Building a more abundant future for Madagascar

 
 
 

Madagascar's natural resources are currently under serious threat, and we need to act quickly to reverse the trend of degradation that is exacerbating poverty. Let's act together to safeguard this natural heritage by mobilizing resources and inviting key stakeholders to join our efforts to combat environmental pressures and build a sustainable economy based on the management and restoration of Madagascar's landscapes and seascapes.

Bruno Rajaspera
Country Director, Africa, Madagascar

 
 

Since 1990, Conservation International-Madagascar has supported local communities in their efforts to responsibly and sustainably care for nature.

The team is working to conserve nearly 700,000 hectares of the last remaining tropical forests in the Ankeniheny-Zahamena and Ambositra-Vondrozo forest corridors. This includes working to prevent further deforestation in both corridors, implementing sustainable agricultural practices to reduce soil erosion and establishing habitat protections for endangered lemurs and other wildlife.

We are also helping drive community-led conservation efforts by establishing locally-managed fisheries in 7 Bays Marine Corridor, including Ambodivahibe Bay, in northeast Madagascar, and spearheading grasslands restoration, as part of the Herding for Health initiative, in the southwest part of the country.

When nature thrives, people thrive. That's why Conservation International-Madagascar is committed to the conservation and sustainable management of Madagascar's vital lands and seas.

 

Highlight project

© Conservation International/photo by Johnson Rakotonaiana

Restoring the forests of Lake Alaotra

The lush forests and wetlands around Lake Alaotra in northern Madagascar are home to a variety of vulnerable wildlife — including lemurs, vontsira and a rare species of diving duck —and support the rice farms and fisheries that feed local communities.

But the entire region has come under threat due to severe soil erosion as a result of large-scale deforestation in the Lake Alaotra watershed.

That's why Conservation International-Madagascar, working with the Priceless Planet Coalition, launched the Flagship Landscape Forest Restoration project — an ambitious tree-planting effort that will revitalize forests around Madagascar's largest lake.

The project’s goal is to plant and regenerate more than 12 million trees across more than 5,000 hectares of land. The project consists of four phases, with each phase beginning with tree planting, followed by a five-year monitoring period. The second phase has recently started, and the project has already planted over 7 million trees and seedlings across 3,200 hectares in the communes of Manakambahiny Est, Amparihitsokatra, Ambohidava, Ambatosoratra and Ambohitsilaozana.

To date, 20 types of forest trees have been planted, along with 19 species of fruit and fodder trees.

 

Where we work in Madagascar

 

News from Madagascar

Cacao plantations: Home sweet home for Madagascar’s lemurs?

This post was updated on October 2, 2019.

Lemurs are making themselves at home in Madagascar’s cacao and vanilla plantations, a new study finds.

New research funded by Conservation International (CI) indicates that carefully planned and well-managed shade-grown cacao and vanilla farms could serve as viable habitats for lemurs and other wildlife — a glimmer of hope for a country where 70 percent of the population lives in poverty, 90 percent of original vegetation has been lost and one iconic lemur species’ population has plummeted 95 percent since 2000.

A team from the Bristol Zoological Society (BZS) and the University of the West of England along with Malagasy colleagues found five species — three endangered — moving, resting and grooming among the branches of cacao and their shade trees on 61 farms in the Ambanja region of northwest Madagascar. BZS and Malagasy researchers also made the first documented observations of lemurs living in vanilla plantations and found five species on farms grown close to areas of natural forest and amid natural vegetation.

“There is a lot of evidence of the value of shade-grown coffee for bird conservation, but this is the first study we have that shows the role that cacao and vanilla farms can play as habitat for lemur species,” said Curan Bonham, an investment officer for Conservation International Ventures. “This research underscores the importance of and need for greater investment to promote sustainable production systems as part of a holistic landscape conservation strategy.”

Through discussions with farmers, the study found little evidence of negative interactions between the animals and local people. In fact, the lemurs may actually help out the farmers by eating insects seen as pests on the farms and also by dispersing seeds from shade trees. Most important: None of the lemurs was observed feeding on cacao pods or beans.

“This co-existence is encouraging,” said Amanda Webber, a co-author of the study from BZS — but further research was needed, she explained, to determine whether cacao plantations serve as core habitat for the lemurs, or if the animals are using them merely as highways to nearby forested areas.

The scientists set up camera traps, carried out nighttime surveys, followed the lemurs on foot and used special equipment to identify their calls. The five species of lemurs (Northern giant mouse lemur, Sambirano mouse lemur, Sambirano fork-marked lemur, dwarf lemurs and Gray’s sportive lemur) were also discovered among albizia, mango, marula and banana trees on farms that work with and supply Madécasse, a direct-trade chocolate and vanilla company. 

As global demand for chocolate and vanilla grows, the potential to improve agroforestry for the benefit of wildlife and forests is substantial, according to Tim McCollum, founder and CEO of Madécasse. For example, more benefits could be generated for endangered wildlife and ecosystems by intercropping the right fruit and native trees, reducing loss of native forest and tracking progress, through a combination of local knowledge and ecological perspective.

“Poverty is the root cause of habitat destruction in Madagascar,” McCollum said. “Any serious conservation needs to solve poverty at the village level. This research is the first step in linking lemur conservation and renewable income generation for cacao and vanilla farmers.”

Cassandra Kane is the communications manager for CI’s Conservation Finance Division.

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Hear directly from Conservation International employees on the ground in Madagascar, in French.

 

References

  1. Fedele, G., Donatti, C. I., Bornacelly, I., & Hole, D. G. (2021). Nature-dependent people: Mapping human direct use of nature for basic needs across the tropics. ScienceDirect, 71. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102368
  2. Conservation International (2021, November). Irrecoverable Carbon. Retrieved January 2025, from https://www.conservation.org/projects/irrecoverable-carbon
  3. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. (2024). Table 8a: Total, threatened, and EX & EW endemic species in each country [Fact sheet]. https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/summary-statistics#Summary%20Tables