The SeaWorld® &
Busch Gardens® Conservation Fund Finalizes 2014 Grant Recipients
Fifty-seven wildlife
conservation projects around the world are receiving much needed funding from
the SeaWorld® & Busch Gardens® Conservation Fund this year. Just over $1
million is being distributed among these projects bringing the amount awarded since
the Fund was created in 2003, to more than $11 million.
A majority of the
grants awarded this year, and every year, are for projects with defined
timelines and long-term objectives and goals, but occasionally the Fund
receives requests for crisis grants when conservation organizations are faced
with unforeseeable challenges.
Crisis Grant –
Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary:
In late August the
Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Sierra Leon, west Africa submitted a crisis
grant for funding. The Sanctuary is a non-profit organization established in
1995 to rehabilitate orphaned or abandoned chimpanzees with the goal of
releasing them back into their natural habitat. A portion of the Sanctuary's
expenses are typically covered by income generated by visitors to the sanctuary
and its eco-lodges.
However, due to the
devastating Ebola outbreak that was confirmed in Sierra Leon in May and the
resulting drop in tourism to the area, the Sanctuary's funding was negatively
impacted and the care of the chimpanzees jeopardized. The SeaWorld & Busch
Gardens Conservation Fund board reviewed and approved the crisis grant request
and provided financial support to offset their funding issues.
Standard Grant –
Painted Dog Conservation:
Painted dogs, also
known as wild African dogs, are among Africa's most endangered species. One of
the biggest threats they face is poaching for bush meat. An organization called
Painted Dog Conservation has formed anti-poaching units that patrol 10,500 square
kilometers in Zimbabwe, removing snares laid by poachers. The Fund has supported the organization by
providing funding for these small, yet highly trained groups.
"The support
from SeaWorld and Busch Gardens remains pivotal to the success of Painted Dog
Conservation," said Peter Biliston, Managing Director of Painted Dog
Conservation in Zimbabwe. "The fact that they have supported our
anti-poaching units for many years shows that they really understand the
complexity of wildlife conservation. They understand that permanent change does
not happen overnight and it takes long-term committed support to make a
difference."
Standard Grant –
SANCCOB:
African penguins,
one of 17 penguin species, are classified as endangered and their numbers are
in rapid decline. The wild population is down to 2 percent of the original 1
million breeding pairs counted in 1930. A group called SANCCOB in South Africa
works to rehabilitate adult penguins, to raise abandoned chicks to increase the
wild population. Research indicates that the wild African penguin population is
19 percent higher entirely due to SANCCOB's oiled wildlife response efforts.
The Fund has supported SANCCOB not only with financial support, but has also
sent aviculturists from SeaWorld to South Africa to assist with penguin
rehabilitation.
Standard Grant –
Ecology Project International (EPI):
The Caribbean coast
of Costa Rica is the world's fourth most important nesting beach for critically
endangered leatherback sea turtles. Without protection from illegal harvesting
and other threats, 80 percent of leatherback sea turtle nests are lost. The
Ecology Project International organization will protect leatherback populations
by working to reduce the illegal harvest of nests and improving nesting
habitats. They also will work with Costa Rican teachers and students to
increase their ecological knowledge so they can better understand their role in
the long term survival of leatherbacks and conservation in general.
For more information
on the SeaWorld & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund and the other projects
supported by the Fund, like the Fund on Facebook.
About the SeaWorld
& Busch Gardens Conservation Fund
A non-profit,
501(c)3 organization, the SeaWorld® & Busch Gardens® Conservation Fund
supports wildlife research, habitat protection, animal rescue and conservation
education in the U.S. and countries around the world. The Fund provides an
outlet for park visitors to help protect wildlife and, because SeaWorld Parks
& Entertainment™ provides all administrative and development costs as well
as staffing and infrastructure, commits 100 percent of donations to
on-the-ground wildlife conservation efforts.
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