Kruger National Park, South Africa
The Kruger National Park, the largest national park in South Africa,
is using 125 CyberTracker units to collect more than a million records a
year. CyberTracker monitoring plays a crucial role in the Strategic
Adaptive Management framework of the Park.
The Kruger National
Park has adopted a management policy known as Strategic Adaptive
Management, which explicitly includes checking against short, medium and
long-term goals. The monitoring programme involves:
Data include distribution of mega herbivores, ungulates, carnivores, small mammals, birds and reptiles; location of spoor of rare species; availability of surface water; location of diseased or injured animals and associated causes; carcasses and possible cause of death; location of poaching activities; fence line breakages; impact of elephants on sensitive tree species; distribution of invasive alien species; fire mapping; vegetation surveys for long-term ecological monitoring; annual veld condition assessments; and collaborative research projects. Data collection aims to benefit both the objectives of management of the KNP and scientific research as outlined in the KNP Management Plan. For more information please see: Kruger National Park: SANParks' CyberTracker - Conservation in the Palms of our Hands Kruger National Park - Plea for Support - SANParks CyberTracker Electronic Ranger Diaries - The Kruger National Park CyberTracker Program, Sandra Mac Fadyen, January 2005. The Fuller Context of Monitoring, Harry Biggs, April 2002. Kruger National Park: Latest Big Five Sightings Kruger National Park: Geographic Information Systems
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