10/03/2026
π Celebrating an incredible milestone for wildlife conservation!
In June 2025, Worth Wild Africa celebrated providing more than $100,000 worth of equipment to conservation and research projects across Africa.
Only eight months later, that number has grown to an impressive $140,000 β meaning $40,000 of additional support has been delivered in a very short time to help protect wildlife and support conservation teams on the ground.
This remarkable progress has been made possible thanks to the generosity of donors and supporters who believe in practical action for conservation.
Here are some of the recent projects supported:
π Madagascar β We were delighted to welcome Peter and Andrew in September, who delivered a trail camera in person and authorized the purchase of a Starlink repeater kit and solar panels for the Maromizaha Wildlife Reserve, greatly improving research capacity and communication in the field.
π Cameroon β The Kordofan giraffe project completed its first large-scale survey in Bouba Ndjidda National Park using advanced camera equipment, including a telephoto lens supported by WWAUK.
π South Africa β Support was provided to several initiatives:
Equipment for the Cheetah Outreach Trust
Funding for South Africaβs first international Bird Observatory in the Karoo
Monitoring support for wildlife projects including rhino conservation and anti-poaching efforts.
π Nigeria β Trail cameras supplied to the West African Conservation Network are already producing the first survey results at Kainji Lake National Park.
π Kenya β Rangers in the Ololasurai Conservancy, a key wildlife corridor near the Masai Mara, received boots, uniforms, radios, and essential field equipment to support their patrol work.
π Namibia β Support for the Brown Hyena Project along the coast.
π South Africa (Zululand) β Equipment including trail cameras and solar panels was provided to the Temminck Pangolin Project and its anti-poaching unit.
π Elephants Alive (Kruger region) β Camera traps deployed in the Phalaubeni community are helping mitigate human-elephant conflict.
π A huge thank you to all the generous donors and supporters who make this possible.
As always, 100% of donations go directly to purchasing field or laboratory equipment to support conservation research, protect wildlife, and help reduce human-wildlife conflict across Africa.
Together, these efforts are making a real difference for biodiversity and the people working tirelessly to protect it.