Mastri, Lawrence2012-08-132012-08-132008-08https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9506The Global Environment Facility (GEF) supported High Forest Biodiversity Conservation Project intended to increase the ecological security of globally significant biological resources, especially within threatened tropical moist forest ecosystems. The project aimed to establish effective systems for the protection of 30 Globally Significant Biodiversity Areas (GSBAs) in all tropical forest biomes in Ghana in four regions within the high forest zone - namely, Ashanti, Eastern, Central, and Western regions. The project focused on communities living at the periphery of these GSBAs.CC BY 3.0 IGOBIODIVERSITYBIODIVERSITY AREASBIODIVERSITY CONSERVATIONBIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION PROJECTBIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENTBIODIVERSITY PROTECTIONBIOLOGICAL RESOURCESBIOMESCONSERVATION MEASURESCRITICAL HABITATSECOSYSTEMECOSYSTEM APPROACHENDEMIC SPECIESENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTIONENVIRONMENTAL QUALITYFORESTFOREST BIODIVERSITYFOREST BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATIONFOREST CONDITIONSFOREST ECOSYSTEMSFOREST HEALTHFOREST PROTECTIONFOREST REGENERATIONFOREST REGIONSFOREST RESERVESFOREST SPECIESFOREST ZONEFORESTRYFORESTRY COMMISSIONFORESTSGENETICGENETIC DIVERSITYGLOBALLY SIGNIFICANT BIODIVERSITYGLOBALLY SIGNIFICANT BIODIVERSITY AREASHUNTINGISSUESLIVELIHOODSLOGGINGNATIONAL PARKSNATURAL RESOURCENATURAL RESOURCE CONSERVATIONNATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENTRESERVESSUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENTTIMBERTIMBER FORESTTIMBER HARVESTINGTREETROPICAL FORESTTROPICAL MOIST FORESTGhana - High Forest Biodiversity Conservation ProjectWorld Bank10.1596/9506