| Publications |
| Official Partnership Documents |
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The key GRASP documents were endorsed at ministerial level at the 2005 intergovernmental meeting. At the same meeting, the GRASP Council directed the Executive Committee together with the secretariat to develop a Programme of Action to serve as a framework of GRASP related activities until the next Council meeting in approximately two years time. |
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| National and Regional Action Plans |
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National Great Apes Survival Plans
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IUCN Species Survival Commission Primate Specialist Group Regional Action Plans
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| Regional Action Plan for West African Chimpanzees |
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Regional Action Plan for the Conservation of Chimpanzees and Gorillas in Western Equatorial Africa |
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| Newsletters |
The GRASP Newsletter is published in English and French twice a year. The GRASP
Newsletter provides recent information about the great apes as well as information
about recent projects and news from the projects and partners. For print copies
of the newsletter, please write to grasp@unep.org |
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| GRASP Partnership Updates. |
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GRASP issues regular updates to the entire Partnership.
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The Last Stand of the Orangutan, State of Emergency |
| World Atlas of Great Apes and their Conservation |
The World Atlas of Great Apes and their Conservation was launched by Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director of UNEP on September 1, 2005, at the Zoological Society of London, Regents Park, London, with presentations by Lera Miles, UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre, co-editor of the Atlas, Glyn Davies, Director of Conservation Programmes, Zoological Society of London and Mark Leighton, Chair, GRASP Interim Scientific Commission. A second launch was done on 9 th September 2005 in Kinshasa , Democratic Republic of the Congo, at the Intergovernmental Meeting on Great Apes and First GRASP Council Meeting. |
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Click here for the press release Poverty Will Make the Great Apes History
The UNEP-World Conservation Monitoring Centre (WCMC) World
Atlas of Great Apes and their Conservation provides a comprehensive review
of what is currently known about the great apes, including a description of
their ecology, distribution and key threats that each great ape species faces.
The Atlas includes an assessment of the current status of great ape species
in each of the countries where they are found, together with an overview of
current conservation action and priorities, illustrated with maps. The World
Atlas of Great Apes and their Conservation also highlights the importance of
great apes to humans. The Atlas will be of interest to the general public, as
well as conservation groups, non-governmental organizations, governments, intergovernmental
organisations, educators and students. The publication raises the international
profile of great ape conservation efforts, and helps to guide future action.
Reviews to the 'The World Atlas of Great Apes and their Conservation' :
Gillespie Conservation Biology review -2008
David Watts Review-2007
To order your copy, click; Earthprint and IUCN World Conservation Bookstore | Also Amazon UK , Amazon US , Barnes & Noble , University of California Press
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The Great Apes
- The Road Ahead (2002):
This report assesses the impact of infrastructural development on great ape
populations, using the GLOBIO modelling approach. GLOBIO is a multivariable
special model, which estimates the extent of land area with reduced abundance
and diversity of living organisms, as a result of infrastructural development.
The model can be used to develop scenarios of possible future impacts, based
on the current rates of infrastructural development. Results of the GLOBIO analyses
indicate that more than 70% of the habitat of each of the African great ape
species has been negatively affected by infrastructural development. For orangutan,
the corresponding figure is 64%. ...More
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Technical Mission to Indonesia
Technical Mission to Thailand and Cambodia Technical Mission to Malysia
UNEP Mission
to DRC |
| Other Documents |
CITES Resolution Conf. 13.4 “Conservation of and trade in great apes”
IUCN-SSC: Best Practice Guidelines for Reducing the Impact of Commercial Logging on
Great Apes in Western Equatorial Africa [English][French] |
| Posters and Leaflets |
The GRASP Secretariat has produced a set of four posters, a general one on the
Partnership and the others featuring the three genera of apes
as follows:
Pongo - orangutan
[English][French]
Gorilla - gorilla
[English][French]
Pan – chimpanzee
[English][French]
Limited numbers of these
posters are available and can be distributed anywhere in the world from the
United Kingdom. If you belong to any organization that could make significant
use of these posters, please write to: grasp@unep.org
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GRASP leaflets summarizing the status of the great apes and the work of the
Partnership are also available to download |

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