Ahead of World Ranger Day on Wednesday, the University of Pretoria (UP) announces a key partnership in a new 10-year research programme focused on injury prevention among game rangers.
Drawing on expertise from UP, the NGO Game Rangers Association of Africa, and expert researchers in injury prevention from the United Kingdom, South Africa and the Netherlands, the programme will run from 2024–2034, focusing on rangers involved in African anti-poaching operations.
Rangers, according to the International Fund for Animal Welfare, will be called upon to protect nearly a third of the planet in the next decade.
In the past year, however, 140 rangers were killed in the line of duty throughout the world. With 42 of those deaths taking place in Africa, African rangers face the highest exposure to life-threatening situations.
The research programme aims to build a repository of data that can be used for future research projects geared towards injury prevention strategies among game rangers in Africa.
An important contribution will come from UP's Departments of Physiotherapy and Section Sports Medicine, which has extensive experience in supporting sports athletes through research aimed at finding injury prevention solutions.
"When we think about wildlife conservation, we think about the animals’ well-being," explained Professor Carel Viljoen, Head of the Department of Physiotherapy at UP. "We rarely think about the rangers protecting these animals behind the scenes.
"Our team of physiotherapists, medical doctors, sport scientists, and biokineticists acknowledge these rangers’ vital contribution, and will be combining all our injury prevention expertise to support anti-poaching rangers in their job to better protect wildlife."
Rangers don't only safeguard natural areas, provide critical data and respond to environmental emergencies.
They also play a central role in tackling poaching, which has had a devastating impact on wildlife conservation efforts across the globe – in southern Africa especially.
Rangers face significant safety risks at the frontlines of the fight against poaching. Ranging is also extremely physically taxing work, requiring similar exposure to physical activity to that seen in multiday endurance athletes.
Nearly 9 out of 10 African rangers (88.6%) have reported facing life-threatening situations in the line of duty, yet there remains a dearth of literature on the incidence on injury, type and mechanisms of injury, severity, risk factors and other critical data.
Such data plays a pivotal role in injury prevention strategies for game rangers.
The new research will firstly focus on gaining a better understanding of the rangers' injury profiles and the injury risk factors at play. Rangers will also be interviewed in order to assess their perceptions of injury risk and prevention, as well as barriers to injury prevention in wilderness areas.
Because occupational injury prevention strategies are more effective when focused on the context where an individual works, the research will initially be wide-ranging and eventually narrow down to specific parks – since risk factors most likely differ for rangers working in, say, Table Mountain National Park versus the Kruger National Park.
“The Game Rangers Association of Africa is the oldest, largest and most representative ranger association in Africa,” said Louise de Bruin, administrator of the Game Rangers Association of Africa. “We provide rangers across Africa with the necessary capabilities and support to perform their vital duties to conserve wildlife and wild spaces across the continent.
“We are therefore delighted to partner with the University of Pretoria in this important study that will provide tangible benefits to rangers’ physical well-being. Ensuring injury prevention among rangers will contribute to their well-being and optimal performance, working on the frontline of conservation.”