For a man who spent his life studying the movements of wildlife, Roberto Zolho was most at peace when not moving at all—drifting in a kayak down the Guacheni channels, pausing to admire an egret, a kingfisher, or a sunlit curve in the reeds. In these secluded corners of Mozambique’s wetlands, he was not a former government official or a decorated scientist. He was simply a witness, content to observe the “amazing birdlife,” as he once wrote with characteristic understatement.
Zolho’s legacy lies most visibly in Gorongosa National Park, once a paradise gutted by civil war. Appointed its administrator in 1996, he inherited a landscape where over 90% of large mammals had vanished. Rather than despair, he set about recovery with meticulous care—counting what was left, building systems for what might return, and working closely with the local community. It was his 2005 proposal for species reintroduction that laid the groundwork for one of the most remarkable wildlife restorations in history. By 2025, Gorongosa’s plains were again teeming with tens of thousands of animals, its predators prowling and its forests mending.
Zolho saw conservation not as an exercise in nostalgia, nor as a fortress to be built against humanity. His career, spanning more than three decades across Mozambique, Tanzania, South Africa, and Australia, reflected a broader conviction: that biodiversity could only endure if local communities shared in its benefits. Whether coordinating climate resilience programs or leading cross-border conservation corridors, he insisted on integrating ecological goals with the aspirations of rural people.
He was not drawn to grandeur. Though awarded the Medal of Environmental Merit in 2022 by Mozambique’s president and honored as a “Conservation Hero” at Gorongosa’s gala, Zolho seemed more comfortable in the field than behind a desk—mentoring young professionals, writing strategy documents rooted in realities on the ground, or volunteering with Banhine National Park, where he was a proud “top fan.” He preferred working where conservation was implemented, not just discussed.
In meetings, colleagues recalled his steadiness and kindness; in the field, his pragmatism and resolve. He could speak of degraded miombo woodlands in the morning and listen with delight to a child describing a monkey she’d seen in the afternoon.
Following his passing, Mozambique’s biodiversity community is mourning the loss not just of a leader, but of a unifying presence. Zolho leaves behind a network of protected landscapes and the people trained to protect them. More enduring still is the ethic he embodied: that conservation, at its best, is not conquest or control, but care.
Zolho leaves behind his wife Brit; his daughters, Hannah, Nyangala, and Adriana; and the countless animals that now thrive in the wilderness he helped restore.
Banner image: Roberto Zolho. Photo from his Facebook page.