HURUNGWE, Zimbabwe - Sharai Tunhira frowns with focus as she runs through drills with her all-female patrol team — each woman armed and ready for the many men they catch poaching wildlife in their corner of northern Zimbabwe.
Despite the risks of the job, she says joining the military-style unit has given her the chance to protect the wildlife she loves while also earning a decent livelihood in a rural area where many poor women struggle to make ends meet.
"Here I am occupied and empowered. I do not depend on a man to survive," said Tunhira, 25, who joined the team in 2021 after years eking out a living as a cleaner and vegetable seller.
The Akashinga unit — aka "the Brave Ones" in the Shona language — says it aims to change the face of conservation as the country's first armed, all-women anti-poaching unit.
The unit is a rarity in a sector dominated by men.
One in five African rangers is female, according to a 2016 World Wildlife Fund survey of 570 rangers, and the continent has a handful of female teams including South Africa's Black Mambas and the Lionesses rangers in Kenya.
Established in 2017 by Damien Mander, an Australian ex-commando, Akashinga has since grown to a total of 200 heavily armed rangers who patrol eight reserves in the Lower Zambezi Valley under contracts with three district councils.
Zimbabwe is home to some 80,000 elephants, about a fifth of Africa's total, conservationists estimate. Numbers have declined sharply in recent years, mostly due to poaching, illegal hunting and drought.