TH)

ExtensionProposed Lenya

National Park

Sadeth NaikromKrom Luang ChumpornWildlife Sanctuary (TH)

KuiburiNational Park (TH)

Kaeng KrachanNational Park (TH)

IUCN-KfW funding: 1 - 1.5 million EURMYANMARTHAILAND

CAMBODIA

Map Sources: Fauna & Flora International, IUCN, Protected Planet, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, GeoBase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordnance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, © OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community

Page 13: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Objective: To recover tiger populations in Northern Myanmar by increasing e�ective law enforcement, security community tenure and improving local ethnic livelihoods in both Myanmar and India, thus maintaining key habitat connectivity across the transboundary TCL and reduced reliance on key resources such as tiger prey.

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Identi�cation of critical tiger corridors in NE India• Conservation activities in corridors• Stabilized tiger and prey populations

> Baseline data on tiger populations to be determined

• Increased law enforcement with SMART in Myanmar• Improved management with METT in Htamanthi &

Hukaung Valley WS

• Improved livelihoods in core areas in both countries• Sustainable management and secure land tenure through

land use plans

Project investments:• Two guard posts and other facilities for Forest Department• Two sta� houses• Kitchens, wells• Two community guest houses• Other facilities for communities• Conservation Facilitation Centre• Animal crossings in tea plantations• Livestock fencing• Monitoring and patrolling equipment• Awareness and communications materials• Camera traps and other investments

Sustainable livelihoods:• Landuse planning• Community forestry• Community-based ecotourism• Bamboo• Fisheries• Sustainable livestock & sustainable handicrafts and natural products

Wildlife Conservation Society (India & Myanmar)Code 1337 - Partners: International NGO; National /Local NGOs; Government Agencies & other organisations.

>Tiger Conservation Landscapes n° 37 & 38<

INDIA

MYANMARProtected Areas

Project Area (will be re�ned further)

20 40 80Km

Hukaung ValleyWildlife Sanctuary

Naga Hills

Yaybawmee KBA

HtamanthiWildlife Sanctuary

NamdaphaTiger Reserve

KazirangaTiger Reserve

Dibru SaihowaNational Park

IntankiWildlife Sanctuary

Map Sources: Wildlife Conservation Society, IUCN, Protected Planet, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, Increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, Geobase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordinance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia © OpenStreetMap contributions, and the GIS User Community

Project lead: Wildlife Conservation Society Project Partners: Nature and Wildlife Conservation Division (NWCD), Forest Department, Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry (MOECAF); Kachin State Government, Sagaing Regional Government, Naga Self-Administered Area Government; New York Botanical Garden (NYBG); Regional Community Forestry Training Centre (RECOFTC); Naga Traditional Committee and Naga Hills Development Network; Centre for Wildlife Studies (CWS) ; Balipara Tract and Frontier Foundation (BTFF); Nagaland Wildlife and Biodiversity Conservation Trust (NWBCT).

BHUTAN

CHINA

INDIA

MYANMAR

Page 14: Integrated Tiger Habitat Conservation Programme Project

Sources: Esri, HERE, DeLorme, Intermap, increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, GeoBase, IGN,Kadaster NL, Ordnance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia, ©OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community

0 40 8020Kilometers

Objective: Secure protected areas in the Dawna-Karen Hills to ensure no further decrease in the tiger population and theopportunity for tiger numbers to recover.

Highlights (project outcomes):

• Tiger census baseline data (presence in project siteprotected areas) obtained by the end of 2018

> Baseline data on tiger populations to be determined

• Critical tiger occupied habitat is protected and tiger andprey loss is reduced through the operation of Wildlife Pro-

tection Units (WPU) in 610,000 ha in four protected areas by 2019.

• By 2019, Karen National Union leaders and a represen- tative number of selected communities demonstrate

support and understanding of tiger management practicesto be implemented in the relevant Protected Areas.

Project investments:• Construction of three new ranger stations• Procurement and maintenance of a boat and engine for WPUs• Procurement and maintenance of six Honda motorcycles for WPUs• Procurement of �eld equipment for WPUs (uniforms, boots, rucksack, sleeping gear, �eld knife, torch �rst aid and medical kits, GPS)• Translation of SMART software into Karen language

Sustainable livelihoods:• Full assessment of feasibility for livelihoods investments to inform the design for a later phase of livelihood development support• Provision of jobs for local communities• Creation of a bu�alo bank for communal use of livestock (six bu�alos)• Construction of mini irrigation canals to support wet paddy rice farming (10 canals for 10 wet rice paddy �elds)• Animal husbandry training• Support for community-based mapping and registration of customary lands

Wildlife Asia - KWCI (Myanmar)Code 1490 - Partners: International NGO; National /Local NGOs; Indigenous authorities; Grassroots organisations

>Tiger Conservation Landscape n° 19<

THAILAND

MYANMAR

Western ForestComplex (Thailand)

Map Sources: Wildlife Asia, Esri, HERE, DeLorme, TomTom, Intermap, Increment P Corp., GEBCO, USGS, FAO, NPS, NRCAN, Geobase, IGN, Kadaster NL, Ordinance Survey, Esri Japan, METI, Esri China (Hong Kong), swisstopo, MapmyIndia © OpenStreetMap contributions, and the GIS User Community

Project lead: Wildlife Asia / Karen Wildlife Conservation InitiativeProject Partners: Karen Environmental and Social Action Network (KESAN); Karen Forestry Department (KFD); World Wide Fund for Nature Myanmar (WWF Myanmar); Wildlife 1 Conservancy (W1C;

IUCN-KfW funding: 0.5 million EUR

20 40 80Km

0

Project Area

Main project Protected Areas

Other Protected Areas

MYANMAR

THAILAND

LAOS

KweekohWildlife

Sanctuary

Klermu ThoopiWildlife Sanctuary

Dawna Range

Karen Hills

ThawtheePwaw-ghaw CF

Kheshorter CF

Kaydoh Mae NyawWildlife

Sanctuary

YomujohWildlife Sanctuary

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INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR CONSERVATION OF NATURE

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