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There’s a new challenge facing the rhino population.
In addition to poaching, rhinos in Zimbabwe's Lowveld are under threat due to a shortage of land – meaning people from local communities have to share conservation land with wildlife.
The Great Land Share Project will help educate and support local communities to live and prosper alongside rhinos, helping both humans and animals to thrive side by side.
This innovative pilot project has the potential to transform the local economy and safeguard wild spaces – for people and rhinos – for generations to come.
£250 can train a Wildlife Guardian to educate and support people living near rhinos in the Lowveld.
£60 can pay a Junior Rhino Monitor's salary for a week.
£25 can pay for a local school to receive 125 exercise books for their students - wildlife guardians of the future
£15 can pay for 18 drums of helicopter fuel for rhino monitoring by air
£5 can pay for a manual to teach farmers about fire management and livestock protection.