Other Animals
African grey parrot, Congo grey, grey parrot
Image courtesy of Ifeanyi Ezenwa

Of all the parrot species, African greys are one of the most heavily trafficked for export. In Nigeria, the greys are further threatened because of strong competition for habitat with palm oil farmers and corporations. With ever more people in the world, there is more demand for palm oil, which inevitably leads to less space for grey parrots. Sometimes it takes a special person to look out passionately for a particular species. Enter Ifeanyi Ezenwa, a Nigerian conservationist who started out with a love for nature at a very early age, but it was a volunteer conservation project exploring the African grey population, threats, and trafficking which sparked his desire to do more for this most special species.

Nigeria landscape
Image courtesy of Ifeanyi Ezenwa

In 2022, Ifeanyi applied for and was awarded a $15K grant from the Conservation Leadership Program to study possible ways of reconciling the development of palm oil plantations with habitat needs for endangered greys. Since Nigeria’s Trade and Investment Ministry has plans to create an additional three million hectares of palm oil estates by 2027, this will pose an even greater threat to the remaining habitat for greys and other large frugivorous birds, and a conservation plan is imperative.

Saving Land to Save African Greys

African grey parrots, grey parrots, greys
Image courtesy of Ifeanyi Ezenwa

Ifeanyi has his work cut out for him – navigating the needs of government, community, and business stakeholders. He hopes to develop strategies for sparing land areas with high conservation value from farming exploitation. In addition, he will strategize possible ways that farmers and African greys can share land by keeping key resources for parrots within palm oil commercial areas. The goal – sustainability for both purposes, no small task. As Ifeanyi rightly says “the expansion without due consideration of the welfare of biodiversity will lead to the destruction of remaining ecosystems that support wildlife.”  African greys are considered a flagship species. If they can’t survive the expansion of palm oil production, what will this mean for other animal species in Nigeria?  We wish Ifeanyi much success with this planning project essential to the survival of the African greys in Nigeria!

Lafeber’s GLOBAL PARROT grant this month goes to support Ifeanyi’s Nigerian planning project, via the World Parrot Trust. This donation will directly help the African greys of Nigeria. You can learn more about Ifeanyi Ezenwa’s work here (link below). If you would also like to help, go to https://www.parrots.org/donate and designate your donation for this purpose.

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