Monday 15 December 2014

Sangha Trinational in Congo

Sangha Trinational - Congo

Located in the North-Western Congo basin, where Central African Republic, Cameroon and Congo meet, the site includes three continuous nature parks in total about 750,000 ha. Much of the site is not affected by human activity and features a wide range of humid tropical forest ecosystems with rich flora and fauna, including Nile crocodiles and goliath tigerfish, a large predator. Herbaceous species and above support forest Sangha is where significant populations of endangered chimpanzee, forest elephants and endangered western lowland gorilla. Of the site environment, the continuation of the ecological and evolutionary processes on a large scale and high biodiversity, including many endangered species preserved.

Wonderful Universal Importance

Sangha (TNS) is a cross-border trinational conservation complex in the North-Western Congo basin where Cameroon, Central African Republic and the Republic of Congo meet. TNS includes three continuous nature parks in total a legally defined area of 746,309 hectares. These are the Lobéké Dzanga-Ndoki National Park in Cameroon, National Park in the Central African Republic and Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park in the Republic of Congo. Dzanga-Ndoki National Park consists of two different units. The parks are embedded in a much larger forest landscape, sometimes referred to as the TNS landscape. A buffer zone of 1, 787, 950 hectares was set up in recognition of the importance of the wider landscape and its inhabitants for the future of the property. The Dzanga-Sanga Forest Reserve buffer zone handheld computers in the Central African Republic, which the Dzanga-Ndoki National Park connects two units.

Natural values and features include the ongoing ecological and evolutionary processes in a mostly intact forest landscape on a very large scale. Numerous and diverse habitats such as tropical forests comprises about 170–180 species of deciduous and evergreen species, a wide variety of wetland types, including swamp forests and periodically flooded forests and many types of forest conservation places of great importance continue to be connected to a landscape level. This mosaic of ecosystems and viable populations of full houses faunal floral assemblages, including top predators and rare and endangered species, such as gorillas, chimpanzees and Forest elephants, several kinds of antelope, such as the Bongo and the characteristic Sitatungas.
Source:whc/unesco

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