The okapi is found only in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Though this endangered giraffe relative is a culturally respected animal and has been protected in the country since 1933, slash-and-burn agriculture, illegal gold mining, and bushmeat poaching threaten its existence.
The quiet, beautiful, and enigmatic okapi has only been known to Western scientists since 1901.
The quiet, beautiful and enigmatic okapi has only been known to Western scientists since 1901 due to its secretive and reclusive nature. However, the local people in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the only country where the okapi is found, have known about the animal for thousands of years. Though this endangered giraffe relative is a culturally respected animal and has been protected in the country since 1933, slash-and-burn agriculture, illegal gold mining and bushmeat poaching threaten its existence.
For over 30 years, the Okapi Conservation Project has never faltered in its ability to withstand civil wars, rebel attacks and insecurity in an area ripe with political strife and uncertainty. It’s this standing loyalty that OCP has developed a strong trust within the community, allowing their conservation programs to thrive and expand under arduous conditions. Throughout DRC’s turmoil, the Okapi Conservation Project has remained the primary supporter of the Okapi Wildlife Reserve and protector of okapi.
Recently, OCP managed to capture the first known footage of a wild okapi feeding in the Okapi Wildlife Reserve, just a few short miles from Epulu, the village where OCP is stationed.
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"The okapi are the most spectacularly beautiful animal..."
Lucas Meers talks to TV network HITN about how Okapi Conservation Project works with communities in the Democratic Republic of Congo to address the threats that are endangering this unusual and spectacularly beautiful animal.
The okapi holds a special reverence within the people’s hearts in the Congo. This is very important in conservation: the local people must have a real love for the animal.
John Lukas
John Lukas, President
John, who is currently Conservation and Science Manager for the Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens and President of the Okapi Conservation Project and the International Rhino Foundation, has over 25 years of international conservation experience. From his work with okapi in the Congo to saving rhinos in Sumatra, John has seen first-hand the importance of integrating the needs of local people into conservation strategies.
OCP supports and works with the ICCN (Institute in Congo for the Conservation of Nature) to ensure the availability of rapid response to threats in the Okapi Wildlife Reserve. ICCN wardens, rangers, and guards share a wide range of protection and law-enforcement responsibilities—collecting snares, evicting miners, pursuing and detaining poachers, monitoring agricultural expansion, and engaging communities throughout the DRC in conservation awareness and education.
Tree Nurseries and Reforestation
OCP supports tree nurseries around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve to provide nitrogen-fixing and nut-producing trees that help both farmers and wildlife. Students also help plant trees around their schools, a useful and educational practice teaching forest protection to the youth. All of OCP’s nurseries employ local people, stewarding the seeds of habitat corridors for native wildlife, including okapi.
Monitoring the Elusive Forest Giraffe
By using motion-sensing camera traps, OCP monitors the presence of okapi and other elusive species within the rainforest to determine population and habitat health. OCP strongly values the involvement of the indigenous Mbuti community in monitoring activities because of their unique history, relationship, and knowledge of the rainforest they have lived in for thousands of years.
Radio Broadcasts
Radio broadcasts are the preferred method of sharing information in the region, and the most productive way to connect with many people over a large insecure area. OCP provides education programming broadcasts on five local stations, covering topics like wildlife rangers, climate change, student participation in conservation, forest protection, and the management of the Okapi Wildlife Reserve.
Women’s Groups
Women’s Groups actively improve food security, safeguard clean water sources, and provide alternative income generating opportunities through small business enterprises. OCP supports Women’s Groups around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve with resources like administrative support, sewing machines and materials, as well as bean and vegetable seeds for community gardens.
Agroforestry
Traditional farming in Okapi Wildlife Reserve involved slash and burn agriculture, which depletes topsoil. OCP’s agroforestry program promotes sustainable farming practices while reducing dependence on forest resources. By introducing alternative crops, better farming methods, and technologies, the program makes villagers’ lives less volatile, healthier, and more prosperous.
Wildlife Protection
General economic and civil instability of the Democratic Republic of Congo makes it very difficult for the government to address wildlife threats. OCP supports and works with the Institute in Congo for the Conservation of Nature (ICCN), with specialized training in wildlife management, communications, technology, and language, to ensure they’re prepared for rapid response to wildlife threats.
Health Clinics
Outbreaks of Ebola and COVID-19 have made clear that healthcare is the most important need surrounding the Okapi Wildlife Reserve. Through the Okapi Dispensary, and provisions to local health clinics, OCP improves access to doctors and nurses, even providing medical care and transport of emergency cases to regional hospitals.
World Okapi Day
World Okapi Day is a celebration around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve, advocating for community participation in their conservation programs. The day is centered around celebrating okapi as a flagship species to protect the entire forest ecosystem in which it lives. Exciting activities are planned in six villages around the Reserve with children, women, and the Mbuti people.
OCP supports and works with the ICCN (Institute in Congo for the Conservation of Nature) to ensure the availability of rapid response to threats in the Okapi Wildlife Reserve. ICCN wardens, rangers, and guards share a wide range of protection and law-enforcement responsibilities—collecting snares, evicting miners, pursuing and detaining poachers, monitoring agricultural expansion, and engaging communities throughout the DRC in conservation awareness and education.
OCP supports tree nurseries around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve to provide nitrogen-fixing and nut-producing trees that help both farmers and wildlife. Students also help plant trees around their schools, a useful and educational practice teaching forest protection to the youth. All of OCP’s nurseries employ local people, stewarding the seeds of habitat corridors for native wildlife, including okapi.
By using motion-sensing camera traps, OCP monitors the presence of okapi and other elusive species within the rainforest to determine population and habitat health. OCP strongly values the involvement of the indigenous Mbuti community in monitoring activities because of their unique history, relationship, and knowledge of the rainforest they have lived in for thousands of years.
Radio broadcasts are the preferred method of sharing information in the region, and the most productive way to connect with many people over a large insecure area. OCP provides education programming broadcasts on five local stations, covering topics like wildlife rangers, climate change, student participation in conservation, forest protection, and the management of the Okapi Wildlife Reserve.
Women’s Groups actively improve food security, safeguard clean water sources, and provide alternative income generating opportunities through small business enterprises. OCP supports Women’s Groups around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve with resources like administrative support, sewing machines and materials, as well as bean and vegetable seeds for community gardens.
Traditional farming in Okapi Wildlife Reserve involved slash and burn agriculture, which depletes topsoil. OCP’s agroforestry program promotes sustainable farming practices while reducing dependence on forest resources. By introducing alternative crops, better farming methods, and technologies, the program makes villagers’ lives less volatile, healthier, and more prosperous.
General economic and civil instability of the Democratic Republic of Congo makes it very difficult for the government to address wildlife threats. OCP supports and works with the Institute in Congo for the Conservation of Nature (ICCN), with specialized training in wildlife management, communications, technology, and language, to ensure they’re prepared for rapid response to wildlife threats.
Outbreaks of Ebola and COVID-19 have made clear that healthcare is the most important need surrounding the Okapi Wildlife Reserve. Through the Okapi Dispensary, and provisions to local health clinics, OCP improves access to doctors and nurses, even providing medical care and transport of emergency cases to regional hospitals.
World Okapi Day is a celebration around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve, advocating for community participation in their conservation programs. The day is centered around celebrating okapi as a flagship species to protect the entire forest ecosystem in which it lives. Exciting activities are planned in six villages around the Reserve with children, women, and the Mbuti people.
Impact by the Numbers
120
schools provided with study materials about human health
and it's connection to wildlife by OCP's Education team
100k
trees planted by OCP's Agroforestry team
$250 will support sustainable livelihood programs for one family living in or around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve for one year.
$500 will support three ICCN rangers who protect okapi by collecting snares and pursuing poachers and other illegal activities.
$1,000 will provide a month’s worth of fuel and maintenance for all motorbikes of the OCP educators who travel the Reserve educating the local people about protecting the forest and conserving okapi.
John Lukas Shares What it's Like Protecting Okapi
For over 30 years, the Okapi Conservation Project has never faltered in its ability to protect the elusive okapi. John Lukas shares updates from the field and how OCP is continuing their work to protect okapi.
News & Stories
New Footage of Elusive Okapi Recorded
Earlier this year, members of the Okapi Conservation Project team ventured into the deep forests of the Okapi Wildlife Reserve...
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A United Front Against Okapi Trafficking
The dust diffused in the afternoon sun as Congolese authorities lugged several containers of illegal cargo into the light. Each...
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Inspiring Children to Protect the Okapi Wildlife Reserve
Today is the United Nations' International Day of Forests, which raises awareness about the importance of Earth's forests. In the...
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An Extraordinary Friendship
As the morning light reached through the canopy, Richard Gelo turned to his crops and waited for signs of movement....
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How Providing Healthcare Supplies Opens the Door for Conservation
Okapi Conservation Project has seen what a lack of access to proper healthcare imposes on a community. While OCP’s focus...
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How Radio Broadcasts Save Lives Around Okapi Wildlife Reserve
Rural communities surrounding the Okapi Wildlife Reserve have limited access to news and essential information due to an underdeveloped communications...
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Mbuti Pygmies Assist with Monitoring Okapi
During the most recent trip to Epulu, John Lukas of Okapi Wildlife Project spoke about the importance of involving the...
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2019: A Year in Photos
Wildlife amazes us. Their resilience, natural athleticism, and ability to evoke many emotions within us are just a few of...
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Two Chimp Infants Confiscated and Sent to Lwiro Primate Sanctuary
In the past year, a total of five chimpanzee infants and one baboon have been confiscated by ICCN rangers in...
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Protecting Wildlife: The Untapped Solution to the Climate Crisis
We’ve all seen the headlines: Climate change. Ocean acidification. Biodiversity loss. Mass species extinction. We know we are living through...
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Okapi Conservation Project: Field Report June 2019
Travel to Epulu has become more difficult with DRC not allowing flights from Uganda to land at Bunia Airport. Getting...
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Okapi and Forest Elephants are Sharing the Fight Against Poachers
In the beating heart of Africa, water cascades into the towering, leafy canopies of the Okapi Wildlife Reserve, where a...
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Orphaned Primates Get a Second Chance
Pilot Anthony Caere navigated the snug, two-seater airplane through a light mist that cloaked the forest below. Sitting shotgun were...
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A Snapshot of the 2019 Spring Wildlife Conservation Expo
On Saturday, April 13th, we hosted the Spring Wildlife Conservation Expo, bringing together some of the world’s most pioneering conservationists...
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Thirty Years of Okapi Conservation
Okapi Conservation Project (OCP) has worked amidst political strife and uncertainty in the Democratic Republic of Congo for over 30...
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A Snapshot of the Fall 2018 Wildlife Conservation Expo
October in San Francisco signals the return of our flagship Wildlife Conservation Expo, providing wildlife enthusiasts with the opportunity to...
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Camera Trapping the Unusual Okapi
Located nearly in the center of Africa, bisected by the equator, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is a nation...
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A Message from Okapi Conservation Project for World Ranger Day
Today is World Ranger Day—a time where we pause to reflect on the many lives lost in the quest to...
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4 Ways Helping People is Saving Rare Wildlife
This article, originally posted on news.nationalgeographic.com, features five WCN Conservation Partners who work with people to save wildlife.
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Celebrating the Weird and Wonderful
Some animal species look a little weird, and there’s nothing wrong with that. In fact, there’s something wonderful about the...
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How Okapi Conservationists Saved Grey Parrots
Despite his best efforts to smuggle dozens of African grey parrots out of the Democratic Republic of Congo, a wildlife...
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Incident at Nazzaro
John Lukas is president of the Okapi Conservation Project and the International Rhino Foundation, Conservation and Science Manager for the...
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Okapi Added to IUCN's Endangered Species List
The gentle, elegant okapi - the "forest giraffe of the Congo" has officially been reclassified as 'Endangered' in the newly...
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Rebel Leader Responsible for Okapi Attack Killed in Congo
Deep in the beautiful but lawless forests of the Democratic Republic of Congo, a notorious poacher known as Morgan has...
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Recovery Continues Around the Okapi Wildlife Reserve
In June 2012 a group of poachers and illegal gold miners, labeled as rebels, attacked the Okapi Wildlife Reserve and...
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Recovery Continues in the Congo
Last June a group of poachers and illegal gold miners, labeled as rebels, attacked the Okapi Wildlife Reserve and the...
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Safeguarding the Okapi Wildlife Reserve
The gentle, shy okapi lives only in the forests of the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country torn by war...
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Wildlife on Camera- Okapis
The Hidden World of the Shy Okapi- The regal okapi makes its home deep in the Ituri forest of the...
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World Okapi Day—Bringing Awareness To The Coolest Animal You’ve Never Heard Of
Tuesday, October 18, 2016, marked the inaugural World Okapi Day to bring awareness to one of the most elusive large...
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