| Abbreviation | CI Timor-Leste |
|---|---|
| Type | NGO |
| Headquarters | Dili, Timor-Leste |
Region served | Timor-Leste |
| Fields | Biodiversity conservation; protected areas; natural resource management |
Parent organization | Conservation International |
| Website | timor-leste |
Conservation International Timor-Leste (CI Timor-Leste) is the Timor-Leste country programme of Conservation International, based in Dili. [1]
CI Timor-Leste supports biodiversity conservation and work related to protected area planning and management. Conservation International has been listed as implementing agency for a Global Environment Facility (GEF)-financed project focused on a national protected area network and priority catchment corridors. [2] [3]
Conservation International has conducted marine biodiversity surveys and rapid assessments in Timor-Leste, including work linked to marine protected area planning around Atauro Island and the Nino Konis Santana National Park area. CI Timor-Leste has also worked with the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Forestry (MALFF) on proposed marine protected areas and coastal ecosystem work on the north-west coast, including sites in Bobonaro and Liquiçá. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
The Government of Timor-Leste listed Conservation International among organisations involved in supporting marine protected area development and management for the Nino Konis Santana Marine Park area in a 2009 planning report. [9]
CI Timor-Leste was operating by 2013, when it was listed as publisher of A Rapid Marine Biological Assessment of Timor-Leste. [10]
In 2018, Conservation International was listed as the implementing agency for a GEF-financed project titled Securing the Long-term Conservation of Timor-Leste's Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services through the Implementation of a Functioning National Protected Area Network and the Improvement of Natural Resource Management in Priority Catchment Corridors, with a GEF grant of US$3,340,367. [2] [3] The project integrated community-based sustainable forest management into village-level natural resource management plans and was linked to a terminal evaluation completed in 2024. [11]
CI Timor-Leste worked with MALFF on national coordination and planning for marine protected area management, including a workshop in Dili linked to proposed marine protected areas on the north-west coast. [6] CI also supported work to build capacity for protected area management and monitoring in Timor-Leste. [12]
CI Timor-Leste's work with MALFF on the north-west marine protected area initiative included the Bobonaro sites of Sanirin, Batugade and Aidabaleten and the Liquiçá site of Vatuvou village; the four-site effort was funded by the Government of New Zealand through its embassy in Timor-Leste. [6]
Conservation International led the Kiwa RESTORE project supporting coastal and nearshore ecosystem restoration and co-management in Timor-Leste in partnership with local organisations. [8]
At the request of Timor-Leste's national government, Conservation International conducted a marine rapid biodiversity assessment of Timor-Leste's northern coastline in August 2012, focusing on the condition and biodiversity of coral reefs in the Nino Konis Santana area. [7] The 2012 assessment recorded 741 coral-reef fish species across 20 sites, including a new dwarfgoby later described as Eviota santanai. [7] Conservation International also published a rapid-assessment report under the Coral Triangle Support Partnership in connection with this work. [10]
Conservation International surveyed Atauro in 2012 and recommended that the Timor-Leste government consider marine protected area development for the island; the government later requested a dedicated Atauro-focused survey in 2016. [7] The 2016 survey around Atauro recorded unusually high reef-fish species richness per site and was discussed in connection with proposals for designating Atauro and its waters as a marine protected area, including multi-use zoning and no-take areas linked to fisheries recovery, livelihoods and ecotourism development. [4] [5]
Conservation International recorded very high reef-fish diversity counts in Atauro assessments, including a 2012 site total of 294 reef-fish species at Belio Barrier Reef; the 2016 survey recorded an additional 261 reef-fish species not previously known from Atauro Island and brought the total reef-fish diversity count for Timor-Leste to 894 species. [7] The Atauro dwarfgoby (Eviota atauroensis) was collected in Berau Bay, Atauro Island, from shallow subtidal (0.5-2 m) coral bommies during CI survey work and technical assistance requested by the Timor-Leste government. [7] Vila-Maumeta in Atauro was listed among designated marine protected areas in Timor-Leste. [6]