With Bitcoin Cash, A Namibian Conservationist Hopes To Save Endangered African Wild Dog
Extinction near the African Wild Dog population in Namibia has also been destroyed. But a wildlife lover is trying to stop everyone. And the cash Bitcoin (BCH) is its gateway.
Lerox first transfers BCH into Namibia Wild
Nadja Lerox, a Namibia wildlife conservationist is looking for an African wild dog, while deep in the woods, the animal he loves most protects (about US $ 10) received his first Bitcoin cash donation of RAND 145.
A week ago, with the goal of conservationist technology to establish a Bitcoin Cash Fund, R24,800 (US $ 1600) to achieve the need for it to work with. By 9th September, the Lerox R504 ($ 33) was raised equal to the value of Bitcoin Cash (BCH).
Namibia believes BCH represents the speed and convenience to achieve African business. "Why BCH?" Lerox asks himself in a post on Twitter designed to understand the world's objectives. "It's a family," he answered. "It's public, it's 24 hours a day. It's a new generation!"
One of the items Lerox wants to buy from its income to raise funds is an iPad. She says that the device and "instant data entry and analysis" allow it to be "safe, mobile. It is so important that I have the right technology to continue my work in the field." Leroux, who has spent so far this year in 121 fields, "trying to find the African wild dog" camp, explains it on Twitter handle, keep track of facts, community and conservation. He is "somewhere in the middle, but the right action is where." Describes your work station as
Endangered Species
African wild dog population is important. Dogs have often been killed by farmers for killing animals. Now, it has become extinct in 23 countries. In the Otjozondzupa region of Namibia, dogs co-exist with rustic communities, set them up for a livestock-centric human wildlife conflict. In the form of Community Development Manager of Cheetah ![IMG_20180911_215644-180x300.jpg]() Conservation Fund, monitoring the pattern of prey of Lerox and using natural means such as livestock guard dogs, farmers do not have the support of the killing of wild dogs in order to protect domestic animals. is attached.
“Why the African wild dog? It’s the most endangered large carnivore in Southern Africa,” she says.