Wildlife of Rwanda
The wildlife of Rwanda comprising its flora and fauna, in prehistoric times, consisted of montane forest in one third the territory of present-day Rwanda. However, natural vegetation is now mostly restricted to the three National Parks and four small forest reserves, with terraced agriculture dominating the rest of the country.[1][2]
Geography
Rwanda is a landlocked country in Central Africa, bordered by Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, and Uganda. It measures 26,338 square kilometres (10,169 sq mi) in size, of which 26,668 square kilometres (10,297 sq mi) is land and 1,670 square kilometres (640 sq mi) is water. Its highest point is Volcan Karisimbi at 4,519 metres (14,826 ft), while it lowest point is the Rusizi River at 950 metres (3,120 ft). Rwanda's geography is dominated by savanna grassland with approximately 46 percent considered arable land and 9.5 percent dedicated to permanent crops. Grassy uplands and hills are predominant characteristics of the terrain, while the country's relief is described as mountainous, its altitude demonstrating a decline from the west towards the east.[3]
A unique feature in the geography and geology of Rwanda is Africa’s Great Rift Valley. As part of this rift, Albertine Rift passes through the Nyungwe forest. It is a mountainous feature that "as a whole, harbors more endemic birds, mammals, and amphibians than any other region in Africa".[4]
A rift valley is defined as: "A rift is where sections of the earth are slowly spreading apart over millions of years, creating mountains, lakes, valleys and volcanoes." Another feature is the Congo-Nile Divide. This mountain range passes through Rwanda in a north to south direction.[4]
Nyabarongo River is a major river in Rwanda, part of the upper headwaters of the Nile and accounts for nearly 66% of the water resources of the country fed by a catchment which receives an annual average rainfall of more than 2000 mm.[4]
The country has a temperate climate with rainy seasons twice per year, February to April and again November to January. Temperatures in the mountains are mild, though there is the possibility of frost and snow.[3]
Protected areas
There are only three protected areas established as national parks. The Akagera National Park covers an area of 108,500 ha, Nyungwe National Park has an area of 101,900 ha and Volcanoes National Park has an area of 16,000 ha. In addition the forest reserves are the Gishwati Forest Reserve (700 ha), Mukura Forest Reserve (1600 ha), Busaga Forest Reserve (150 ha) and Buhanga forest and gallery forest in the eastern province of about 160 ha.[2]
Nyungwe is the largest remaining tract of forest which contains 200 species of tree as well as orchids and begonias.[5] Vegetation in the Volcanoes National Park is mostly bamboo and moorland, with small areas of forest.[1] By contrast, Akagera has a savanna ecosystem in which acacia dominates the flora. There are several rare or endangered plant species in Akagera, including Markhamia lutea and Eulophia guineensis.[2]
Flora
The forest cover in Rwanda as of 2007 accounted for 240,746.53 ha comprising humid natural forests in 33.15% area, degraded natural forests covering 15.79%, bamboo forest of 1.82%, savanahs accounting for 1.55%, large eucalyptus plantations to the extent of 26.4%, recent plantations of eucalyptus and coppices and 5.01 percent of pinus plantations.[2] Montane forest, one of the most ancient forests dated to even before the Ice Age which has a unique richness of 200 species of trees, many flowering plants including the giant lobelia and many colourful orchids.[6] There are more than 140 species of orchids in the wildlife area of Nyungwe forest.[7]
There are four defined forest categories. These are: he Congo Nile Ridge Forest, a natural forest that encompasses the national parks and reserves; the savannah and gallery-forests; forest plantations consisting of species of Eucalyptus sp, Pinus sp, and Grevillea robusta; and agroforestry areas in farm lands and also anti-erosion measures.[2]
The world's smallest water lilly, Nymphaea thermarum, was endemic not only to Rwanda, but to the damp mud formed by the overflow of a freshwater hot spring in Mashyuza.[8] It became extinct in the wild about 2008 when local farmers began using the spring for agriculture. The farmers cut off the flow of the spring, which dried up the tiny area—just a few square meters—that was the lily's entire habitat.[8] Carlos Magdalena, at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, managed to germinate some of the last 20 seeds; eight began to flourish and mature within weeks and in November 2009, the waterlilies flowered for the first time.[9]
Fauna
The greatest diversity of large mammals is found in the three National Parks, which are designated conservation areas.[10] Akagera contains typical savanna animals such as giraffes and elephants,[11] while Volcanoes is home to an estimated one third of the worldwide mountain gorilla population.[12][13]
Nyungwe Forest boasts thirteen primate species including chimpanzees and Ruwenzori colobus arboreal monkeys; the Ruwenzori colobus move in groups of up to 400 individuals, the largest troop size of any primate in Africa.[14] Twenty species of mammals reported by Animal Diversity web of the Museum of Geology University of Michigan are as under.[15]
- Dendrohyrax arboreus (eastern tree hyrax)
- Delanymyinae (Delany's swamp mice)
- Cercopithecus lhoesti (L'hoest's monkey)
- Cercopithecus hamlyni (owl-faced monkey)
- Colobus angolensis (Angolan colobus)
- Scutisorex somereni (armored shrew)
- Gorilla beringei (eastern gorilla)
- Profelis aurata (African golden cat)
- Gorilla gorilla (western gorilla)
- Galago moholi (South African galago)
- Aonyx capensis (African clawless otter)
- Equus burchellii (Burchell's zebra)
- Hippopotamus amphibius (hippopotamus)
- Aepyceros melampus (impala)
- Colobus guereza (guereza)
- Epomops franqueti (Franquet's epauletted bat)
Primates are the dominant species of fauna in the Nyungwe Forest. The species reported are Ruwenzori colobus, L’Hoest’s monkeys and chimpanzees (largest concentration of 13 species).[4] An amphibian species reported is Hyperolius viridiflavus.[15]
Birds
There were 670 bird species in Rwanda, with variation between the east and the west.[16] However as per the Birdlist Organization the number of species as per WICE criteria are reported to be 711.[17] Nyungwe Forest, in the west, has 280 recorded species, of which 26 are endemic to the Albertine Rift;[16] endemic species include the Ruwenzori turaco and handsome francolin.[18]
Eastern Rwanda, by contrast, features savanna birds such as the black-headed gonolek and those associated with swamps and lakes, including storks and cranes.[16] Further, according to the Avi Base Organization, the globally endangered species are 9 and species introduced are 3 out of a total of 692 species as of 2012.[19] Balaeniceps rex (shoebill) and Agapornis fischeri (Fischer's lovebird) are also reported.[15]
Nyungwe forest is a designated Important Bird Area (IBA) listed by the BirdLife International. The great blue turaco is a very prominent bird species found in large numbers . It is blue, red and green, described as a "bird which streams from tree to tree like a procession of streamlined psychedelic turkeys".[20] The European bee-eater Merops apiaster is a migrant bird species in this forest area during the winter season.[20] [21] The Rugezi Marsh shelters Rwanda's largest breeding population of grey crowned cranes.[22] The strange weaver and the collared sunbird have been featured on Rwandan stamps.[23]
The list of globally endangered bird species, as reported by the Avibase data of BirdLife International, are the following.[24]
- Endangered
- Ardeola idae (Madagascar pond-heron)
- Necrosyrtes monachus (hooded vulture)
- Gyps africanus (white-backed vulture)
- Gyps rueppellii (Rueppell's griffon)
- Balearica regulorum (gray crowned-crane)
- Bradypterus graueri (Grauer's swamp-warbler)
- Near-threatened
- Ficedula semitorquata (semicollared flycatcher)
- Malaconotus lagdeni (Lagden's bushshrike)
- Laniarius mufumbiri (papyrus gonolek)
- Agapornis fischeri (Fischer's lovebird)
- Falco concolor (sooty falcon)
- Falco vespertinus (red-footed falcon)
- Indicator pumilio (dwarf honeyguide)
- Lybius rubrifacies (red-faced barbet)
- Coracias garrulus (European roller)
- Rynchops flavirostris (African skimmer)
- Glareola nordmanni (black-winged pratincole)
- Gallinago media (great snipe)
- Limosa limosa (black-tailed godwit)
- Numenius arquata (Eurasian curlew)
- Neotis denhami (Stanley bustard)
- Circus macrourus (pallid harrier)
- Polemaetus bellicosus (martial eagle)
- Stephanoaetus coronatus (crowned hawk-eagle)
- Terathopius ecaudatus (bateleur)
- Oxyura maccoa (Maccoa duck)
- Phoenicopterus minor (lesser flamingo)
- Vulnerable
- Balaeniceps rex (shoebill)
- Sagittarius serpentarius (secretary-bird)
- Trigonoceps occipitalis (white-headed vulture)
- Circaetus beaudouini (Beaudouin's snake-eagle)
- Glaucidium albertinum (Albertine owlet)
- Bucorvus leadbeateri (southern ground-hornbill)
- Hirundo atrocaerulea (blue swallow)
- Calamonastides gracilirostris (papyrus yellow-warbler)
- Cryptospiza shelleyi (Shelley's crimson-wing)
Conservation
The national parks and forest reserves are under threat due to poaching, invasive plants such as water hyacinth, unauthorized livestock grazing, illegal fishing, bush fires, mining, bamboo harvesting, encroachment of protected land for agricultural farming, firewood gathering, be keeping and herbal plant extraction. The resins for such a situation is attributed to governance issues lacking in legal acts and guidelines and also heavy anthropogenic pressure.[2]
Conservation management plans have been instituted for all protected areas which involves the community of villages living in and around the protected areas. Conservation activities have focused on increasing the forest density by planting trees in a "natural self rehabilitation and natural regeneration of primary and high value species". The planting has involved species such as carissa macrocarpa, entandrophragma (a genus of eleven species of deciduous trees) and symphonia globulifera, and erecting protective fencing on the boundary of the forest reserves using leguminous thorny plants.[2]
One of the concerted efforts initiated by the Government of Rwanda is to increase the number of protected areas and to proliferate tree plantations to increase the present forest area cover of 10% to 20% by 2020.[2]
See also
References
- 1 2 Booth 2006, pp. 3–4.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Chap VI. Forest and protected areas". Official website of Rwanda State of Environment and Outlook Report. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- 1 2 Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) (2012). "Rwanda". The World Factbook. Retrieved 2013-04-21.
- 1 2 3 4 "Nyungwe Forest". Official website of Nyungwe National Park. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- ↑ King 2007, p. 11.
- ↑ "Nyungwe Vegetation". Official website of Nyungwe National Park. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- ↑ "Orchids of Nyungwe". Official website of Nyungwe National Park. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- 1 2 Magdalena, Carlos. "Nymphaea thermarum". Plants & Fungi. Kew Gardens. Retrieved 19 May 2010.
- ↑ 'Extinct' Waterlily back from the dead, Australian Geographic, May 21, 2010,
- ↑ IUCN 2011.
- ↑ Embassy of Rwanda in Japan.
- ↑ "Tourism and Conservation Performance in 2008". Rwanda Development Board (RDB) (I). Retrieved 2013-04-16.
- ↑ "Welcome to Rwanda". Anderson Wildlife Propertes. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
- ↑ Booth 2006, p. 140.
- 1 2 3 "Taxon Information". Animal Diversity Web of the Museum of Geology University of Michigan. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- 1 2 3 King 2007, p. 15.
- ↑ "Birds Of Rwanda, Checklist Of The Birds Of Rwanda, The Complete Rwanda Birdlist". Birdlist Organization. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- ↑ WCS.
- ↑ "Avibase - Bird Checklists of the World, Rwanda". Avi Base Organization. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- 1 2 "Nyungwe Wildlife". Official website of Nyungwe National Park. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- ↑ "A Refuge for Rare Birds". Official website of Nyungwe National Park. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- ↑ "Grey Crowned Crane". International Crane Foundation.
- ↑ Eriksen, Jens; Eriksen, Hanne (June 1983). Collect birds on stamps. S. Gibbons Publications. pp. 268, 274. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- ↑ "Avibase - Bird Checklists of the World Rwanda". Avi Base organization. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
Bibliography
- Booth, Janice (2006). Rwanda. Bradt Travel Guides. ISBN 978-1-84162-180-7. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
- King, David C. (2007). Rwanda. Marshall Cavendish. ISBN 978-0-7614-2333-1. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
- Wilson, Don E.; Reeder, DeeAnn M., eds. (2005). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed). Johns Hopkins University Press. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
- "Animal Diversity Web". University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. 1995–2006. Retrieved 22 May 2007.
- "Akagera National Park". Embassy of Rwanda in Japan. 2009. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
- Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). "Birds endemic to the Albertine Rift" (PDF). Albertine Rift Programme. Retrieved 2012-02-16.
- International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) (2011). "IUCN welcomes Rwanda as new State Member". Retrieved 2012-02-16.
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