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Back To: Environment
Banc
d’Arguin
Banc d'Arguin is a World Heritage
Site and was established as a National Park inMauritania
in 1976. It is located on the western fringe of the
Sahara,
and accounts for more than one third of Mauritania’s entire
coastline. It is one of the richest fishing grounds in the world,
owing to the upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich waters.
The park’s has an area of 1,200,00 ha which includes marine, land
areas and islands. The wetlands are composed of extensive, shallow
marine areas, scattered islands, intertidal sand banks, mudflats,
channels, cr eeks
and mangrove forest. The mudflats support vast beds of seagrass
housing mollusks and crustaceans and are important high-tide feeding
or nursery areas for commercially-important deep sea fish.
Banc d’Arguin was designated a Ramsar Wetland of International
Importance in 1982. The Park is home to 1500 fishermen and their
families who use traditional fishing methods for a livelihood.
Large flocks of shorebirds forage at low tide and over two million
flock to the park’s mudflats between September and March.. It is
home to more than 40,000 pairs of nesting birds including several
species of terns, cormorants, pink flamingos, endemic grey herons,
endemic spoonbills, white pelicans, slender bill gulls.
Other notable fauna include a variety of marine mammals, marine
turtles, and an endangered seal species. The marine life includes
fishes, marine mammals and sea turtles, shellfish.
Salt tolerant grasses grow along the coast, and in the desert are
typical Saharan plants, bushes and trees. Plants include more than
200 species.
Drought and poaching have almost eradicated the larger mammal
species (Oryx, Gazelles, Ostriches). Desert rodents and reptiles are
seasonal visitors. There is a small population of Dorcas Gazelles on
Tidra Island.
Barc d’Arguin National Park was inscribed in 1989 as UNESCO World
Heritage Site based on the following UNESO criteria:
1) an outstanding example representing significant on-going
ecological and biological processes in the evolution and development
of terrestrial, fresh water, coastal and marine ecosystems and
communities of plants and animals.
2) contains the most
important and significant natural habitats for in-situ conservation
of biological diversity, including those containing threatened
species of outstanding universal value from the point of view of
science and conservation.
The Convention on Wetlands came into force for Mauritania on 22
February 1983. Mauritania presently has 3 sites designated as
Wetlands of International Importance, with a surface area of
1,231,100 hectares: Banc d’Arguin,
Parc National du Diawling, and
Chat Tboul.
Ramsar site no. 250.
Reference:
http://www.ramsar.org/profile/profiles_mauritania.htm
photo:
http://www.mauritania-today.com/anglais/tourism/banc-d-arguin/
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