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Back To: Environment
Bahrat Homs
A large artificial lake in
Syria dotted with small islands 15 km south-west of Homs
and west of Qattiné dating from Roman times. It is surrounded by an
open green area. To the south of the lake the land is fertile and
cultivated, but to the north is a large area of basalt rock.
Villages are scattered around the lakeside. The lake is an important
wintering area for ducks and coots.
In 2004, one specimen of the rarest globally threatened bird, the
Sociable Lapwing Vanellus gregarious, was seen at Bahrat Homs.
In January 2005, the Middle East Office of BirdLife International
organized a training course for Iraqi wetland biologists at Bahrat
Homs as part of an Environmental Training Programme for
Iraq. Their survey recorded 67,900 birds of 29 species.
Problems facing the lake are pollution from factories near Qattiné,
disturbance from recreational use, fishing, shooting of wildfowl,
high human population density. The lake was proposed as a Project
Aqua conservation site by Syria’s Ministry of Agriculture and
Agrarian Reform in the late 1960s.
References:http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/;
http://www.cimiwetlands.net/doclib/CIMI_TechReport_3.PDF
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