Neha Patil (Editor)

Gambela National Park

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Address
  
Ethiopia

Area
  
5,061 km²

Gambela National Park

Location
  
Gambela Region, Ethiopia

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Gambela National Park is the largest of the national parks in Ethiopia, covering 5,061 square kilometres (1,954 sq mi). Established in 1973, it is located in the Gambela Region, about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) southwest of the city of Gambela, which houses the park's headquarters. The northern boundary is delineated by the Baro River.

Contents

Beautiful gambela national park


Topography

The park is situated in a lowland plain, but there are some areas of higher, often rocky, ground with deciduous woodland and savanna, as well as large termite mounds. Gambela National Park also supports extensive areas of wet grassland and swamps.

Flora and fauna

There are "69 species of mammal, 327 species of birds, 7 species of reptile, 493 species of plants and 92 species of fish". Planning for the conservation and management of wildlife in Gambela Park was focused on protecting three endangered species: the African elephant, Nile lechwe and shoebill stork. Among the mammal species reported to be living here are the Cape buffalo, Masai lion, leopard, Sudan cheetah, Nubian giraffe, roan antelope, tiang, Lelwel hartebeest, olive baboon, and guereza monkey, as well as hyena, buffalo, sable antelope, hippopotamus, Kafue lechwe, blue wildebeest, zebra, greater kudu, bushbuck, oribi, reedbuck and waterbuck. The peak of the annual antelope migration occurs from January to March. Several birds only found in this area include the long-tailed paradise whydah and the red-throated and green bee-eaters.

About 66% of the area is considered shrubland, 15% is forest, while 17% has been altered by man. In the wet grassland and swamps, the native grasses grow over 3 metres (9.8 ft) in height.

Climate

The mean annual rainfall is 1,400 millimetres (55 in); there is a wet season from May to October and a dry season the rest of time. The park is mostly flooded from August to October. The mean temperature is 27 °C, with signification variation.

Human activities

There is no infrastructure, but it is claimed that development is underway to make it a tourist attraction.

The local residents graze their animals, plant a few crops along the rivers and hunt in the park.

It is being encroached upon by refugee camps, many occupied by people from the southern Sudan.

References

Gambela National Park Wikipedia