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Fauna & Flora International

Fauna & Flora International
Fauna and Flora International (logo).jpg
Abbreviation FFI
Formation 1903 (1903)
Type INGO
Purpose Conservation charity
Headquarters Cambridge
Chairman
Andrew Sykes
Chief Executive
Mark Rose
Main organ
Council
Website www.fauna-flora.org

Fauna & Flora International (FFI), formerly the Fauna and Flora Preservation Society, is an international conservation charity and non-governmental organization.

FFI was founded in 1903 as the Society for the Preservation of the Wild Fauna of the Empire by a group of British naturalists and American statesmen in Africa. It later became the Fauna Preservation Society, before being renamed Fauna and Flora Preservation Society in 1981. The goal of the society was to safeguard the future of southern Africa’s large mammal populations, which had declined alarmingly due to over-hunting and habitat encroachment. Working in tandem with landowners, government and sport hunters, the Society helped pass legislation which controlled hunting in vast stretches of East Africa and South Africa. This ultimately paved the way for the formation of National Parks, such as Kruger National Park and Serengeti National Park.

FFI has been referred to by many historians as the world's first conservation society, and the society's early work in Africa was also trend-setting in ecotourism.

The Society's scientific journal – Oryx – The International Journal of Conservation – is published on its behalf by Cambridge University Press.

FFI has a seven-step approach to conserving biodiversity:

In line with its seven-step approach to conservation, Fauna & Flora International has endorsed the Forests Now Declaration, which calls for new market based mechanisms to protect tropical forests.

Fauna & Flora International is constituted under English law as a company limited by guarantee and is a registered charity with its head office in Cambridge. FFI has sister organisations in the U.S. and Australia, and a subsidiary in Singapore.


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