Selous National Park - Africa Natural Tours ( africanaturaltours.com )
Selous National
Park: Africa
Natural Tours (For Kilimanjaro, Serengeti and Zanzibar) Tanzania safari company
in Moshi
Specialized
in: Wildlife safaris, Mountain climbing,
Cultural tourism and Beach holidays in East Africa
Contact
+255 653 679 958
Email: info@africanaturaltours.com
Website: www.africanaturaltours.com
About Selous
The Selous Game Reserve, covering 50,000 square kilometers,
is amongst the largest protected areas in Africa and is relatively undisturbed
by human impact. The property harbors one of the most significant
concentrations of elephant, black rhinoceros, cheetah, giraffe, hippopotamus
and crocodile, amongst many other species. The reserve also has an
exceptionally high variety of habitats including Miombo woodlands, open
grasslands, riverine forests and swamps, making it a valuable laboratory for
on-going ecological and biological processes.
The Selous Game Reserve is one of the largest remaining
wilderness areas in Africa, with relatively undisturbed ecological and
biological processes, including a diverse range of wildlife with significant
predator/prey relationships. The property contains a great diversity of vegetation
types, including rocky acacia-clad hills, gallery and ground water forests,
swamps and lowland rain forest. The dominant vegetation of the reserve is
deciduous Miombo woodlands and the property constitutes a globally important
example of this vegetation type. Because of this fire-climax vegetation, soils
are subject to erosion when there are heavy rains. The result is a network of
normally dry rivers of sand that become raging torrents during the rains; these
sand rivers are one of the most unique features of the Selous landscape. Large
parts of the wooded grasslands of the northern Selous are seasonally flooded by
the rising water of the Rufiji River, creating a very dynamic ecosystem.
The reserve has a higher density and diversity of species
than any other Miombo woodland area: more than 2,100 plants have been recorded
and more are thought to exist in the remote forests in the south.
Similarly, the property protects an impressive large mammal fauna; it contains
globally significant populations of African elephant (Loxodonta africana)
(106,300), black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis) (2,135) and wild hunting dog
(Lycaon pictus). It also includes one of the world's largest known populations
of hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibious) (18,200) and buffalo (Syncerus
caffer) (204,015). There are also important populations of ungulates including
sable antelope (Hippotragus Niger) (7000), Lichtenstein's hartebeest
(Alcelaphus lichtensteinii) (52,150), greater kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros),
eland (Taurotragus Oryx) and Nyassa wildebeest (Connochaetes albojubatus)
(80,815). In addition, there is also a large number of Nile crocodile
(Crocodilus niloticus) and 350 species of birds, including the endemic Udzungwa
forest partridge (Xenoperdix udzungwensis) and the rufous winged sunbird
(Nectarinia rufipennis). Because of this high density and diversity of species,
the Selous Game Reserve is a natural habitat of outstanding importance for
in-situ conservation of biological diversity.
Large numbers of elephants, black rhinoceroses,
cheetahs, giraffes, hippopotamuses and crocodiles live in this immense
sanctuary, which measures 50,000 km2 and is relatively undisturbed by human
impact. The park has a variety of vegetation zones, ranging from dense thickets
to open wooded grasslands.
Integrity
With its vast size (5,120,000 ha), the Selous Game Reserve
retains relatively undisturbed on-going ecological and biological processes
which sustain a wide variety of species and habitats. The integrity of
the property is further enhanced by the fact that the Reserve is embedded
within a larger 90,000 km2 Selous
Ecosystem, which includes national parks, forest reserves and community managed
wildlife areas. In addition the Selous Game Reserve is functionally linked with
the 42,000 km2 Niassa
Game Reserve in Mozambique, and this is another important factor that ensures
its integrity. With no permanent habitation inside its boundaries, human
disturbance is low.
Protection and
management requirements
The Selous Game Reserve has appropriate legal protection
and a management plan has been developed. It is managed as a game reserve, with
a small area (8%) in the north dedicated to photographic tourism while most of
the property is managed as a hunting reserve. As long as quota are established
and controlled in a scientific manner, the level of off-take should not impact
wildlife populations and, in fact, should generate substantial income which
needs to be made available for the management of the reserve in order for the
system to be sustainable. A detailed tourism strategy for the reserve needs to
be developed, in line with the framework and principles outlined in the
management plan. The income generated by those activities needs to be made
available for the management of the reserve in order for the system to be
sustainable. The large size of the reserve presents important management
challenges in terms of the levels of staffing and budget required. Key
management issues that need to be addressed are: control of poaching, in particular
of elephants and black rhinoceros; ensuring sufficient benefits for the local
communities through the wildlife management areas and the improved management
of hunting and photographic tourism. Enhanced surveillance and ecological
monitoring systems are required to provide a better scientific/technical basis
for management of the property's natural resources, as well as to better
understand the impacts/benefits of consumptive and non-consumptive tourism. The
most significant threats are related to exploration and extraction of minerals,
oil and gas, and large infrastructure plans; environmental impact assessments
need to be conducted for all development activities in the vicinity of the
property that are likely to have an impact of the property's Outstanding
Universal Value. To ensure long term integrity of the property it is important
to ensure its management as part of a wider Selous ecosystem and to take the
necessary measures to maintain the functional link to Niassa Game Reserve in
Mozambique
For more information
visit www.africanaturaltours.com
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