stateforward.com
Home Page :> About Us :> Add Url :> Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Article
Search:   
Get 3 way links
 
 

Recreation & Entertainment

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Law & Politics

 

Events & News

 

Self Help

 

Companies & Business

 

Estate & Realty

 

Home & Garden

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Fashion & Lifestyle

 

Eating & Drinking

 

Teens & Kids

 

Finance & Banking

 

Careers & Employment

 

Science & Research

 

Academics & Learning

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Indoor Games

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Software & Networking

 

Art & Creative

 

Hygiene & Health

 

People & Communities

 

Sports & Adventure


 

  Home Page › Hotels & Travel › Game & Nature Reserves
   
 

Sustainable Tourism in the Selous Game Reserve

   
Author: ian Williamson
 

Winning the battle for sustainable Tourism in the Selous Game Reserve are a small staff of about 350 game scouts and technical staff; that is one scout per 140 square kilometers. The headquarters for the Selous Game Reserve staff are in the Northern section of the Selous at Matambwe. The battle for sustainable tourism in this vast game reserve has not been easy and hard lessons have been learnt and now the battle for sustainable tourism is beginning to be realized.

Half the income from the Selous is returned to the reserve to help keep this park in existence. A second scheme is involving the communities around the park; by allowing controlled hunting by the local communities and thereby providing direct tangible benefits for the local people. Without local support from surrounding villages poaching would be impossible to maintain. Working with and through the local communities rather than against them has helped the reserve to flourish.

As a direct result of international pressures hunting was banned in the 1980's and an immediate consequence was a devastating decline on animal populations; especially the elephant populations. Hunting has been reintroduced, well away from the photographic safari areas. The money charged from these hunting safaris generates the main source of income to maintain the reserve. It is though that as a direct result of reintroducing hunting that poaching is no longer a threat and animal numbers had increased noticeably over the past decade. Sustainable hunting safaris are strictly controlled and they are allowed in the reserve between the months of July and November. Without this income the reserve in its present sate would not exist.

The reserve has set out restricts for tourism in the Selous to keep the human impact as low as possible. Tourist numbers are kept low and lodges and camps strictly controlled. Over the past two years there have been several new camps. The lakes in the west of Tanzania and especially the Serengeti and the Ngorongoro crater in the north of Tanzania have be overwhelmed by a tourism explosion over the past few years. Park fees have been increased dramatically from January 1, 2006 to direct tourists from these areas and into the lesser know areas such as the Selous.

The tourism areas are all in the north of the Selous game reserve and south of the Rufiji River is a true wilderness. However, there are plans to develop this area for the photographic safaris to reduce the pressure on the lake area's and the northern National Parks. Tanzania is keen to maintain its parks and keep tourism under control and human impact to a minimum. For further information on sustainable tourism or for information on how to find your way around the Selous Game Reserve contact us through website below.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Sustainable Tourism in the Selous Game Reserve
 
Experience Natural Beauty with Destin Florida Vacation Rental
 
Car Hire Adds More to Alicante as a Holiday Destination
 
Winchester Is A Perfect Place for a Weekend Break
 
Hawaii Whale-Watching
 
Australian Visas - An Overview
 
Athens Could Be The Best Vacation You'll Ever Take!
 
Odessa Tales
 
Visiting Lake Havasu
 
New Zealand Hitchhiking Advice
 
 
 

Related Links
(If you have a website related to this article, we would be happy to add it for free in this section.)

 
Hotel La Casa De Don David
Best value rooms Near TIKAL Mayan ruins, Lake, Jungle, 15 modern rooms, AC, large botanical garden. restaurant. Tours and transportatin to remote jungle areas.
 
 
 
 

New Zealand Vacation Packages

The distance from USA to New Zealand is the deciding factor when selecting any New Zealand vacation ... - Eric Morris
 

Make Dining Part of Your Branson, Missouri Experience

Regardless of whether you're going to Branson, Missouri for shows and shopping, or theme parks and l ... - Jason Collmorgen
 

Cape May County Park and Zoo

When vacationing in Cape May County, NJ there are plenty of destinations apart from the "beach scene ... - Matthew Keegan
 
 

Newsletter from East Africa May 2006

Information from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Rwanda for travelers and people in Africa tourism - Karl-Heinz Straus
 

Yankton, SD--Retaining a Sense of Place

A reflection on Yankton, SD, Mother City of the Dakotas and river and lake oasis on the prairie, and ... - Todd Epp
 
 
   Home Page :> Privacy :> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.stateforward.com