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Okapi, Photo: John Lukas
John Lukas, Photo: GIC
John Lukas
John Lukas has been active in international conservation for over twenty-five years. He founded the Okapi Conservation Project in 1987. He is also a co-founder and serves as a Board Member of the Wildlife Conservation Network. His expansive experience with wildlife includes directorship of the White Oak Conservation Center in Yulee, Florida, a world premier facility for wildlife breeding and research on endangered species.
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Deforestation, Photo: GIC
Threats
Found only in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the okapi is a shy and elusive forest dweller and the only living relative of the giraffe. Its unusual coloration and markings, including stripes resembling a zebra, provide camouflage in the dense rainforest. It is vulnerable to pressures from natural resource extraction and over a decade of civil unrest.
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Anti-poaching patrol, Photo: GIC
Solutions
In 1992, the Okapi Conservation Project (OCP) created the Okapi Wildlife Reserve to provide shelter to the species in its native habitat, the Ituri Forest. To support the Okapi's long-term survival, OCP trains and equips wildlife guards and provides assistance to improve the lives of neighboring communities. It raises awareness of threats to the okapi and teaches alternative agricultural practices to preserve the ecosystem.
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Okapi Staff Spotlight:
Meet Muvi Yalala…
Mr. Muvi Yalala has been with the Okapi Conservation Project (OCP) since 1999 and works on their agroforestry program, which is a keystone to the overall conservation success of OCP. The agroforestry program was designed to assist farmers in improving their crop yields thereby discouraging the creation of new fields through destructive slash and burn technologies that destroy okapi habitat. More
Photo: GIC
Muvi (far right) and Okapi Conservation Project Director Rosmarie Ruf (second from the left) visit with a local farming family that is participating in the agroforestry program.
 
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Okapi Conservation Project