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The Whitley Awards 2024

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2024

Kasia Brookes*
Affiliation:
Whitley Fund for Nature, London, UK

Abstract

Type
Conservation News
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC BY 4.0.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Fauna & Flora International

The Whitley Fund for Nature (WFN) has announced the six conservation leaders receiving the Whitley Awards 2024. The Whitley Awards ceremony was held at the Royal Geographical Society and was also broadcast online. These awards are worth GBP 50,000 each in project funding over 1 year. The 2024 Whitley Award Winners are Leory Ignacio, Guyana (Red alert: land and fire management to protect Guyana's red siskins); Naomi Longa, Papua New Guinea (Empowering women to conserve coral reefs); Kuenzang Dorji, Bhutan (Living with langurs: promoting co-existence); Aristide Kamla, Cameroon (Restoring Lake Ossa: improving freshwater management for African manatees); Raju Acharya, Nepal (An Action Plan to safeguard Central Nepal's owls); and Fernanda Abra, Brazil (Building bridges: primate canopy crossings in the Amazon).

In addition, a Whitley Award alumnus is chosen to receive the Whitley Gold Award in recognition of their outstanding contribution to conservation. Worth GBP 100,000, this prize was presented to 2017 Whitley Award winner Purnima Devi Barman of the Indian NGO Aaranyak for her work to conserve the greater adjutant stork Leptoptilos dubius—known locally as Hargila—whose numbers have quadrupled in Assam to more than 1,800 thanks to a dynamic campaign she masterminded and that she is expanding to include 20,000 women. This stork was recategorized from Endangered to Near Threatened on the IUCN Red List in December 2023 in a success story that has transformed the outlook for the bird as well as the lives of rural women known as ‘stork sisters’. Purnima aims to increase the stork's population from the estimated global population of 3,180 to 5,000 by 2030, expanding conservation efforts across its range to Cambodia and the state of Bihar in East India. She will also establish a collaborative network to expand conservation education and knowledge exchange, joining forces with the Ethical Conservation Alliance, pioneered by fellow WFN alumni. This alliance aims to support conservation practitioners around the world to build respectful partnerships with local and Indigenous communities.

The Whitley Fund for Nature was established to accelerate the work of grassroots conservationists, and has funded more than 200 conservationists in Latin America, Africa, Europe and Asia since it was founded by Edward Whitley OBE 30 years ago. It has awarded GBP 23 million in conservation grants. By including local people as stakeholders in saving ecosystems, today's conservationists are helping the world's most vulnerable people to tackle climate change, land grabs, food insecurity and water scarcity.

The Whitley Fund for Nature has a long-term commitment to conservation leaders. Winners can apply for Continuation Funding grants of up to GBP 100,000 over 2 years to scale up their work or respond to new threats. Winners also gain lifelong membership of the global alumni network, giving them access to like-minded leaders and opportunities to foster collaborations. For more information on the Whitley Awards or how to apply, visit whitleyaward.org.