TEXT ONLY             CONTACT             FAQ             SEARCH             SITE MAP


ABOUT CEPF

OUR STRATEGY

NEWS

CEPF in the News

E-News Subscribe

In Focus Features

Press Releases

WHERE WE WORK

PROJECT DATABASE

APPLY FOR GRANTS


Pride Campaign: Succulent Karoo

Country: South Africa

Partner: Conservation International

Campaign Manager: Morne Farmer

Target Area: Northern Namaqualand, South Africa

Campaign Goal: To conserve the biodiversity of the northern Namaqualand region so that people take ownership of and enjoy their unique living landscape in a way that maintains biodiversity and improves livelihoods now and in perpetuity

Flagship Species: The armadillo lizard (Cordylus cataphractus)

Campaign Slogan: Our Quartz Rocks!

Principal Threats: Harmful farming methods (the use of pesticides and fertilizers, overgrazing and poor grazing methods), ad hoc tourism development and unmanaged tourism activities, lack of awareness about conservation amongst local people, poaching of reptiles and succulents in particular, and lack of coherent planning for conservation and development.

Notable Information from the Questionnaire Survey:
  • Only 21.6% of the general public could name one threat to the northern Namaqualand region.
  • Overgrazing is a big problem in the region, but 41.8% of respondents said they didn’t know what overgrazing is.
  • The majority of people interviewed did not know whether the armadillo lizard is threatened because of illegal trade, and only 15.4% of respondents knew that there is legal punishment for being involved in the trade.

Campaign SMART Objectives:
  • Objective 1: By December 2004, increase the number of general public who can name at least one threat to the northern Namaqualand region (from 21.6% to 45%)
  • Objective 2: By December 2004, increase the number of general public who know that the armadillo lizard is threatened by the illegal pet trade (from 19.8% to 45 %)
  • Objective 3: By December 2004, increase the number of general public who can name any priority wild animals from the northern Namaqualand region (from 42.6% to 65%)
  • Objective 4: By December 2004, increase the number of general public who know that there is legal punishment for the trade of the armadillo lizard (from 15.4% to 40%)
  • Objective 5: By December 2004, increase the number of general public who say they have heard of the armadillo lizard in the past six months (from 13% up to 40%)
  • Objective 6: By December 2004, increase the number of farmers who can name at least 3 effects of overgrazing (from 6.34% to 30%)
  • Objective 7: By December 2004, increase the number of general public who say they have participated in conservation related activities in the previous six months (from 26.3% to 50%)
  • Objective 8: By the end of June 2005, establish a strategy to increase rehabilitation activities at small scale mines in the northern Namaqualand region
  • Objective 9: By June 2005, measure an increase in reports of illegal activities related to northern Namaqualand’s wildlife (flora and fauna) conservation

Highlights from the Results (based on pre- and post-campaign surveys:)
  • The number of general public who could name at least one threat to the Northern Namaqualand Region increased by 45 percentage points: to 67% up from 22%
  • 58% (up from 13%) of local residents said they had heard about the Armadillo lizard in the previous 6 months.
  • 85% of farmers could correctly name 3 effects of overgrazing, compared to 48% of farmers prior to the campaign.
Tell a Friend About CEPF


© Hal Brindley
Campaign Manager Morne Farmer dressed in a costume of the armadillo lizard, the campaign's flagship species.


© Conservation International, photo by Daniela Lerda
To raise awareness of the region's unique quartz patches, Campaign Manager Morne Farmer has developed a suite of materials targeting schoolchildren, including his costume of the armadilo lizard.



Listen to the campaign songs: Our Quartz Rocks sang by the Port Nolloth Youth Choir and the Skurwejantjie School Song.

Index to CEPF-supported Pride campaigns

Related stories:
- November 2004, In Focus: Marketing Social Change
- August 2003, In Focus: Students Get Off to Strong Start for Conservation Education



© 2007 Conservation International        Privacy Policy      Terms of Use

Photo credits for banner images: (Frog) © CI, Haroldo Castro; (Chameleon) © CI, Russell A. Mittermeier