Nature Conservancy launches new program in Mongolia
The Nature Conservancy has launched a new conservation initiative to protect the globally significant grasslands of the Eastern Steppe of Mongolia. The Conservancy will share its conservation and scientific expertise to help the government of Mongolia balance conservation and economic needs. “This program will help Mongolia to set a new standard for sustainable development,” said Ms. Stephanie Meeks, acting president and CEO of The Nature Conservancy. “This unique effort will encompass policy initiatives with on-the-ground conservation techniques to protect more than 69 million acres of grasslands in Eastern Mongolia.”
Grasslands are among the most threatened habitat types on Earth, with 50 percent having been lost to agriculture use, urbanization and fire suppression. Mongolia, home to vibrant and celebrated nomadic cultures that coexist with an astonishing array of wildlife, contains the largest unconverted temperate grasslands remaining in the world. Visitors may come across steppe eagles, cranes, wolves and Mongolian gazelles. The Mongolian gazelle, a nomadic species that follows no fixed migratory route, needs an extremely large landscape to survive, but the once isolated, unpopulated Eastern Steppe in Mongolia is facing unprecedented development pressures as the country seeks to expand its economy and connect to the East Asian markets.
The challenge is to reconcile economic needs with the protection of the country and its unique natural treasures. Working with the government of Mongolia and many diverse partners, the Conservancy’s new initiative will work to address these issues by incorporating conservation of vast areas of grasslands with sustainable development and policy initiatives. The Mongolia program’s “pragmatic approach to conservation will directly benefit the people of Mongolia”, added Ms. Meeks. “By integrating herder traditions and livelihoods with water conservation, sustainable economic and infrastructure development, and biodiversity conservation, this program can play an active role in the long-term health of the people and species that live within the Eastern Steppe,” she said.
The program will help local communities to establish and manage conservation areas, develop a model of coordinated grassland, wildlife and wetland management with neighboring provinces, and facilitate a national environmental forum to unite business, religious, governmental and conservation leaders around in a common environmental agenda.
Grasslands are among the most threatened habitat types on Earth, with 50 percent having been lost to agriculture use, urbanization and fire suppression. Mongolia, home to vibrant and celebrated nomadic cultures that coexist with an astonishing array of wildlife, contains the largest unconverted temperate grasslands remaining in the world. Visitors may come across steppe eagles, cranes, wolves and Mongolian gazelles. The Mongolian gazelle, a nomadic species that follows no fixed migratory route, needs an extremely large landscape to survive, but the once isolated, unpopulated Eastern Steppe in Mongolia is facing unprecedented development pressures as the country seeks to expand its economy and connect to the East Asian markets.
The challenge is to reconcile economic needs with the protection of the country and its unique natural treasures. Working with the government of Mongolia and many diverse partners, the Conservancy’s new initiative will work to address these issues by incorporating conservation of vast areas of grasslands with sustainable development and policy initiatives. The Mongolia program’s “pragmatic approach to conservation will directly benefit the people of Mongolia”, added Ms. Meeks. “By integrating herder traditions and livelihoods with water conservation, sustainable economic and infrastructure development, and biodiversity conservation, this program can play an active role in the long-term health of the people and species that live within the Eastern Steppe,” she said.
The program will help local communities to establish and manage conservation areas, develop a model of coordinated grassland, wildlife and wetland management with neighboring provinces, and facilitate a national environmental forum to unite business, religious, governmental and conservation leaders around in a common environmental agenda.
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