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Why do we do this?

Because across Africa elephants are running out of space and there is increasing conflict between elephants and people.

In the last 100 years Africa’s elephants have declined by 97%.

Help us to keep Elephants Alive!

How we work to keep Elephants Alive

Protecting Elephants

Elephant Protection
and Conservation

Education

Education
and Outreach

Our Impact

Logo

Three countries – we work where our elephants go

25 years of studying elephants with scientific integrity

22 Black Mamba Anti-poaching Women upskilled in beekeeping and permaculture

Creating networks of good by collaborating with > 35 NPOs, > 5 communities around Protected Areas, 13 Local- and 42 International Universities and partnering with

> 50 Corporate Organisations

> 50 peer reviewed scientific publications

Creating life-long learners by supervising 10 PhD, 15 MSc, 8 BSc and 13 undergraduates’ fieldwork and degrees

2 Awards & 2 prestigious listings

> 3000 iconic trees monitored for elephant impact

> 300 trees with vultures monitored for elephant impact

> 1500 trees as valuable seed dispersers protected from elephant impact

> 2000 elephants named and identified

> 200 elephant collaring operations to track their movements

> 150 beehives protecting trees, providing pollination services and income

Elephant Icon

Elephants

> 2000 elephants named and identified

> 200 elephant collaring operations to track their movements

Hand

Communities

25 years of studying elephants with scientific integrity

22 Black Mamba Anti-poaching Women upskilled in beekeeping and permaculture

Creating networks of good by collaborating with > 35 NPOs, > 5 communities around Protected Areas, 13 Local- and 42 International Universities and partnering with
> 50 Corporate Organisations
> 50 peer reviewed scientific publications
Creating life-long learners by supervising 10 PhD, 15 MSc, 8 BSc and 13 undergraduates’ fieldwork and degrees
2 Awards & 2 prestigious listings

Africa

Locations

Three countries – we work where our elephants go

Bee

Bees

> 150 beehives protecting trees, providing pollination services and income

Tree

Trees

> 3000 iconic trees monitored for elephant impact

> 300 trees with vultures monitored for elephant impact

> 1500 trees as valuable seed dispersers protected from elephant impact

Our Impact

  • Africa

    Three countries – we work where our elephants go

  • Tree

    > 3000 iconic trees monitored for elephant impact

    > 300 trees with vultures monitored for elephant impact

    > 1500 trees as valuable seed dispersers protected from elephant impact

  • Elephant Icon

    > 2000 elephants named and identified

    > 200 elephant collaring operations to track their movements

  • Bee

    > 150 beehives protecting trees, providing pollination services and income

  • Hand

    25 years of studying elephants with scientific integrity

    22 Black Mamba Anti-poaching Women upskilled in beekeeping and permaculture

    Creating networks of good by collaborating with > 35 NPOs, > 5 communities around Protected Areas, 13 Local- and 42 International Universities and partnering with

    > 50 Corporate Organisations

    > 50 peer reviewed scientific publications

    Creating life-long learners by supervising 10 PhD, 15 MSc, 8 BSc and 13 undergraduates’ fieldwork and degrees

    2 Awards & 2 prestigious listings

Our Impact

Elephants are more than a keystone species in their ecosystems.

They are an indicator species, large grey mirrors of the fate of all other wild creatures.

If we can’t protect a species this large, how can we be expected to protect the little things? Dr Ian McCallum

Africa
Africa

Areas

Three countries – we work where our elephants go

Tree
Tree

Trees

> 3000 iconic trees monitored for elephant impact
> 300 trees with vultures monitored for elephant impact
> 1500 trees as valuable seed dispersers protected
from elephant impact

Elephant Icon
Elephant Icon

Elephants

> 2000 elephants named and identified
> 200 elephant collaring operations to track their movements

Bee
Bee

Bees

> 150 beehives protecting trees, providing
pollination services and income

Hand
Hand

People

25 years of studying elephants with scientific integrity
22 Black Mamba Anti-poaching Women upskilled in beekeeping and permaculture
Creating networks of good by collaborating with > 35 

Sir David Attenborough

"The question is, are we happy to suppose that our grandchildren may never be able to see an elephant except in a picture book?"

Sir David Attenborough

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