ZimParks Launches Landmark Wildlife Translocation Drive to Revive Matusadona Ecosystem

Zimparks Spokesperson Tinashe Farawo

In a bold and science-driven move to reinvigorate Zimbabwe’s protected ecosystems, the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (ZimParks), in collaboration with the African Parks Network and The Matusadona Conservation Trust, has embarked on a multi-year wildlife translocation programme to restore the ecological integrity of Matusadona National Park (MNP) and the broader Sebungwe landscape.

The programme, which kicked off in early July 2025, marks one of the most comprehensive conservation efforts in recent years and is poised to serve as a model for biodiversity restoration across Southern Africa. It will see the systematic relocation of key herbivore species to MNP, where wildlife populations were significantly depleted over past decades due to poaching, habitat degradation, and ecological imbalance.

Under permits issued by ZimParks, the first wave of relocations includes 10 eland from Tsetse Island in Lake Kariba Recreational Park and 50 buffalos to Matusadona. In a parallel move, 20 sable antelope will be relocated from Sibilobilo Safari Area, with additional sable, eland, and the majestic roan antelope also set to be sourced from well-managed wildlife populations across the country.

The driving force behind this ambitious translocation strategy is the re-establishment of viable, self-sustaining herbivore populations that can rejuvenate the park’s ecosystem dynamics. ZimParks and its partners are implementing this in alignment with ecological assessments that ensure donor populations remain healthy and that the receiving environment is fully capable of supporting the reintroduced species.

More than just a relocation effort, the initiative represents a broader conservation blueprint for Zimbabwe. The programme is tied to enhanced law enforcement, biodiversity monitoring, and community development projects, all aimed at building resilience for the park and the communities surrounding it. These actions are expected to increase anti-poaching success rates, improve natural resource governance, and generate livelihood opportunities that support conservation objectives.

Matusadona National Park, once one of Zimbabwe’s most iconic safari destinations, is undergoing a renaissance through infrastructural upgrades, stakeholder partnerships, and ecosystem rewilding. This translocation programme is a pillar of that transformation, and its success could reposition the park as a premier destination for eco-tourism, research, and sustainable development.

The integrated approach, balancing ecological restoration with community upliftment, is central to modern conservation practices. ZimParks and its partners are demonstrating that conservation must go beyond fence-line protection; it must empower people, restore natural balance, and create enduring value for generations to come.

As Zimbabwe scales its climate resilience and biodiversity strategies under Vision 2030, initiatives like the Matusadona wildlife translocation underscore the country’s potential as a leader in conservation innovation across Africa.

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