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African biodiversity hotspots and other important conservation designations for unique areas which may include mountains SJ Taylor, AfroMont Programme Coordinator 4/7/2015 AFroMont, Centre for Environmental Studies, University of Pretoria, Hatfield, South Africa African biodiversity hotspots and other important conservation designations for unique areas which may include mountains Contents 1.0 Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 2 1.1 Biodiversity hotspots designation................................................................................................. 3 1.2 The Global Ecoregions designation ............................................................................................... 4 1.3 Other biodiversity designations of importance ............................................................................ 4 2.0 Examples of Global Ecoregions and Biodiversity Hotspots in Africa ................................................ 5 2.1 The Cameroon Highlands Global Ecoregion ................................................................................. 5 2.2. Guinean Forests of West Africa biodiversity hotspot ................................................................. 7 2.3 The Eastern Afromontane Hotspot ............................................................................................... 9 2.3.1 Vegetation of the Eastern Arc Mountains ............................................................................. 9 2.3.2 Flora of the Eastern Afromontane Hotspot ......................................................................... 10 2.4 The Ethiopian Highlands ............................................................................................................. 12 2.5 The Congo Basin ecosystem........................................................................................................ 13 3.0 World Heritage Sites ....................................................................................................................... 15 4.0 Biosphere reserves.......................................................................................................................... 15 5.0 References ...................................................................................................................................... 15 1 1.0 Introduction Africa has unique biodiversity, and many biodiversity hotspots, Global Ecoregions, biosphere reserves, World Heritage Sites, trans-boundary parks, national parks and other smaller nature areas. This review contains a sample of the important hotspot areas. Many of these important areas encompass a wide range of ecosystems and landscape features, notably wetlands, grasslands, savannas, mountains and mountain forests. Generally these areas are fabulously diverse in endemic species of global importance, notably chimpanzee and gorillas, but are also significantly rich for plants, reptiles, amphibians, birds and invertebrates. These areas contain important forests and mountain ecosystems that are repositories of biodiversity and ecosystem services, notably the provision of water to lowland communities and the maintenance of lake systems. Importantly, the mountain and forest ecosystems provide livelihoods for many millions of local people. For example, the Virunga National Park, containing the Mount Ruwenzori massif, is estimated to be worth USD 49 million in forest products, tourism and jobs, which could increase to USD 1 billion if managed sustainably (WWF/Dalbert, 2013). As well as this, is the global significance of these forests in terms of carbon sequestration. Preserving Africa’s surviving tropical forests and planting new trees to replace those lost to deforestation could 2 help reduce the severity of climate change by absorbing more carbon from the air, and ease the local impact of climate change by regulating local weather conditions. As well as this, the burning of biomass that follows forest clearing releases the stored carbon back into the atmosphere, exacerbating climate change (Fleshman, 2008). Most of these biodiversity and forest rich areas are under threat from human activities and some very valuable areas do not yet have formal protection, or are proclaimed, but protection is not effective enough. There are many examples of proclaimed protected areas are rapidly becoming ‘islands in a sea of deforestation’ with surrounding areas given over for commercial and subsistence land use. Political decisions are often detrimental to long term conservation efforts. The Akagera National Park in Rwanda is a good example of a protected area which has largely been reassigned to accommodate returning refugees and has lost much of its land area. The size of Akagera National Park was reduced by approximately twothirds in 1997 to allow for the resettlement of large numbers of refugees. Heavy grazing pressure, agricultural encroachment, charcoal production, the felling of trees for fuelwood and construction, and deliberately set fires have seriously fragmented Figure 1 : Map of Rwanda showing the Akagera NP. Sourced from http://www.rwandadirect.com/rwanda-akagera-park/ the ecosystem. Wildlife populations are now concentrated in scattered enclaves (UNEP atlas, n.d.). 1.1 Biodiversity hotspots designation Biodiversity hotspots are designated biogeographic regions with a significant reservoir of biodiversity which is under threat from human activities and need significant and multidimensional protection. They are generally considered to contain the biologically richest and most endangered terrestrial ecoregions to be found on Earth. To qualify as a biodiversity hotspot, a region must meet two criteria: the region must contain at least 0.5% or 1 500 species of vascular plants as endemics, and it has to have lost at least 70% of its primary vegetation. All biodiversity hotspots contain at least one Global 200 Ecoregion (see below), a Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) designated area. Around the world, 25 areas qualify under Global Ecoregion definition, with nine other possible candidates. These sites support nearly 60% of the world's plant, bird, mammal, reptile, and amphibian species, with a very high share of endemic species. 3 In Africa, designated biodiversity hotspots include the Cape Floristic Region, the Coastal Forests of Eastern Africa, the Eastern Afromontane region, the Guinean Forests of West Africa, the Horn of Africa, the Madagascar and the Indian Ocean Islands, the MaputalandPondoland-Albany area and the Succulent Karoo. 1.2 The Global Ecoregions designation The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has derived a system called the ‘Global 200 Ecoregions’, the aim of which is to select priority ecoregions for conservation within each of 14 terrestrial, three freshwater, and four marine habitat types. These areas are chosen for their species richness, endemism, taxonomic uniqueness, unusual ecological or evolutionary phenomena, and global rarity. The aim of the Global Ecoregions analysis is to ensure that the full range of ecosystems is represented within regional conservation and development strategies, so that conservation efforts around the world contribute to a global biodiversity strategy (WWF, n.d.). All biodiversity hotspots contain at least one Global 200 Ecoregion. 1.3 Other biodiversity designations of importance Birdlife International has identified 218 ‘Endemic Bird Areas’ (EBAs) each of which hold two or more bird species found nowhere else. Birdlife International has identified more than 11 000 Important Bird Areas around the world, including in Africa. Plantlife International has established the Important Plant Areas. Important Plant Areas (IPA) to provide a framework for identifying and maintaining the richest sites for plant life, and IPAs are selected with the intention of focusing on the conservation of the important wild plant populations in these areas, and act as a subset in the broader context of Key Biodiversity Areas. The Alliance for Zero Extinction is an initiative of a large number of scientific organizations and conservation groups who co-operate to focus on the most threatened endemic species of the world. They have identified 595 sites, including a large number of Birdlife’ s Important Bird Areas. Also, the Key Biodiversity Areas (KBA) approach helps to identify and designate areas of international importance in terms of biodiversity conservation using globally standardised criteria. KBAs extend the Important Bird Area (IBA) concept to other taxonomic groups and are now being identified in many parts of the world, by a range of organisations. Examples include Important Plant Areas (IPAs), Ecologically and Biologically Significant Areas (EBSAs) in 4 the High Seas, Alliance for Zero Extinction (AZE) sites, Prime Butterfly Areas, Important Mammal Areas and Important Sites for Freshwater Biodiversity with prototype criteria developed for freshwater molluscs and fish and for marine systems. The determination of KBAs often brings sites onto the conservation agenda that hadn't previously been identified as needing protection due to the nature of the two non-exclusive criteria used to determine them - vulnerability and irreplaceability (Wikipedia, 2015). The Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund (CEPF) is a global program that provides funding and technical assistance to nongovernmental organizations and participation to protect the Earth's richest regions of plant and animal diversity including: biodiversity hotspots, highbiodiversity wilderness areas and important marine regions. There are many other partnerships to conserve Africa’s biodiversity and forests, notably the Central African Forests Commission (COMIFAC) and associated Congo Basin Forest Partnership (CBFP). Many of these areas overlap. 2.0 Examples of Global Ecoregions and Biodiversity Hotspots in Africa 2.1 The Cameroon Highlands Global Ecoregion The Cameroon Highlands has been designated as a Global Ecoregion with the Ecoregion encompassing the mountains and highland areas of the border region between Nigeria and Cameroon. This region lies within a narrow rectangle 180 km by 625 km, oriented southwest to northeast and originating about 50 km inland of Mount Cameroon which is a coastal, volcanic mountain linked to the ‘Cameroon volcanic line’, a line of volcanic activity originating in an offshore fault. The Cameroon Highlands Global Ecoregion covers the Rumpi Hills, the Bakossi Mountains, Mount Nlonako, Mount Kupe and Mount Manengouba (WWF Cameroon, n.d.). Seen as biologically ‘priceless’, this is one of the least well-protected ecoregions in Africa, and although declared as a Global Ecoregion, no part of this ecoregion is under formal protected status in Cameroon. Local traditional rulers still exert considerable authority over land use, but under the pressures of today, this is not necessarily enough to secure the species of the region (WWF Cameroon, n.d.). 5 The main section of the Bakossi Mountains (550 km²) has been proposed as ‘Protection Forest’, banning all logging. Mount Kupe has been proposed as a ‘Strict Nature Reserve’, while the forest at Mount Oku has some form of protection and the boundaries are well demarcated (WWF Cameroon, n.d.). Mt Cameroon is an active volcano that sits near the coast and rises from this mountain range, but is considered a separate ecoregion from the older, non-volcanic Cameroonian Highlands Forests. At 3 011 m, Mount Oku is the highest peak in this ecoregion. The remainder of peaks are between 800-2600 m in elevation (WWF Cameroon, n.d.). Forest loss caused by unsustainable exploitation of firewood, overgrazing, fire damage and agricultural encroachment is the main threat to this ecoregion. Hunting also threatens the remaining larger mammals (WWF Cameroon, n.d.). World Resource Institute (WRI) atlas projects like the Cameroon Forest Atlas and the collaborative process involved to develop the Atlas, provide a wealth of important information to Cameroon decision makers responsible for forest (and mountain) governance (Mertens et al, n.d.). Built on a geographic information system (GIS) platform, the atlas provides unbiased and up-to-date information on the Cameroonian forest sector. One of its main objectives is to strengthen forest management and land use planning by bringing all major land use categories onto the same standardized platform (Mertens et al, n.d.). 6 2.2. Guinean Forests of West Africa biodiversity hotspot The Guinean Forests of West Africa biodiversity hotspot covers all of the lowland forests of west Africa, from Guinea and Sierra Leone eastward to the Sanaga River in Cameroon. This hotspot region includes forests in Liberia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria, which are now remnant fragments of the original forests. The hotspot also covers several important montane regions, including the Cameroon Highlands (Mt. Cameroon, at 4 095 meters, is the highest peak in West Africa) and the Nimba Highlands. The hotspot also includes four islands in the Gulf of Guinea: Bioko and Annobon, which are both part of Equatorial Guinea, and Sao Tomé and Principe, which Figure 2: Map showing Guinean Forests hotspot in red. Sourced from http://www.microsfere.org/en/ghana/guineanforests-of-west-africa-biodiversity-hotspot.html together form an independent nation. Bioko is a continental-shelf island, whereas the remaining three are oceanic (Microsfere, n.d.) (see Figure 1). The Guinean Forests of West Africa biodiversity hotspot includes two distinct sub-regions, which incorporate several important forest refugia created by the retraction and fragmentation of forests during the Pleistocene Epoch (Microsfere, n.d.). The first sub-region, Upper Guinea, stretches from southern Guinea into eastern Sierra Leone and through Liberia, Ivory Coast and Ghana into western Togo. The second subregion, Nigeria-Cameroon, extends along the coast from western Nigeria to the Sanaga River in southwestern Cameroon. The two sub-regions are separated by the Dahomeny Gap in Benin, an area of farmland, savannah and highly degraded dry forest (Microsfere, n.d.). BirdLife International has recognized six Endemic Bird Areas (EBA) as lying partly or entirely within this hotspot. The Upper Guinea Forests EBA has 15 endemic bird species, and the Cameroon Mountains EBA, which includes the island of Bioko, is the sole habitat of nearly 30 bird species. These montane regions support a number of endemics: the Mount Cameroon francolin ( Francolinus camerunensis, EN) and the Mount Cameroon speirops ( Speirops melanocephalus, VU) are endemic to Mount Cameroon, while the Mount Kupe bush-shrike (Malaconotus kupeensis, EN) is largely confined to Mount Kupe, where only 21 square kilometers of habitat remains (it has recently been discovered at two additional localities). The conservation of the forests of Mount Oku is the last remaining hope for two species, Bannerman's turaco ( Tauraco bannermani, EN) and the banded wattle-eye ( Platysteira 7 laticincta, EN), which are restricted to montane forests in the Bamenda-Banso highlands (Microsfere, n.d.). The Guinean Forests hotspot, of which the mountains in the South West region of Cameroon is part, is home to an estimated 9 000 vascular plant species, about 20% (1 800 species) of which are thought to be endemic (25%). Nearly 2 500 plant species have been recorded on Mount Cameroon alone (Microsfere, n.d.). The biodiversity of Mount Bamboutos landscape is home to endemic and globally threatened plants to primates such as Ternstroemia sp and Allanblankia gabonensis, Cross River gorilla, and Nigeria-Cameroon Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes). It is for this reason that in 1900, the government classified it as a Forest Reserve and in 2009, Cameroon government re-classified Mt Bamboutos as a proposed ‘Integral Ecological Reserve’ (Status IUCN 1.a.) (Microsfere, n.d.). These mountains have been identified as some of Africa's most critical primate conservation areas. As many as nine species are endemic to the forests of Nigeria and Cameroon border region. The hotspot also has populations of two of Africa's great apes, including remaining scattered populations of chimpanzees (IUCN Red List: EN) and Cross River gorillas endemic to this area (IUCN Red List: CR). The area claims one-third of Africa's primate species. Large mammals such as the African Forest Elephant still occur here in reasonable numbers with a notable mountain subpopulation found on Mt Cameroon (Microsfere, n.d.). These mountain ecosystems also supply over 30% of the Cameroon food needs and harbor the indigenous pastoralist Mbororo community. Mt. Bamboutos is very important in general for its ecological services to the population in Cameroon with between three to five million people depending on the water resources from this mountain. About 30% of the Cameroon energy needs (fire wood) is derived from the Bamboutos mountain which are also important touristic destinations nationally and internationally with Mt Cameroon receiving over 3 000 tourists in a year. Mount Cameroon is also one of Africa's largest volcanoes, rising to 4 095 m and is the biggest tourist attraction nationally with its outstanding beaches in the 8 city of Limbe. The mountain generates hundreds of millions of dollars into the local and national economies due to its traditional, regional, national and international importance. 2.3 The Eastern Afromontane Hotspot When combined with the Southern Rift, the Albertine Rift and the Ethiopian Highlands, the Eastern Arc Mountains form the Eastern Afromontane Ecoregion which is recognized globally as one of the 34 biodiversity hotspots on earth, characterized by high concentrations of endemic species (EAMCEF, n.d.). The Eastern Afromontane hotspot encompasses several widely scattered, but biogeographically similar mountain ranges in eastern Africa, from Saudi Arabia and Yemen in the north to Zimbabwe in the south. Figure 3: Eastern Afromontane biodiversity hotspot. Source http://www.eoearth.org/view/article/150 641 The main part of the hotspot's more than one million km2 is made up of three ancient massifs (see adjacent map): the Eastern Arc Mountains and Southern Rift which stretch from south-eastern Kenya to southern Tanzania and Malawi, with small outliers in eastern Zimbabwe and western Mozambique; the Albertine Rift includes portions of Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Congo; In addition to these three main massifs, a number of outlying mountains are part of this hotspot, including the neogene volcanics of the Kenyan and Tanzanian Highlands (e.g., Mt Kilimanjaro, Mt Meru, Mt Kenya, Mt Elgon, Aberdares Range, and other peaks); and the Asir Mountains of southwest Saudi Arabia, the highlands of Yemen and the Chimanimani Highlands of eastern Zimbabwe. Many of these massifs are volcanic in origin, and indeed the Albertine Rift system includes the still-active Virunga Volcanoes (McGinley, 2009). The Eastern Arc Mountain forests cover several major catchment areas which collectively provide water for most of the nations’ coastal communities, including Dar-es-Salaam with its population of over four million people and most of the major industries in the country. Hydro-electric energy production in Tanzania is heavily dependent on maintaining the integrity of these forests (EAMCEF, n.d.). 2.3.1 Vegetation of the Eastern Arc Mountains In the Eastern Arc Mountains, vegetation types include upper montane, montane, submontane and lowland forests, with Afro-montane grassland and heathland plant communities at higher altitudes. Grasslands are the primary habitats of the Southern Rift, 9 while forests are found in sheltered valleys and along mountain ridges. The main vegetation type on the mountains of the Albertine Rift is montane forest. Glaciers and rock occur at the highest altitudes, below which is alpine moorland with giant Senecio, giant Lobelia and bogs, followed by zones of giant heather, bamboo, montane forest, mid-altitude forest, lowland forest, woodland, and savanna. The Albertine Rift also has papyrus and Carex wetlands, as well as hot springs and a peculiar type of sclerophytic vegetation that colonizes old lava flows in the Virunga National Park in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (McGinley, 2009). 2.3.2 Flora of the Eastern Afromontane Hotspot The flora of the Eastern Afromontane Hotspot shows great uniformity and continuity, with its composition changing with increasing altitude. The lower altitudinal limit is between 1 500 and 2 000 meters, while the Knysna Forests in the Cape, which are considered to be the southernmost reaches of the Afromontane habitat, are at 300 meters. The Eastern Arc Mountains have over 1 100 species of endemic plants, as well as about 40 endemic plant genera. Endemism is lower in the Southern Rift, with perhaps only 100 plant species endemic. However, the grasslands of the Southern Rift are particularly rich in orchids including more than 500 species, and plants of the genus Protea. The Nyika Plateau supports nearly 215 orchid species, of which about four species and two subspecies are endemic (McGinley, 2009). The most widespread tree genus is Podocarpus, although Juniperus is found in drier forests of northeastern and eastern Africa. A zone of bamboo is often found between 2 000 and 3 000 meters, above which there is often an Hagenia forest zone up to 3 600 meters. Many species common in montane forest, such as trees of the genera Podocarpus and Juniperus have economic importance, while several crops including coffee (Coffea arabica) and tef (Eragrostis tef) from the Ethiopian Highlands have been domesticated (McGinley, 2009). At the highest elevations, such as the Rwenzori Mountains, the Aberdares, Mt. Elgon, Mt. Kilimanjaro, Mt. Kenya, and the Bale and Simien Mountains in Ethiopia, Afro-alpine vegetation typically occurs above 3 400 meters. Afro-alpine vegetation is characterized by the presence of giant senecios (Dendrosenecio spp.), giant lobelias (Lobelia spp.), and Helichrysum scrub (McGinley, 2009). The Albertine Rift is home to about 14 % (about 5 800 species) of mainland Africa's plant species, with more than 550 endemic species, including three endemic genera: Afroligusticum, Micractis, Rhaesteria. The Ethiopian Highlands harbor an estimated 5,200 plant species, of which 555 are endemic. The genus Senecio is particularly diverse, with half of the two dozen species found 10 nowhere else. This area also has a monotypic endemic genus, Nephrophyllum abyssinicum, which is found on heavily grazed pastures, open ground, and rocky areas on steep slopes between 1 650 and 2 700 meters. African violets (Saintpaulia spp.) from this region are globally known as a pot plant, but there are with up to 20 endemic species of Saintpaulia in the Eastern Arc Mountains. There are also about 13 endemic species of African primroses (Streptocarpus spp.) in the Eastern Arc Mountains, and 18 endemic species of Impatiens in the Albertine Rift (McGinley, 2009). About 1 300 bird species occur in the Eastern Afromontane Hotspot, and about 110 of these are found nowhere else. The Eastern Arc and Southern Rift Mountains form a single Endemic Bird Area, as defined by BirdLife International. Other mammals, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates are also highly endemic and notable (McGinley, 2009). However, the most charismatic flagship species of the Albertine Rift, and indeed of the entire hotspot, are the great apes. The well-known mountain gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei, CR) is restricted to about 380 individuals in the Virungas. Grauers gorilla (G.b. graueri, EN), was estimated to number about 16 900 in eastern DRC in 1996, but has since suffered major declines as a result of hunting, habitat loss and degradation. Although there are robust chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) in many of the Albertine Rift forests, their populations are generally small (McGinley, 2009). The forests of the Albertine Rift are also home to at least 27 other primate species, including Hoests monkey (Cercopithecus lhoesti), the owl-faced monkey (C. hamlyni), and the golden monkey (C. mitis kandti). Other mammals iinclude the Ruwenzori duiker (Cephalophus rubidus, EN), which is restricted to the Rwenzori Mountains, and the Ruwenzori otter shrew (Micropotamogale ruwenzorii, EN), one of only three representatives of the family Tenrecidae on the African mainland (McGinley, 2009). The primary threat to the biodiversity of the Eastern Afromontane Hotspot is habitat loss, due to conversion of land for agriculture, plantations and commercial estates, as well as logging. Other threats include fires, mining, infrastructure development, gathering of firewood and collection of plants for medicinal use, while hunting and disease have led to 11 major declines in the populations of many species. It is estimated that only about 10 % of the hotspot's original vegetation remains in pristine condition (McGinley, 2009). Nearly 12 % of the Albertine Rift is protected in parks, game reserves, and forest reserves. The largest of these protected areas is the 8 000 km2 Virunga National Park, which links with Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda, and Queen Elizabeth, Rwenzori Mountains, and Semuliki National Park in Uganda to form the 12 800 km2 Greater Virunga Landscape. Other important areas in the Albertine Rift include the asyet-unprotected Itombwe Massif, the 6 000 km2 KahuziBiega National Park in the DRC, Kibale and Bwindi Impenetrable National Parks in Uganda, and Nyungwe National Park in Rwanda. Virunga, Rwenzori Mountains, Bwindi Impenetrable and Kahuzi-Biega are all World Heritage Sites (McGinley, 2009). Since 2001, a process supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation has sought to develop a strategic framework for conservation and joint planning for protected areas in the Albertine Rift. This process brings together NGOs, protected area authorities, and government ministries in each country (McGinley, 2009). 2.4 The Ethiopian Highlands The Ethiopian Highlands covers much of Ethiopia (See Figure 3), as well as small parts of Eritrea, Djibouti, and Sudan, and is bisected by the Great Rift Valley. In the Ethiopian Highlands, the foothills support woodland vegetation, while forests at slightly higher elevations are dominated by conifers. Above 3 000 meters, the Afroalpine ecosystem consists of grassland and moorland, with an abundant herb layer, while the heathland scrub above this is dominated by heathers (McGinley, 2009). The high plateaus of the Ethiopian Highlands are home to the giant Lobelia rhynchopetalum, which grows to a height of about 2-3 Figure 4: The Ethiopian Highlands. Sourced from https://portals.iucn.org/library/efiles/html /African%20primates/section5f29.html meters before sending up a single inflorescence of dark blue-purple flowers that can reach a height of nine meters. Every few years, the lobelias have a musth year when the great majority of plants flower (McGinley, 2009). 12 In the Ethiopian Highlands, the Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Organization (EWCO) was established in 1964 with the assistance of international conservation organizations. The EWCO is plagued by a lack of resources and legislation that has been impossible to enforce. Although a system of conservation areas was proposed to form the basis of wildlife conservation in the country, only two of the planned 14 national parks and sanctuaries have been legally constituted, namely Awash National Park and Simien Mountains National Park. These two parks are not adequately secured, staffed or equipped, and management difficulties have been exacerbated by famines, refugee problems, civil unrest, armed rebellions, and war, which threaten the livelihoods of people and make it unlikely that conservation measures will be implemented (McGinley, 2009). The most important of the conservation areas in Ethiopia is the Bale Mountains National Park, which, while a formal national park, it is yet to be officially gazetted. This Key Biodiversity Area harbors the ‘finest and most intact’ remnants of the highlands' original vegetation. These mountains are also home to more than half of the global population of the Ethiopian wolf. The Ethiopian Wolf Conservation Program (EWCP) has been working in the Bale Mountains for several decades to secure the conservation of areas of Afro-alpine ecosystem, to assess, address and counteract threats to the wolf's survival (McGinley, 2009). 2.5 The Congo Basin ecosystem The Congo Basin begins in the highlands of the East African Rift system with input from the Chambeshi River, the Uele and Ubangi Rivers in the upper reaches and the Lualaba River draining wetlands in the middle reaches and Figure 5: Congo Basin conservation regions. Sourced from http://www.cuvettecentrale.info/frameContent/home. html finally entering the Congo River. Over 80% of this landscape are Guineo-Congolean forests, with two areas of afro-montane 13 forests 2 000 km apart in Cameroon and the Albertine Rift of Eastern DRC. Although this vast forest block is commonly referred to as the Congo basin, strictly speaking it is spread over several watersheds (Congo, Sanaga, Ntem, Ogooué, Nyanga, Niari and Kouilou) but with the Congo River watershed covering by far the largest area. Roughly two thirds of the central African moist forests are drained by the Congo River and 50% of these forests fall within the DRC (WHS, 2010). See Figure 4 and 5. The forests of the Congo Basin account for about a sixth of the world’s remaining tropical forest cover and are among the most biodiverse places on earth. The sub-region’s forests also provide food, materials and shelter to some 40 million people. Yet close to 0.5 million hectares of these forests are being lost each year, due mainly to illegal and destructive logging activities that benefit from – and reinforce – widespread corruption and weak governance in the sub-region (WWF, 2011). An international moratorium on logging in the Congo forest was agreed with the World Bank and the DRC in May 2002. The World Bank agreed to provide $90 million of development aid to the DRC with the proviso that the government did not issue any new concessions granting logging companies rights to exploit the forest. The deal also prohibited the renewal of existing concessions. In 1999, the Yaoundé Summit, a meeting of heads of state from the Congo Basin countries (Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, DRC, Rwanda and Uganda), led to partner countries agreeing to jointly manage the forests of the Congo Basin sustainably. Since then, millions of acres have been protected, new initiatives on bushmeat and anti-poaching have been put in place, and sustainable forestry is beginning to be established. In 2005, a follow up summit, the Brussels Summit, sought to reinforce the initiative and review successes and challenges. Other meetings of the Central African Regional Programme for the Environment (CARPE) led to the identification of 12 important landscapes: Monte-Alen-Monts de Cristal, GambaMavumba-Conkouati, Lope-Chailu-Louesse, Dja-Odzala-Minkebe, Sangha Tri-National, Econi-Bateke-Lefini, LacTele-Lac-Tumba, Selonga-Lukenie-Sankuru, Maringa-Lapori-Wamba, Maiko-Tayna-KahuziBiega, Ituri-Epulu-Aru and Virunga. The 12 landscapes form the Congo Basin that spans an area of 680 300 km2 across Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, DRC, Rwanda and Uganda. At the Johannesburg Earth Summit in 2002, the Congo Basin Forest Partnership (CBFP) was launched. The Congo Basin Forest Partnership (CBFP) is a non-profit initiative to promote the conservation and responsible management of the Congo Basin's tropical forests. The project aims to improve the techniques and information sharing of involved organizations. It is led by the United States and sponsored by more than 40 international governments and investors (CBFP, n.d.). 14 There is now also a treaty in place on the Conservation and Sustainable Development of the Forest Ecosystems of Central Africa in place (2006), ratified by 10 signatory states to also assist in the protect this area. To implement the Treaty, a sub-regional organization, called ‘Central Africa Forests Commission’ (COMIFAC) was established. COMIFAC is an organization set up to guide, harmonize and monitor forest and environmental policies in Central Africa. The COMIFAC Convergence Plan defines the common intervention strategies of the States and development partners of Central Africa in the conservation and sustainable management of forest ecosystems (COMIFAC, n.d.). 3.0 World Heritage Sites The African continent's three highest mountains are all in East Africa and all three are UNESCO World Heritage Sites. They are Mount Kilimanjaro, Mt Kenya and the Rwenzori range. While Mt Kilimanjaro and Mt Kenya are volcanoes, the Rwenzori range is more ancient, pushed up from the surrounding plateau during the formation of the western (Albertine) branch of the Great Rift Valley. These three mountains all support permanent glaciers, although these will only remain a few more decades because of global warming. The other World Heritage Site mountains in Africa are South Africa's Drakensberg and Ethiopia's Simien Mountains, two of Africa's most spectacular escarpments. The only world heritage mountain is Mount Nimba, located on the borders of Guinea, Liberia and Côte d’Ivoire, and west Africa's highest point and home to many unique species that have evolved in isolation on this remote mountain (ANH, 2014). Interestingly, iron ore is mined on Mt Nimba. The iron ore deposit is located at the base of Mount Nimba, and is one of the highest iron ore peaks in Africa. 4.0 Biosphere reserves There are 64 UNESCO Man and Biosphere (MAB) biosphere reserves in 28 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. The biosphere reserve concept aims at simultaneously help preserve biological diversity, enhance development and empower poor rural people. The full list of biospheres reserves in the 28 African countries can be found at http://wikitravel.org/en/UNESCO_World_Heritage_List#Africa 5.0 References AfriMab (2013). Biosphere reserves in Sub-Saharan Africa. UNESCO MAB programme. Document sourced online at http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0022/002269/226919E.pdf 15 ANH (2014). Africa Natural Heritage. Sourced online at http://www.africannaturalheritage.org/Mountains/ CBFP (n.d.). The Congo Basin Forestry Partnership. Online promotional material, sourced at http://pfbc-cbfp.org/comifac_en2.html COMIFAC (n.d.). The COMIFAC Convergence Plan, 2005. Online promotional material, sourced online at http://pfbc-cbfp.org/comifac_en2.html EAMCEF (n.d.). Eastern Arc Mountain Conservation Endowment Fund. Online material. Sourced online at http://www.easternarc.or.tz/fund. Fleshman M (2008). Saving Africa’s forests, the ‘lungs of the world’. African Renewal online. Sourced online at http://www.un.org/africarenewal/magazine/january-2008/saving-africa%E2%80%99sforests-%E2%80%98lungs-world%E2%80%99 McGinley M (2009). Biological diversity in the Eastern Afromontane. Encyclopedia of Earth. Sourced online at http://www.eoearth.org/view/article/150641/ Mertens B, Shu G N and Steil M (n.d.). Interactive Forest Atlas Of Cameroon. Version 3.0 | Overview Report. Sourced online at http://www.microsfere.org/en/ghana/guinean-forests-of-west-africabiodiversity-hotspot.htmldata.wri.org/forest_atlas/cmr/report/cmr_atlas_v3_eng.pdf Microsfere (n.d.). Guinean Forests of West Africa Biodiversity hotspot. Microsfere organisation, Sourced online at http://www.microsfere.org/en/ghana/guinean-forests-of-west-africa-biodiversityhotspot.html UNEP Atlas (n.d.). Akagera National Park. Environmental Change Hotspots Atlas. http://www.na.unep.net/atlas/webatlas.php?id=275 WHS (2010). World Heritage in the Congo Basin. UNESCO publication. Sourced online from file:///C:/Users/Richard/Downloads/activity-43-10.pdf Wikipedia (2015). Key Biodiversity Area. Sourced online at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_Biodiversity_Area WWF Cameroon (n.d.). Cameroon Highlands Forests - A Global Ecoregion/ Information sourced online at http://wwf.panda.org/about_our_earth/ecoregions/cameroon_highlands_forests.cfm WWF (n.d.). About Global Ecoregions. Information sourced online at http://wwf.panda.org/about_our_earth/ecoregions/about/ WWF (2011). WWF position statement: Congo Basin Forests. Sourced online at http://d2ouvy59p0dg6k.cloudfront.net/downloads/2011_05_25__final_wwf_congo_basin_position _statement.pdf WWF/Dahlberg (2013). The Economic Value of Virunga National Park. WWF International, Gland, Switzerland. Sourced online at 16 http://awsassets.wwfnz.panda.org/downloads/the_economic_value_of_virunga_national_park_lr.p df 17