The Ford Wildlife Foundation (FWF) has once again shown its commitment to the environment by providing the Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (SANCCOB) Port Elizabeth Centre with a locally built Ford Ranger Double Cab 4×4 for a period of two years. The loan vehicle will assist the organisation‘s efforts to protect critically endangered African penguins and threatened seabirds.
SANCCOB is a registered non-profit organisation whose primary objective is to reverse the decline of seabird populations through the rescue and rehabilitation of sick, injured and oiled seabirds, including the endangered African penguin, and threatened species such as the Cape gannet, African black oystercatcher, cormorant and tern. Once the birds have fully recovered, they are released back into the wild.
“We are delighted to extend our support for SANCCOB, building on our existing relationship with
the organisation’s main centre in Cape Town through the loan of a ‘Built Ford Tough’ Ranger for
its important conservation programs,” says Conrad Groenewald, director of Sales Operations at
FMCSA and chairman of the FWF.
“SANCCOB Port Elizabeth does important work all along the Eastern Cape coast rescuing and
rehabilitating African penguins and seabirds. With this facility located close to our Struandale
Engine Plant where all of our engines used in the Ranger are produced, it further strengthens our
support for the organisation, and its important role in providing wildlife conservation and
education,” he adds.
“The philosophy behind the Ford Wildlife Foundation embodies one of our key Live the Ranger
Life core values, ‘can’t help but help’. The loan of the capable Ford Ranger lives up to this ethos
by empowering our FWF partner organisations to protect and preserve our precious natural
resources,” Groenewald explains.
The FWF Ford Ranger was handed over to Dr Stephen van der Spuy, CEO of SANCCOB, at the
Port Elizabeth Centre. “Having access to a reliable and rugged Ford Ranger Double Cab 4×4 will
assist our rehabilitation staff and full-time volunteers in Port Elizabeth to collect birds brought to
shore from the breeding islands in Algoa Bay,” he says. “It will also help our team collect and
transport birds identified as injured or in need of rehabilitation from other areas in the Eastern
Cape, thereby contributing to our rehabilitation efforts of the African penguin and other
threatened seabirds.
“We truly appreciate the active role the Ford Wildlife Foundation plays in supporting SANCCOB
in Cape Town and now in Port Elizabeth too, by helping us rescue, rehabilitate and release more
endangered African penguins and seabirds, thereby increasing the chances of survival of these
species,” Van der Spuy adds
The SANCCOB Port Elizabeth Centre is based in the 366-hectare Cape Recife Nature Reserve
on Marine Drive in Summerstrand, with its pristine beach and 170-year-old lighthouse being key
tourist attractions. The facility is open to the public, and provides educational tours and popular
daily feeds for the penguins as one of its most important fund-raising mechanisms. The centre
also features a new purpose-built rehabilitation pool with six pens, as well as a seabird hospital
with a surgical theatre and intensive care unit (ICU).
“With the dangerous decline of the African penguin population, the importance of securing the
breeding colonies in Algoa Bay cannot be overemphasised,” says Margot Collett, manager of the
SANCCOB Port Elizabeth Centre. “From a global population of roughly one million breeding pairs
at the beginning of the 20th century to just 20 000 breeding pairs today, it is estimated that at the
current rate of decline, African penguins in the wild could be functionally extinct in the next two
decades.”
To address this critical issue, in December 2019 SANCCOB and South African National Parks
(SANParks) appointed a Penguin and Seabird Monitor in the Addo Elephant National Park
Marine Protected Area (MPA). The monitor is stationed on Bird Island, and monitors the seabird
colonies on St Croix Island and Bird Island which fall within the Addo MPA. St Croix is currently
home to the largest breeding population of African penguins in the world, however the number of
breeding pairs has seen a steep decline, and SANCCOB’s conservation and rehabilitation
measures are crucial for their long-term survival.
The MPA Seabird Monitor identifies and rescues sick, injured, and oiled birds as well as
abandoned penguin chicks and ensures that they are admitted timeously and effectively for
treatment at the SANCCOB facility. The birds are often malnourished and dehydrated due to a
shortage of sardine and anchovy, the African penguin’s preferred food. The number of birds
being brought off the islands for rehabilitation and admission has been increasing, and this is
projected to climb further now that Addo MPA Seabird Monitor is based on Bird Island.
In February 2020, the Ford Wildlife Foundation adopted two African penguins at the SANCCOB
Port Elizabeth Centre, and named them Ranger and Raptor – with the adoption fees going
towards the feeding and care of the two penguins.
For over 30 years, Ford Motor Company of Southern Africa (FMCSA) has actively been involved
in the conservation of wildlife and ecosystems in South Africa and sub-Saharan Africa. The Ford Wildlife Foundation (FWF), which was established in 2014, continues FMCSA’s long-standing
support of conservation projects in Southern Africa through the provision of ‘Built Ford Tough’ 4×4
Ranger Double Cabs to partner organisations. During the two-year loan period, the vehicles are
monitored and serviced by Ford’s extensive dealer network to ensure optimum performance and
efficiency.