17 Jan 2007 - Washington, DC – New studies published this
month in the scientific journal Biological Conservation
document an amazing concentration of over 1000 species unique
to the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania and Kenya. This
remaining mountain habitat has the highest concentration
of endemic animals in Africa but is increasingly coming
under threat.
“The wild areas of the Eastern Arc Mountains are pockets
of Eden, the last remaining safe havens for over 1000 plants
and animals found nowhere else on Earth and some with ancient
lineages stretching back in time over millions of years,”
said Dr Neil Burgess, lead author of the two studies and
Eastern Arc expert for WWF-US and the University of Cambridge.
“Side by side, these species and their human neighbours
struggle for survival as more and more people need more
and more farmland for food.”
One study found that the Eastern Arc Mountains are exceptionally
important for conservation because at least 96 animals,
832 plants and hundreds of invertebrates, including 43 butterflies,
live only there and nowhere else on earth. Another 71 animals
are found only within a limited range including these mountains
and nearby areas. Of these species, 71 are classified as
threatened by extinction by the IUCN Red List.
According to WWF, there are likely more species to be discovered
in the mountains. One of the most exciting recent discoveries
was that of a new genus of monkey, the highland mangabey
(Rungwecebus kipunji). A further 15 new animals have recently
been found that are still in the process of being described
by scientists including several new chameleons. Over the
next two years, surveys will continue and new discoveries
are expected in remote and poorly known areas.
The studies also point out another unusual characteristic
of the species in the Eastern Arc Mountains: a number of
them are genetically ancient. DNA analysis of forest birds
indicates that some species have lineages stretching back
25 million years and some are more strongly related to birds
in Southeast Asia than birds in Africa. Some plants and
animals, like elephant shrews and bushbabies, are thought
to have evolved early in the species lineage, known as “primitive”
or “ancient relic lineages".
The same conditions that give life to these plants and
animals support a dense and growing human population in
one of the poorest countries in the world, according to
the second study. With most local populations dependent
on agriculture, inefficient farming methods and a growing
need for food lead to farmland expansion, sometimes into
existing reserves.
"Effective conservation in the Eastern Arc Mountains
requires finding solutions to the livelihood needs of these
poor, rural populations and sufficient funds to establish
and adequately manage a network of protected areas,"
Dr Burgess said.
Currently, seven proposed reserves protecting an additional
153, 205 acres of wilderness in the Eastern Arcs are awaiting
declaration by the Tanzanian government.
“Their declaration would help establish the network urgently
needed to protect the natural wealth of the Eastern Arc
Mountains," he added.
The Tanzanian government is also pursuing the declaration
of the area as a World Heritage Site, in recognition of
its universal value for the conservation of biological diversity.
Not only do the Eastern Arc Mountains support life locally,
but they provide drinking water for at least 60 per cent
of the urban population of Tanzania and generate over 90
per cent of the nation’s hydroelectricity generation capacity.
WWF-US and its partners are exploring one possible solution
for conserving the Eastern Arc Mountains that would attach
a monetary value to these “ecosystem services” and divert
funds paid by water users to the forest managers and surrounding
communities.
END NOTES:
• The Eastern Arc Mountains — an area slightly larger than
the US state of Rhode Island — curve through eastern Tanzania
and just over the border into south-eastern Kenya. Its forests
are often covered in a blanket of mist during the night
and help collect water for much of Tanzania and its hydroelectricity.
As a crucial source of water and home to unique and threatened
wildlife, WWF considers the Eastern Arc Mountain range and
coastal East Africa a conservation priority and works with
local communities and partners to protect the natural richness
of the region.
• The two studies published in the January issue of the
journal Biological Conservation are: Neil D. Burgess et
al., “The biological importance of the Eastern Arc Mountains
of Tanzania and Kenya,” Biological Conservation (2007);
and Neil D. Burgess et al, “Correlations among species distributions,
human density and human infrastructure across the high biodiversity
tropical mountains of Africa,” Biological Conservation (2007).