Endangered Wildlife Trust

The Endangered Wildlife Trust is a South African environmental organisation for the conservation of threatened species and ecosystems in southern Africa.[1]

Environmental movement in South Africa
Organisations
Conferences

Founded in 1973, the EWT implements conservation research and action programmes, supports biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, and advocates the sustainable use of natural resources. EWT establishes dedicated working groups through which the objectives of the Trust can be achieved. These working groups are the operational units of the organisation and are essentially self-managed, harnessing the talent and enthusiasm of a network of specialists and stakeholders in an area of conservation priority. Existing working groups have developed highly credible track records affecting conservation outcomes.

The Endangered Wildlife Trust and two other organisations accredit the Specialised Wildlife Protection Academy.

Working groups

  • Airports Wildlife Working Group
  • Birds of Prey Working Group
  • Carnivore Conservation Group
  • Conservation Leadership Group
  • Healthy Rivers Programme
  • IT4 Conservation Group
  • Law and Policy Working Group
  • Marine & Coastal Working Group
  • Wildlife Conflict Prevention Group
  • Riverine Rabbit Working Group
  • International Crane Foundation / EWT Partnership
  • Threatened Grassland Species Programme
  • CBSG Southern Africa
  • Wildlife Energy Interaction Group
  • TRAFFIC East / Southern Africa
  • Giant Bullfrog Project
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_memory#Principles_of_operation (apparently it's weird transistors, not capacitors)
gollark: They use flash storage, which... has electrons stored in tiny capacitor things where the charge persists for ages, or something.
gollark: There's a new ATX12VO standard which drops everything but 12V because it's not used much, apparently.
gollark: For now it'd be neat if there were actually good AR glasses available. Google Glass got killed off, and there was this company called North doing similar stuff but... Google bought them and killed them off too.
gollark: Brains are very adaptable, so perhaps you could just dump data into some neurons in some useful format and hope it learns to decode it.

See also

References

  1. Endangered Wildlife Trust - Overview. Retrieved April 2009.
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