Safaris can help conservation
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Abstract
Conservation doesn't always alleviate poverty, and commercial ecotourism doesn't always protect biodiversity (Nature 467, 264–265; 2010) — but both succeed often enough to be worth doing.
A few tourism enterprises have made globally significant contributions to conservation. The safari company &Beyond, for example, protects 2% of the world's black rhinos and 1% of white rhinos on two of its 50 properties, as well as 4% of the Aders' duiker (Cephalophus adersi) antelope population and 10% of suni antelopes (Neotragus moschatus) on two others.
In addition, Wilderness Safaris protects 8% of the world's remaining population of an endangered bird, the Seychelles white-eye (Zosterops modestus) on one of the company's 60 properties. For further details, see http://go.nature.com/g8Z4Pj.
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Nature
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467
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© 2010 Nature Publishing Group. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal website for access to the definitive, published version.
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Conservation and biodiversity