WWF in Senegal & West Africa
WWF in West Africa
Office
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WWF West Africa Marine Ecoregion Office (WAMER),
DakarWest Africa Marine Ecoregion Sacre Coeur III No 9639 Dakar
Senegal
+221 33 869 37 00
+221 33 869 37 02
WWF Conservation Projects in Senegal
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Supporting Environmental Journalism
Groupe Environnement Presse (GREP) plans to focus its lobbying activities on 3 main areas that require urgent action: plastic peril; degradation of ma...
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Dolphin conservation in West Africa
The waters off West Africa are home to several dolphin species, including the endemic Atlantic humpback dolphin and a largely isolated population of l...
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West African Programme for Coastal and Marine Ecosystems
The Sahelian upwelling marine ecoregion, part of the larger Canary Current ecoregion, covers a coastline of more than 2,150km ranging from rocky cliff...
Latest Senegal News
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Highlights
WWF selected to manage component 2 of the sustainable management of fish Resources project
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Environmental Education Programme in Joal Fadiouth: using paintings to sensitize
The second phase of the environmental education programme started in Joal Fadiouth
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Wamer Infos
The publication of this issue of WAMER Info, the last for 2008 and the first for 2009 provides us ...
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Battered sharks get critical listing
Four of the most commercially valuable sharks - one a staple of fish and chips - have just been ...
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WWF Signs New Agreement for African Cetaceans
WWF-West African Marine Ecoregion Programme today signed a new intergovernmental agreement to ...
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Tuna commission comes up with "a disgrace, not a decision"
The commission tasked with preventing a collapse of the Mediterranean bluefin tuna fishery today ...
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West Africa Marine Newsletter (April 08)
News, views and information from WWF's West Africa Marine Ecoregion (WAMER) programme based in ...
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New guide to reducing bycatch goes online
As a service to the long-term sustainability of both fish stocks and fishing communities, WWF has ...
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Green turtle nesting sites discovered in Senegal
A WWF survey has discovered new marine turtle nesting sites on the beaches of Senegal, prompting ...
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Sea turtles threatened by rising seas
Sea turtles lay their eggs into the beach sand. Many return to the exact beaches that they were ...
