Sahel & Sahara

Interest Group


Every year, Sahara Conservation brings together hundreds of professionals interested in the conservation of the wildlife and landscapes of the Sahel and the Sahara.

The Sahel & Sahara Interest Group (SSIG) plays a unique role as a forum for people to meet, network, share information and build strong partnerships for the Sahel and Sahara conservation.

2025
SSIG
meeting

Tozeur, Tunisia

7 to 9 May 2025

Hosted by Tunisia’s Direction Générale des Forêt (Ministry of Agriculture, Water Resources and Fisheries), and organized by Sahara Conservation with support from Marwell Wildlife, the 2025 conference will focus on enhancing the role of community initiatives in conservation and sustainable development.

The meeting

Facilitated by Sahara Conservation, the meeting promotes collaboration and the sharing of solutions that seek to improve outcomes for biodiversity and society throughout the Sahara and the Sahel, ranging from grassroots conservation to influencing national and international policy and decision-making. Equally important is encouraging and enabling the next generation of change-makers by providing opportunities for emerging conservation researchers and actors to present their work and engage with established leaders in their fields.

2023 meeting in Almeria, Spain
2017 meeting in Saint Louis, Senegal

Participants represent a wide range of stakeholders with an interest in people and the natural world across the region, including universities and research centers, zoological institutions, museums, and non-governmental organizations, together with statutory and inter-governmental agencies.

Over a hundred participants from more than 20 countries, committed to actively sharing information, resources, and skills, attend the event every year.

History

The formation of the SSIG is at heart of Sahara Conservation’s origins.

In 2000, a small workshop of 20 people was convened in Marwell Zoo, in the United Kingdom, to explore ways to support the Convention on Migratory Species’ plan (CMS), formulated in Djerba in 1998, for the conservation of six endangered sahelo-saharian antelopes.

The Wildlife of the Sahel and the Sahara were facing an alarming, unprecedented extinction crisis, with no recognition nor action from the international conservation scene.

The workshop resulted in the establishment of the SSIG as an informal action and information sharing forum to drive and monitor work going forward

Since then, SSIG and its descendant, Sahara Conservation, have implemented dozens of projects and activities in support of the CMS action plan.

Past meetings and proceedings

Since its creation, the meeting has become an annual forum bringing together hundreds of conservation practitioners and organizations to share their work on Sahelian and Saharan species and habitats, and creating a unique and powerful network of actors from all walks of society and all range states.

Beyond the Sahel and the Sahara, SSIG interests extend to all types of arid lands fauna, flora, and traditional land-use practices necessary for the maintenance of healthy and productive desert ecosystems.

Agadir, Morocco (2024)Proceedings
Almería, Spain (2023)Proceedings
Online (2022)ProceedingsVideos
Online (2021)ProceedingsVideos
Tunis, Tunisia (2019)Program
Paris, France (2018)
Saint-Louis, Senegal (2017)Proceedings
Barcelona, Spain (2016)
Abu Dhabi, UAE (2015)
Porto, Portugal (2014)
Agadir, Morocco (2013)
London, United Kingdom (2012)
Almeria, Spain (2011)
Algiers, Algeria (2010)
Hampshire, United Kingdom (2009)
Al Ain, United Arab Emirates (2008)ProgramProceedings
Hanover, Germany (2007)Proceedings
Douz, Tunisia (2006)Proceedings
La Haute Touche, France (2005)Proceedings
Souss, Tunisia (2004)Proceedings
Agadir, Morocco (2003)Proceedings
Bratislava, Slovakia (2002)Proceedings
Almería, Spain (2001)Proceedings
Hampshire, United Kingdom (2000)Proceedings