Author Archives: Marion
British Ecological Society Annual Meeting
Synthesis outputs for outreach: presenting our AgrisysTanzania (evidence generation for natural capital benefits and disservices to farmed land) and CORRESTOR (how to use that evidence for informing the restoration process), we highlight a set of key messages for restoration at … Continue reading
Workshop 4 Travels – two days with key actors
Time is previous for us and our key partners in Tanzania. We are incredibly grateful to our funder (Science for Nature and People Partnership) and our Tanzanian colleagues to enable this knowledge sharing and inform the next steps shaping restoration … Continue reading
Workshop 4 travels – October 2022
We have now returned from our travels, visiting the landscape in the upper Kilombero Valley to meet key actors (Reforest Africa, Illovo Sugar Kilombero Sugar Company) and travelling to Morogoro to implement the final workshop of the project in Tanzania. … Continue reading
In Morogoro: workshop 3
02/2022 Model consolidation workshop. Morogoro – Tanzania: Discuss data, restoration plans and priorities The venue was awesome: thank you again to staff and manager of The extraordinary experience – Antique Legacy Hotel with the best view from the roof ever.
How is that in country journey going?
Very well indeed. We did have a break posing at Mikumi (of course) and we visited the landscape, having a look for the elephants at Magombera FR and just reminding ourselves of the complexity of this landscape. It was raining, … Continue reading
A couple of virtual workshops later
We are in Tanzania, meeting for workshop 3 of the CORRESTOR project. Who is we: actually, its a bunch of different people not all doing work for CORRESTOR. from left to right: Eleanor Moore (PhD candidate at Newcastle University: using … Continue reading
The CORRESTOR project – How it started
Natural wildlife movement corridors are being restored in fragmented landscapes to reconnect animal populations and restore wildlife habitats. This can benefit people, enhancing soil and water quality, and biodiversity. Another critical goal of corridor restoration is to reduce human-wildlife conflict … Continue reading