Karl Amman.
Karl Amman is one of the world's top environmental journalists - he was awarded the prestigious Dolly Green Award for Artistic Achievement at the Genesis Awards in 1997, for his work on the illegal bush-meat trade in Cameroon.
The Jane Goodall institute Netherlands
The Jane Goodall Institute Netherlands, is an organization focusing on nature research and protection. Our efforts are geared towards the welfare of animals in general and with specific emphasis on the Chimpanzees in Africa.
The Bio synergy Institute
The Bio synergy Institute was founded in 1994 by conservation Psychologist Anthony L. Rose to study and advance the synergy of humanity and nature. Under the BSI umbrella Dr.Rose established the Epiphany project(1994), the Bush meat project(1996), the wildlife protection fund(1999) and the Altisima press(2002) .
The Bush meat Project
Great apes -- gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos -- are being hunted to extinction for commercial bush meat in the equatorial forests of west and central Africa. A ragged far flung army of a few thousand commercial bush meat hunters supported by the timber industry infrastructure will illegally shoot and butcher more than two billion dollars worth of wildlife this year, including as many as 8,000 endangered great apes. People pay a premium to eat more great apes each year than are now kept in all the zoos and laboratories of the world. If the slaughter continues at its current pace, the remaining wild apes in Africa will be gone within the next fifteen to fifty years. With them will vanish most of the equatorial rain forest, and the cultures of indigenous people who have lived there for millennia.
The Wasmoeth Wildlife Foundation
Great apes -- gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos -- are being hunted to extinction for commercial bush meat in the equatorial forests of west and central Africa. A ragged far flung army of a few thousand commercial bush meat hunters supported by the timber industry infrastructure will illegally shoot and butcher more than two billion dollars worth of wildlife this year, including as many as 8,000 endangered great apes. People pay a premium to eat more great apes each year than are now kept in all the zoos and laboratories of the world. If the slaughter continues at its current pace, the remaining wild apes in Africa will be gone within the next fifteen to fifty years. With them will vanish most of the equatorial rain forest, and the cultures of indigenous people who have lived there for millennia.







