Conkouati-Douli National Park | |
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Map of the Republic of the Congo | |
Location | Kouilou, Republic of the Congo |
Coordinates | 3°54′18″S11°28′12″E / 3.905°S 11.47°E [1] |
Area | 5,049.5 km2 [3] |
Established | August 14, 1999 |
Governing body | Ministry for National Forestry Commission |
The Conkouati-Douli National Park is a UNESCO-recognised coastal national park in the Republic of the Congo. The park's main activities include community outreach, biological research and tourism development.
The national park was established by the Presidential Decree No. 99-136 on 14 August 1999, it occupies an area of 7,955km² / 795,500ha including 4,121 km² / 412,195ha marine and 3,833 km² / 383,305ha land and located in the Kouilou Department, straddling the districts of Nzambi and Madingo Kayes.
It is located near the villages of Cotovindou and Louléma along the border between Congo and Gabon, at the point of intersection with National Route 5. [4]
Conkouati-Douli National Park is managed by the Ministry of Forest Economy and Sustainable Development (MEFDD), in partnership with the NGO Noé, a non-profit conservation organisation, created in 2001. The responsibilities of the two partners are recorded in a memorandum of understanding (20-year management mandate, signed on April 13, 2021).
In addition to the Ministry of Forest Economy, institutional partners include the Congolese Agency for Wildlife and Protected Areas (ACFAP), Ministries of Agriculture, Fisheries and Livestock (MAEP), and Environment , Tourism, Scientific Research, National Navy and the Judiciary. Concerning the technical and financial partners, there are, in addition to private financiers, WCS, African Parks Network, JGI Congo, HELP/Beauval, Renatura, ESI Congo, the European Union, AFD and USFWS.
The park is divided into three zones:
The Conkouati-Douli National Park was established on August 14, 1999, however the park has been part of an active area of conservation since at least 1980 and includes areas of the former old reserve of Conkouati.
This reserve covered nearly 300,000 hectares but was reduced down to 144,294 hectares by a legal provision in 1989. [5]
From 1994 to 1999 the IUCN recognised that the area was critically endangered and collaborated with PROGECAP-GEF Congo with financing from the World Bank in agreement with the Congolese authorities until June 1999. [5]
After being promoted to a national park, Conkouati-Douli has been managed by the Ministry for National Forestry Commission in partnership with the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) since 1999. [5] , until the conclusion of their partnership in 2018.
This transition paved the way for Noé, a conservation organization, to step in and continue the park's conservation initiatives beginning in 2019. The culmination of these efforts was marked by the signing of a public-private partnership agreement (PPP) in 2021, signaling a renewed commitment to biodiversity conservation, sustainable development and community involvement within the Conkouati-Douli National Park
The park is an important part of native local culture. Some 7,800 people lived in and around the park divided into 31 villages
The coastal residents are mainly Vili people, an ethnic group of fishers and traders that settled there in the 13th century. The villages along the forest road contain a mix of over 30 different ethnic groups who came with the industrial forestry sector and settled fewer than 100 years ago.
Conkouati-Douli National Park is the most bio diverse park in the country and includes the only marine-protected area in Congo.
Home to fauna typical of forest ecosystems of the Congo including elephant, buffalo, gorillas, leopards, chimpanzees, red river hogs, sitatunga and mandrill. [4] [6] The park also has a number of endangered turtle and dolphin populations.
The Noumbi River flows through the park, which is characterised by dense forests, mixed with wetlands, floodplain forests and lagoons. Rhizophora racemosa and Avicennia nititta are common mangroves in the park and aquatic vegetation in lakes and lagoons is composed of Vossia cuspidata and Ctenium newtonili. [4]
Savannahs of the south-west are dominated by Ctenium newtonili, Elytonrus brazzae and Pobeguinea arrecta, while those of Cotovindou in the north-east are made up of Hypparrhenia diplandra, Panicum phragmitoides, and Pobeguinea arrecta. [4]
It is a priority site for great apes in the IUCN great ape conservation action plan as it is home to around 7,000 central chimpanzees ( Pan troglodytes ) and 900 western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla).
The park also houses 900 forest elephants ( Loxodonta africana cyclotis ) and is a Ramsar site for its importance for migratory and wetland birds.
Its beaches are among the most important in the world for nesting of leatherback turtles ( Dermochelys coriacea ).
The marine park also includes a group of around 100 humpback dolphins ( Sousa teuzsi ).
Local ecosystems are vulnerable to industrial threats from logging, mining, petroleum production, and commercial fishing. [4]
Additionally, poachers commonly use the coastal and south-east forest roads traversing the park to gain access to rare animals such as elephants.
The local human population is low but the nearby city of Pointe-Noire (150 km from the park) fuels natural resource exploitation to feed the growing demands for bushmeat and wood.
Chinese-owned trawler boats are a serious threat to the marine park. Local threats include unsustainable fishing, hunting and agriculture techniques. [7]
Since the begin of 2024 the oil company Congo Holding United, a company majority-owned by China Oil Natural Gas Overseas Holding United plans to drill for oil near and inside the Conkouati-Douli Nationalpark. This is a massive risk for rich biodiversity and indigenous people living there.
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