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Three new mountain national parks for Uganda

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2009

Thomas M. Butynski
Affiliation:
World Wide Fund for Nature, Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation, PO Box 7487, Kampala, Uganda.
Jan Kalina
Affiliation:
Development Through Conservation Project, CARE-Uganda, PO Box 7280, Kampala, Uganda.
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Abstract

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For many years the Fauna and Flora Preservation Society has supported efforts to conserve forests in the Albertine Rift Afromontane Region of east-central Africa. The biodiversity of these forests is especially high but most have been destroyed or badly degraded. There are a large number of local, national and international initiatives to conserve at least some of the forests that remain. In 1991 Uganda created the Rwenzori Mountains, Mgahinga Gorilla, and Bwindi-Impenetrable National Parks, thus protecting all three of its Albertine Rift montane forests. This paper presents a synopsis of the conservation values of these three parks, and describes the conservation problems and the efforts to help ensure their proper development and long-term viability. Considerable progress towards the conservation of all three areas has already been made and future prospects are good, particularly for the mountain gorilla Gorilla gorilla beringei.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna and Flora International 1993

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