Environment
Apr 30, 2026
Protecting Lions and Communities: How Biologist Moreangels Mbizah Tackles Human‑Wildlife Conflict
In 2014 a lion entered a Zimbabwean village, killing a child and prompting conservation biologist M…
2014 Hwange Incident Sparks a Shift Toward Community‑Centric Conservation
While tracking lion movements for her PhD in Hwange National Park, Mbizah received a GPS alert that a lion had wandered into a nearby village. The animal killed a seven‑year‑old boy before wildlife authorities shot it. The tragedy made Mbizah realise that protecting lions required protecting the people living on the park’s edge.
Lion Population Decline and Economic Stakes for Rural Households
90% of the historic lion range across Africa has been lost.
Fewer than 20,000 lions remain in the wild.
In Zimbabwe’s mid‑Zambezi valley a cow is worth up to $300 and a goat $30.
Average household income is about $108 per month.
When predators kill livestock, families lose a vital source of income, prompting retaliatory killings that further endanger the remaining lion population.
Human‑Wildlife Conflict Undermines Livelihoods and Biodiversity in the Mid‑Zambezi
Livestock represents the primary wealth for communities in the corridor linking Zimbabwe, Zambia and Mozambique. Losses on both sides—people losing cattle, wildlife losing individuals—create a vicious cycle that threatens both biodiversity and rural economies.
Scaling Community Guardians Could Redefine Conservation Across Africa
Mbizah’s organisation, Wildlife Conservation Action (WCA), trains local "community guardians" to monitor GPS signals and raise alarms when predators approach. Early warning systems allow herders to protect their herds, reducing retaliatory killings and giving lions a safer corridor.
If the model expands, it could provide a replicable blueprint for other regions where human‑wildlife conflict erodes both conservation goals and livelihoods.
#Moreangels Mbizah
#Wildlife Conservation Action
#Hwange National Park
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