Central Africa: Congo and Democratic Republic of Congo

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This ecoregion, combined with the neighboring Eastern Congolian Swamp Forests [14], contains one of the largest continuous areas of swamp forest in the world. Although relatively few species have been recorded, it remains largely intact and contains large populations of western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla). Poaching is thought to have reduced populations of forest elephants (Loxodonta africana cyclotis) along the navigable waterways. Little research has focused on this region, and further efforts are necessary to better understand these forests and their species composition. There are no protected areas.

  • Scientific Code
    (AT0129)
  • Ecoregion Category
    Afrotropical
  • Size
    49,700 square miles
  • Status
    Relatively Stable/Intact
  • Habitats

Description
Location and General Description
The Western Congolian Swamp Forests ecoregion stretches from eastern Republic of Congo through to the western portion of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and into the Central African Republic. This ecoregion lies on the western bank of the Congo River, which forms a major biogeographic barrier to the Eastern Congolian Swamp Forests [14] and Central Congolian Lowland Forests [15]. The river in this section can be up to 15km wide, and becomes braided in a maze of alluvial islands. The Western Congolian Swamp Forests have an irregular shape (reflecting riparian habitats) bounded by the right bank of the Congo River between the confluence of the Lualaba (Upper Congo) and the Lomami Rivers to the confluence of the Lefini and the Congo Rivers.

These swamps are found in the Cuvette Congolaise, a sedimentary basin that straddles the equator. In the relatively recent geological past (the past four millennia), the area may have supported a lake over much of its extent. There is, however, considerable debate on the climatic history of the area. What is generally accepted is that at one or more times during the driest periods associated with the Pleistocene Ice Ages, climatic desiccation caused the forests to retreat to the wetter areas alongside the river systems (Ngjelé 1988, Colyn 1991, Colyn et al. 1991, Maley 1994).

The Congo River and its tributaries play an important role in this ecoregion, not only as barriers to species dispersal, but also by providing the water for the swamp forests. These forests grow extensively along the meandering tributaries, and often form the predominant forest type between neighboring rivers, especially in the area between the Congo and the Oubangui Rivers. The major tributaries to the Congo that support marginal swamp forests are the Mangala, Giri, Likouala aux Herbes, Sangha, Likouola, and the Kouyou Rivers.

The topography is predominantly a featureless alluvial plain at an altitude of 380-450 m. Climatically, the area is part of the wet tropics with mean annual rainfall around 1,800 mm per annum. Mean maximum temperatures are around 30° C, and mean minimum temperatures are between 21-24° C. There is little seasonality, and humidity levels are normally high. In the wet season, the forests are mainly flooded, usually to a depth of 0.5 to 1.0 meters; and during the dry season, they dry out again. The soils of the ecoregion are classified as gleysols, due to the flooding and waterlogging throughout the year. The human population is low and typically involved with hunting and fishing activities in the forest and its rivers.

This ecoregion contains swamp forest, flooded grasslands, open wetlands, rivers, and some drier forest areas on slightly raised land. The seasonal floods are characteristic features of the riparian habitats of both the Congo and its tributaries, and determine the structure and species distributions in these areas. Species such as Guibourtia demeusei, Mitragyna spp., Symphonia globulifera, Entandrophragma palustre, Uapaca heudelotii, Sterculia subviolacea, Alstonia congensis, and species of Manilkara and Garcinia characterize the swamp forests. Permanently flooded swamp regions host almost monospecific stands of Raphia palm, which can occupy significant areas within the ecoregion. Levee forests occur on higher ground and host a high diversity of liana species as well as Gilbertiodendron dewevrei and Daniekkia pynaertii. Open areas are home to giant ground orchids (Eulophia porphyroglossa), and riverbanks are often lined with arrowroot (Marantochloa spp).

Biodiversity Features
This ecoregion is believed to possess similar, and low, levels of species richness and endemism. Available data indicate that faunal endemism is lower in this ecoregion than in the Eastern Congolian Swamp Forest ecoregion [14], but this may be due to differences in the intensity of biological study. Together with the Eastern Congolian Swamp forest and the Central Congolian Forests [15], this area has been interpreted as a possible forest refuge during the drier climatic periods associated with Ice Ages (e.g. White 1993, Colyn et al. 1991). During the Belgian colonial period there was some study of this ecoregion and many specimens of the flora and fauna are found in museum collections in Belgium. Many of these data have never been fully compiled.

One of the primary values of this ecoregion is its intact forest wilderness where most species populations fluctuate within natural ecological limits. The Congo River is a highly navigable waterway, making some areas accessible to poachers. Despite this, large tracts of low-access forest remain in the ecoregion since swamp forests are not easy to log (Bryant et al. 1997, Forests Monitor 2001, Minnemeyer 2002).

This ecoregion supports a number of large mammal species, including important populations of western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla, EN), chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes, EN), and forest elephant (Loxodonta africana cyclotis, EN) (Lanjouw 1987, Fay et al. 1989; Blake 1993; Blake et al. 1995; Blake 2002; Moore 1989). Large numbers of forest buffalo (Sycerus caffer nanus) were once found here, although most have been hunted out. Together with the elephants and gorillas, the few remaining forest buffalo make use of open grassland areas within the swamps. There may also be important seasonal migrations of elephants (Blake pers. comm.).

This ecoregion is separated from the Eastern Congolian Swamp Forest [14] by the Congo River that forms an important biogeographical boundary for the radiation of species, with clear examples among the primates. For example, crowned guenon (Cercopithecus pogonias EN), moustached guenon (C. cephus), chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes, EN), agile mangabey (Cercocebus agilis), gray-cheeked mangabey (Lophocebus albigena albigenea), Guereza lowland colobus (Colobus guereza), potto (Perodicticus potto edwardsi), golden angwantibo (Arctcebus aureus), and western lowland gorilla occur only on the right bank of the Congo River. In comparison, Wolf's guenon (Cercopithecus wolfi), bonobo (Pan paniscus, EN), golden-bellied mangabey (Cercocebus galeritus chrysogaster), black crested mangabey (Lophocebus aterrimus), and dryad guenon (Cercopithecus dryas) occur only on the left bank of the Congo (Colyn et al. 1991). The distribution of Demidoff's galago (Galagoides demidoff) subspecies follows a similar pattern, with G. d. anomurus and G. d. murinus found only on the right bank of the Congo and G. d. phasma found only on the left. Allen's swamp monkey (Allenopithecus nigroviridis) is found on both sides of the Congo River.

For other vertebrates there is generally a low rate of species richness and few endemics. In birds there are 2 near-endemic bird species - the African river-martin (Pseudochelidon eurystomina DD), and the Congo martin (Riparia congica). There is one near-endemic amphibian, the Yambata River Frog (Phrynobatrachus giorgii), and three near-endemic reptiles: gray chameleon (Chamaeleo chapini), Witte's beaked snake (Rhinotyphlops wittei), and Gastropholis tropidopholis. The apparently low number of endemic species may be due to the low rate of biological study.

Current Status
Together, the Eastern and Western Congolian Swamp Forest ecoregions contain approximately 124,000 km2 of swamp forests habitats (Sayer et al. 1992). Perhaps half of this area remains in this ecoregion.

The ecoregion contains one large (4,390 km2) Ramsar site in the Republic of Congo, Lac Télé-Likouala-aux-Herbes Community Reserve, which was gazetted in 1998. The reserve is located along the River Likouala-aux-herbes, with four major tributaries – Tanga, Mandoungouma, Bailly, and Batanga – and the lake, Lac Télé, which is the home of the mythical giant dinosaur-like animal called Mokele Mbembe. The area is a good example of a freshwater tropical African wetland ecosystem with a diversity of habitats, including swamp forest, inundated savannas and floating prairies along the watercourses. The site is public property, owned by the local communities. A special zone of firm land and seasonally flooded forests, named Zone d'Utilisation Rationelle (ZUR, zone with sustainable use) is used for hunting.

The remote and difficult nature of the swamp forest makes many human activities difficult, and hence the habitats are regarded as largely intact.

Types and Severity of Threats
The habitats of this ecoregion are becoming increasingly threatened by logging concessions in the Congo and DRC, which have been awarded over large areas. Roads have increased, facilitating hunting in areas that were once inaccessible. For example, along the northern and northwestern border of the Lac Télé-Likouala-aux-Herbes Community Reserve a road has been planned for transportation of wood from a logging concession located just outside the reserve. The main threat to some of the fauna is from hunting and poaching; in particular there is organized hunting of the larger species for bushmeat, elephants for ivory and meat, and gorillas for meat and fetishes. The potential increase in commercial bushmeat hunting may in the future cause a reduction in animal populations in the Likouala swamps (Blake 1993). Closer to the Congo and Ubangui Rivers, poaching has probably already eliminated elephants.

Justification of Ecoregion Delineation
The boundaries of the Western Congolian Swamp Forest largely follow those of White (1983). However, the sections of swamp forest that White extends along the Sangha, Dja, and Ngoko Rivers, were subsumed into the Northwestern Congolian Lowland Forest, to which they are thought to be more similar. Although the entire swamp forest is floristically similar (albeit relatively species poor), the definition into two ecoregions was based on differences in the fauna. For example the great apes chimpanzee and Western lowland gorilla are only present on the right bank of the Congo, and the bonobo is only present on the left bank.

References
Blake, S. 1993. A reconnaissance survey in the Likouala Swamps of northern Congo and its implications for conservation. MSc Dissertation, University of Edinburgh. Unpublished.

Blake, S. 2002. Elephants as individuals: correlates in time and space with population characteristics. In the ecology of forest elephant distribution, ranging, and habitat use in the Ndoki Forest, Central Africa. PhD Thesis, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh.

Blake, S., E. Rogers, J.M. Fay, M. Ngangoué, and G. Ebéké. 1995. Swamp gorillas in northern Congo. African Journal of Ecology 33: 285-290.

Bryant, D., D. Nielsen, and L. Tangley. 1997. The last frontier forests: ecosystems and economies on the edge. World Resources Institute, Washington DC.

Colyn, M. 1991. Zoogeographical importance of the Zaire River basin for speciation: L'importance zoogeographique du bassin du fleuve Zaire pour la speciation: le cas des primates simiens. Tervuren, Belgie: Koninklijk Museum voor Midden-Afrika. Annalen. Zoologische wetenschappen. 264: 1-250.

Colyn, M., A. Gautier-Hion, and W. Verheyen. 1991. A re-appraisal of the palaeoenvironmental history in Central Africa: evidence for a major fluvial refuge in the Zaire Basin. Journal of Biogeography 18: 403-407.

Fay, J.M., M. Agnagna, J. Moore, and R. Oko. 1989. Gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) in the Likouala swamp forests of North Central Congo: preliminary data on populations and ecology. International Journal of Primatology 10: 477-486

Forests Monitor. 2001. Sold down the river. The need to control transnational forestry corporations: a European case study. Forests Monitor, Cambridge, UK.

Hilton-Taylor, C. 2000. The IUCN 2000 Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, United Kingdom.

IUCN 1998. 1997 United Nations list of protected areas. Gland and Cambridge: WCMC/IUCN.

Kingdon, J. 1997. The Kingdon field guide to African mammals. Associated Press, London, U.K.

Maley, J. 1994. The African rain forest - main characteristics of changes in vegetation and climate from the Upper Cretaceous to the Quaternary. Pages 31-74 in I.J. Alexander, M.D. Swaine and R. Watling, editors. Essays on the ecology of the Guinea-Congo rain forest. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Series B 104.

Minnemeyer, S. 2002. An analysis of access into Central Africa's rainforests. World Resources Institute, Washington DC.

Moore, J. 1989. Summary of a primate survey, Lac Telle. Unpublished report.

Ngjelé, M. 1988. Principales distributions obtenus par l'analyse factorielle des éléments phytogeographiques présumés endémiques dans la flore du Zaïre. Monograph of Systematic Botany of the Missouri Botanical Garden 25: 631-638.

Sayer, J.A., C.S. Harcourt, and N.M. Collins. 1992. The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests: Africa. IUCN and Simon & Schuster, Cambridge.

White, F. 1983. The vegetation of Africa, a descriptive memoir to accompany the UNESCO/AETFAT/UNSO Vegetation Map of Africa (3 Plates, Northwestern Africa, Northeastern Africa, and Southern Africa, 1:5,000,000). UNESCO, Paris.

White, F. 1993. Refuge theory, ice-age aridity and the history of tropical biotas: an essay in plant geography. Fragmenta Floristica et Geobotanica 2: 385-409.

WWF. 2003. Biological Priorities for Conservation in the Guinean-Congolian Forest and Freshwater Region. Proceedings of Workshop held on March 30 - April 2, 2000 in Libreville, Gabon. Kamdem Toham, A., D. Olson, R. Abell, J. D'Amico, N. Burgess, M. Thieme, A. Blom, R. W. Carroll, S. Gartlan, O. Langrand, R. Mikala Mussavu, D. O'Hara, H. Strand, and L. Trowbridge (Editors). Available from http:www.worldwildlife.org/ecoregions
Prepared by: Allard Blom
Reviewed by: In progress

 

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