

Madagascar faces one of the world’s biggest conservation challenges.
It is suffering historic rates of habitat loss, primarily as a result of slash-and-burn agriculture, and overexploitation of its natural resources, timber and fuelwood extraction, and charcoal production.
Nearly 90% of the original natural vegetation across Madagascar has already been destroyed, leaving it perilously fragmented, disturbing the natural homes and breeding grounds of wildlife, pushing animals dangerously close to people, and isolating very small populations that can quickly die out.