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The Mkomazi Game Reserve
The Mkomazi Game Reserve is a magnificent, 1,262 square mile game reserve in northern Tanzania. Remote and inaccessible, it was established in 1951, but never attracted the financial support provided for the better-known wildlife strongholds such as the Ngorongoro and the Serengeti National Parks. Only since 1989, when the Tanzanian Government reexamined the reserve's status and designated it a National Priority Project, has its true significance and importance been recognized.
The Mkomazi Game Reserve is a spectacular wilderness. Within sight to the northwest is Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest summit.
To the south, the Pare and Usumbara Mountains form a dramatic backdrop, and to the north, Kenya's vast Tsavo National Park shares a

Click to enlarge Photo by George Newman OPEN
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border with Mkomazi, making common ground for migratory herds of elephant, oryx and zebra during the wet season. Together with Tsavo,
it forms one of the largest and most important protected ecosystems on earth.
By 1988, Mkomazi was in steep decline. It represented a classic example of degradation. Heavy poaching had wiped out its black rhino and
elephant populations. Overgrazing, deliberate burning and illegal hunting had also taken their toll. At one time, it was even feared that the reserve
might be de-gazetted and released for subsistence agriculture. The Tanzanian Government then reexamined the status of Mkomazi Game Reserve,

Click to enlarge Photo by Billy Dowd
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with a view to ensuring the complete rehabilitation of this vast area and the reintroduction of its endangered species, and was awarded National
Priority Project status. The Government invited Tony Fitzjohn to to work with them on a program of habitat restoration and the reintroduction of
endangered species. In 1989, the Mkomazi Project was born.
The George Adamson Wildlife Preservation Trusts have been the Tanzanian Government's main partner in this unique and important endeavor.
Since 1988, the majority of the resources of the Trusts have been devoted to the project. Roads, boundaries and airstrips have been cleared, an

Click to enlarge Photo by Billy Dowd
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entire radio network installed, water sources sited and pumped, dams constructed and desilted, rangers recruited and equipped, and well over
fifteen hundred air-hours flown on anti-poaching patrols. The captive-breeding program for the African Wild Dog has been established, and a rhino
sanctuary has been constructed and stocked. Both form part of the Tanzanian Government's policy on endangered species. The result has been
one of spectacular success. One of the most fragile, threatened and beautiful parts of Africa has been reborn.
Already, the years of hard work have had a profound effect on the animals living in the reserve. At the end of the 1980's, after two decades of slaughter at the hands of ivory poachers, only eleven elephants were left in Mkomazi. Today, during the rainy season, close on 1,000 elephants range freely across the reserve, including many herds of breeding females with their young.
Information and large top photo by the Mkomazi Game Reserve
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