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Back To: Environment
Ichkuel National Park
Ichkeul National Park is
located in northern
Tunisia about 15km south of the Mediterranean. The
Park consists of a wooded massif and a
lake of brackish water. The lake is connected to the sea by the
river Oued Tindja. The Park comprises approximately 1,360ha of
mountain terrain; 8,500 ha of lake and the rest of the Park’s area
is marshland.
Lake Ichkeul is the last of a chain of lakes which used to extend
across the North African seaboard and one of the four most important
and productive remaining wetlands in the western Mediterranean. It
is a major stopover for hundreds of thousands of migrating birds;
over 300,000 birds can be present at one time at the lake. Geese,
storks and pink flamingoes come to feed and nest there. The
threatened migrant white stork and 4% of known world population of
the white-headed duck, 226 species of birds, the rare black stork
and glossy ibis have all been recorded here.
The resident and the migratory birds
are attracted by the wide range of plant habitats within the park;
the mountain is dominated by wild olive trees and dense shrubs.
Grasses grow in the marsh pools and in drier areas and ridges are
oleander and lotus.
One of the most notable mammals at
Ichkeul is the otter which has been hunted for its meat and is
threatened with extinction. There are large populations of wild
boar, and wild water buffalo, porcupine, jackal, Egyptian mongoose,
wildcat, and four species of bats.
The amphibians vary with water level and salinity. The marsh frog,
the painted frog, three species of toad, two harmless species of
snake and two pond turtles are found in the lake.

The lake’s fish are eel, mullets, sole,
sea bass, barbel, shad , anchovy, Mediterranean killifish and
seahorse.
The lake, marshes and mountain have been settled for centuries. In
1740 Jebel Ichkeul and the lake were managed as a hunting reserve.
Water buffalo were introduced from Italy in 1729.
The lake is fed by six main rivers from the west and south: Oueds
Douimis, Sejenane, Malah, Rhezala, Joumine, and Tine. The rivers dry
out in summer. The lake’s salinity began to increase in the mid 90s
after dams were constructed on some of these rivers almost cutting
off the fresh water supply.
The fresh-water reeds and grasses have been replaced by salt
tolerant grasses. The migratory birds
depended on the former habitat; and so species such as purple heron,
purple gallinule and reed warblers have disappeared from the park.
In 1996 the Park was inscribed on the List of World Heritage Sites
in Danger. In 1998 the World Heritage Committee recommended sending
an expert mission to the site “to look into possibilities of
developing measures to retain freshwater and reduce the salinity of
the lake.”
sources:
http://www.unesco.org/whc/sites/8.htm ,
http://www.ramsar.org/ram/ram_rpt_41e.htm
http://www.wcmc.org.uk/protected_areas/data/wh/ichkeul.html
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