 Yr hollwydau isgwyddiadau sydd wedi'i gweithio ar holdau cyfnodion a nghymru yn gynghwilio am ei ffordd Gyllidolol Ffair.繁 ydych chi'n ddweud gan gyllidol Ffair Cymraed Ffair Gyllidol Ffair Gyllidol i mi ffandd gan gyllidol fel Gyllidol GIZ. ac mae'n rhan o'r 2018 i ddweud o'r 2021 ac yn ystod o'r mynd i'r byd i'r eistedd i AED, yn ddod o'r IUCN, Ysgolwch Cymru, TNRF, tannidol, Zambion CBNRM, ac Nymibian Nature Foundation. Mae'r proiect yn ddod o'r three key components. The first one is around building the evidence base on the effectiveness of community-based approaches to tackling illegal wildlife trade. The second one is about enhancing community engagement in national level policy and programmes. So we've got a specific focus here on Tanzania and Zambia at the national level. And then we're also working on the same thing, trying to enhance community engagement in international policy processes that deal with illegal wildlife trade, so including cites, but also the intergovernmental illegal wildlife trade conferences which have happened over the last few years. And then the third and final component is encouraging peer-to-peer learning between communities and between countries, so running multi-country learning events and exchanges. So just to give you a bit of detail on what that means, in terms of building the evidence base, we've established a database of case studies of how communities have been engaged in tackling illegal wildlife trade. You can see the website here www.peoplenotpoaching.org and I strongly encourage you to go and have a look at the wide variety of case studies that are there on that website. There are over 70 of them at the moment. And you can look for case studies by searching by country or searching by the type of species or searching by the type of community engagement strategy. So that includes things like ranger patrols but also community incentives for conservation, tackling human wildlife conflict and so on.