Sunday Tribune

Camera trap-based sightings show slow return of wildlife to DRC national park

- DANIELA HEDWIG

MONITORING mammal species is a crucial conservati­on tool. This is particular­ly true in ecological transition zones – geographic­al areas in which different habitats, like grassland and forest, meet and merge into one another.

These zones are frequent hotspots of mammal species diversity because they do not only contain species typical for specific habitat types, but often also additional highly adaptable species.

But in zones of ecological transition animals can find themselves at the edge of the habitat type most suitable to them. The result is that there are often fewer of them and they have reduced genetic variabilit­y. This makes them less resilient than core population­s.

As such, with ever increasing levels of human encroachme­nt and poaching, these zones need special attention by conservati­onists to guarantee the survival of population­s inhabiting in these.

A good example is the stunning, but largely overlooked, Batéké Plateau National Park in south-eastern Gabon. In 2015, a systematic camera trap-based monitoring programme was started by The Aspinall Foundation and the Gabonese National Parks Agency. Since 1998, they have worked together to facilitate the reintroduc­tion of the western lowland gorilla in the national park.

Data was collected in collaborat­ion with Panthera, an internatio­nal NGO dedicated to the conservati­on of the world’s wild cats and the Pan-african Program of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy, which conducted a survey investigat­ing the behaviour of chimpanzee­s in the park.

The park is situated at the transition between the Gabonese rain forest and the savannah-dominated Batéké Plateau of the Republic of the Congo. It provides breathtaki­ng views of narrow stretches of forest along the banks of the Mpassa River (so-called gallery forests) meandering into the savannah. The park once teemed with wildlife.

But the bushmeat and illegal ivory trade along with organised eradicatio­n of large carnivores had taken its toll on the mammal species in the area.

Those that remained appeared to be restricted to the gallery forests. Some were thought to be close to extinction. For example, for decades it was assumed that mammals like lions were extinct in the park. But the results from the camera trap monitoring project give reason for hope that wildlife is returning. And captured footage provides intriguing insights into the Batéké mammal species community.

The monitoring programme found 12 mammal species that are threatened with extinction according to the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN). These include chimpanzee, leopard, elephant, giant pangolin and western lowland gorilla, which have been reintroduc­ed to the park since 1998.

Notably, the camera traps captured species thought to be long extinct or even not occurring in the area. For example, camera footage in 2015 marked the first definitive proof of lion in Gabon. Until then, the assumption had been that the last specimen was shot in 1996. Potential paw prints were spotted in 2004. Non-invasive efforts were made to collect hair samples. Genetic analysis showed that this single male lion might be a survivor of the historic Batéké population.

Another example involves footage of several young mandrills (primate of the Old World monkey family). This suggests that emigrating males of this species may venture out further than previously thought in search for new groups and females. According to the IUCN, the distributi­on of mandrills in Gabon is restricted to the east near the Ivindo and Ogoue rivers.

Combined with interviews with local people, which reported that mandrills were once present in the north of the park, observatio­ns suggest that the current species distributi­on must be redefined.

More recently, another spectacula­r discovery took place in 2017. Camera traps captured a spotted hyena in Batéké for the first time in two decades.

These astonishin­g findings illustrate that large mammals are returning to the Batéké Plateau National Park after 20 years of conservati­on efforts, initiated by The Aspinall Foundation’s gorilla reintroduc­tion programme.

Today, Batéké appears to be the only park within the network of protected areas in Gabon where the savannah-dwelling serval, jackal and bush duiker exist together. It is also the only park with four species of wild cats.

The national park is also rare because it holds large carnivores such as lion and spotted hyena. But illegal hunting remains a threat, particular­ly in the southeast of the park.

Intriguing­ly, the findings also showed that the species diversity was not as great as might have been expected. With 36 medium to largesized mammal species, the park appears to host a smaller number of species than the forested protected areas of Gabon and Congo. To investigat­e this, researcher­s took a closer look at the mammal species in the gallery forests.

As the gallery forests reach out into the savannah, they may degrade and become less suitable for species that are highly adapted to living in a forest habitat. But the researcher­s did not find a smaller number of species in the gallery forests further in the savannah compared with those closer to the continuous Gabonese rain forest.

However, it may be possible that the narrow gallery forests are simply too small to provide sufficient forage to support certain species. This might explain the striking absence of mangabey and colobine primate species, which are characteri­stic for the African rain forest.

Future studies will need to take into account factors like altitude, climate and soil compositio­n influencin­g plant productivi­ty and food availabili­ty, to understand the local variation in species richness.

In the meantime, it is crucial that the Batéké Plateau National Park is rigorously protected to guarantee the continued survival and recovery of the fragile community of mammals.

This article was co-authored by Tony King of The Aspinall Foundation. – The Conversati­on

 ??  ?? The Batéké Plateau National Park is situated at the transition between forest and savannah habitats in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It once teemed with wildlife. PICTURE: DANIELA HEDWIG
The Batéké Plateau National Park is situated at the transition between forest and savannah habitats in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It once teemed with wildlife. PICTURE: DANIELA HEDWIG

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