New Publication: Wildlife Corridors Bridge Conservation and Conflict in Namibia’s KAZA TFCA

In this paper, Emilie Köhler and Michael Bollig (Project A04 Future Conservation) examine wildlife corridors in the Sobbe corridor within the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA) in Namibia. The study analyzes the creation, governance, and challenges of these corridors. Their research shows that while human-elephant conflict is a key issue, it occurs more frequently near roads than within corridors, and the biggest threat to wildlife corridors stems from agricultural expansion and local land disputes.



Abstract

Wildlife corridors are seen as essential environmental infrastructure guaranteeing species connectivity and biological diversity in contemporary conservation landscapes. Harking back to recent social science literature on infrastructure in general and environmental infrastructure in particular this contribution will analyze one contested wildlife corridor as part of a large conservationist project, the giant Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA), founded in 2011, and with 520,000 km2 the world’s largest conservation area. Using elephant corridors as an example, we will examine how they come into being and how they are governed. Only at first sight wildlife corridors appear as something entirely natural, constituted by the daily or seasonal movements of large herbivores. Indeed, elephants for example, produce paths through the savannah that are well visible in the landscape.

Elephamt paths pictured from bird's eye view
Elephant paths from bird’s eye view. Photo taken by Emilie Köhler

But to make them wildlife corridors in conservation projects human action is needed: we will analyse wildlife corridors as hybrids of wildlife produced paths, administrative action and modern technologies of wildlife monitoring. As we will show in some detail focusing on one important Namibian wildlife corridor, the so-called Sobbe corridor, the human-elephant conflict is a real challenge leading to local resistance to corridors. Surprisingly, though, conflict is more frequent along the linear settlements close to roads, than on wildlife corridors, instances of human-elephant conflict is a prominent topic linked to corridors. The most significant challenge to corridors though comes from the rapid expansion of agricultural fields as well as from local conflicts over land ownership.




Reference

Köhler, E., Bollig, M. 2025. Elephant corridors in the Kavango-Zambezi transfrontier conservation area (KAZA TFCA): environmental infrastructures for a greener anthropocene in Namibia’s Mudumu landscape. Review of Regional Research. DOI

More CRC News

group foto taken at a workshop

Dissemination Workshop in Dodoma: Discussing Futures of Rural Transformation

On 25 April 2025, the Collaborative Research Centre (CRC) Future Rural Africa co-hosted a Dissemination Workshop in Dodoma, Tanzania together with the German Institute of ...
Read More »
Thumbnail of a video featuring anna-katharina hornidge

Video: Anna-Katharina Hornidge on Research, Training and Value Chain Development in Tanzania

Anna-Katharina Hornidge is the director of the German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS) and researcher in Future Rural Africa Project B05 Science Futures. She ...
Read More »
geothermal energy plant in Kenya

New Publication: The Unintended Socio-Economic Transformations of Kenya’s Green Energy Boom

In this new publication, Clemens Greiner, Britta Klagge, Samuel Owuor (Project C02 Energy Futures) alognside Cynthia Wamukota and Isaiah Nyandega examine the unintended socio-economic impacts of ...
Read More »
Group photo with the minister, Deputy Minsiter, Parmanent Secretary, the Board members

Professor Theobald Frank Theodory Appointed to NEMC Board of Directors

We are proud to share that Professor Dr. Theobald Frank Theodory of Mzumbe University, Tanzania, and cooperation partner of Project C03 Green Futures, has been ...
Read More »
image of an african savannah

New Publication: How Land-Use Change Shapes Carbon Storage in African Savannas

In this article, Liana Kindermann, Alexandra Sandhage-Hofmann, Wulf Amelung, Jan Börner, J., Ezequiel Fabiano, Maximilian Meyer and Anja Linstädter (Project A01 Future Carbon Storage) and ...
Read More »
Scroll to Top