Gorilla Journal 32, June 2006

Trip to Nigeria

From 13 January to 17 February I visited Nigeria. Up to 1983, gorillas were believed to be extinct in Nigeria; in that year the Cross River gorilla was rediscovered, although it is still critically endangered. This is both the northernmost as the westernmost occurrence of gorillas.
The Cross River gorilla was first described in 1904 by Paul Matschie of the Humboldt University Zoological Museum in Berlin, who classified them as a new species, based on the characteristics of a short skull, short molar row, palate shape, and skull base shape. Decades of disagreement followed until the 1990s when Esteban Sarmiento and John Oates definitively confirmed it as an valid subspecies, Gorilla gorilla diehli. There are less than 300 individuals left, making it the most threatened gorilla subspecies. Only one single animal is in captivity at the moment, a confiscated gorilla living at the Limbe Rescue Centre in Cameroon together with rescued western lowland gorillas.
I visited above all the projects supported by Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe. In Calabar, I met Andrew Dunn, with whom I had exchanged many emails in the past; he had already put together a full program. I also met Chris Agbor, the Permanent Secretary of Forest Commission for the Cross River State, and we discussed the protection and possible further development of the park. I learned that both the Afi and Mbe Mountains are now very well protected thanks to the reliable work of rangers and scientists, whose continuing presence prevents poaching in both areas.
Our first destination was the Afi Mountain Wildlife Sanctuary. In May 2000, part of the existing Afi River Forest Reserve was established as a wildlife sanctuary, mainly to protect the Cross River gorilla. The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), for which Andrew Dunn works, has been active in that area since 1986. The sanctuary covers 32 km² (lying within the forest reserve of 380 km²), approximately 1,300 m above sea level.
Reaching Afi is not easy: it is an impenetrable area with steep slopes, which has surely helped the survival of about 30 gorillas there, but makes working there rather difficult. The area is characterized by a long dry season, during which the animals find fewer fruits and roam the forest on a north-south axis. Every 3 months WCS facilitates a sweep census when biologists and rangers distributed at different camps survey the whole area and record all nests and faeces they encounter. I was lucky to be at Afi during such a census, and met among others WCS research officer, Inaoyom Imong and the Conservation Coordinator of the Afi Mountain Wildlife Sanctuary, Ubi Sam. Usually biology students from the nearby University of Calabar join those censuses which gives them a good opportunity to gain field experience. They all participated with great enthusiasm and interest.
Another very important area is Mbe, since it represents a corridor between Afi and the Okwangwo Division of the Cross River National Park (CRNP). Without official protection status it is up to the WCS eco-guards to patrol this forest and thanks to their work there has not been any gorilla poaching in the past 5 years. The management of this area is carried out by the surrounding villages. Currently the demarcation of borders for a core protected area is under way. SPACE (Sustainable Practices in Agriculture for Critical Environments) is doing a considerable amount of education in those villages. Since 1990 there has been a proposal to integrate Mbe into the national park, but so far no action has been taken to implement this. Population increase and thus pressure on the forest are the main problems at Mbe.
Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe financed the renovation of ranger posts at Mbe and Afi. The building materials needed to be carried up the mountains one by one, and when I saw those steep slopes I began to understand why this has taken quite some time; but as all the materials have now arrived at the site it will not take long to complete the job. The Afi ranger post has been completed in the meantime (see photo below).

Renovated ranger post in Afi  Photo: Ubi Sam

The Cross River National Park is a so-called biodiversity hotspot, meaning that it is an area with many species, including many endemics; it is extremely endangered because of poaching, clearing, road construction and population pressure. The park consists of two parts: the Oban Division in the south (approximately 3,000 km²), which is connected with the Korup National Park in Cameroon, and in the north the Okwangwo Division (approximately 640 km²), connected to the Takamanda Forest Reserve in Cameroon. The two parts are separated by 63 km, and taken together they contain 80% of all wild primate species in Nigeria. In 1991, the area was recognized as national park.
Alhaji Abdulsalam, the director of CRNP, arranged for the rangers at Anape to show us the area around their region. Kolmården Zoo has funded the construction of a ranger post at Anape which I was interested in visiting. There are still numerous villages in the forest which makes effective protection enormously difficult. It is therefore important to continue supporting education and protection efforts throughout CRNP.
Anape is near Obudu, which is outside of the national park. In 1959 a first class hotel was established here, which has now been further extended by luxury lodges. Fulani living in that area still burn the vegetation from time to time to provide grass for their cattle. Fortunately it is also in the interest of the hotel operators to preserve natural habitat around the Obudu Plateau, as the surrounding forests are a tourist destination. As the area is huge with many hills and valleys, only a fraction can be controlled from Anape and there are plans to establish another ranger post in Bumaji. This would also give locals an alternative way of living and therefore help to reduce exploitation of natural resources; they could find jobs as rangers and work on the construction of the ranger station.
Last year Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe donated tents, backpacks and sweaters for the rangers. In February a new Director of CRNP was appointed; in Nigeria Park Directors are regularly rotated. Andrew Dunn will discuss further conservation efforts with the new man in charge, Steven Haruna. It is essential to continue to work for protection of the remaining areas and the animals living there; Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe has pledged to support further conservation efforts in Cross River National Park in 2006.

Denise Nierentz

Denise Nierentz worked for one year at the Endangered Primate Rescue Centre (EPRC) in Cuc Phuong National Park in Vietnam, and is now a zoo animal keeper (for gorillas, among others). She has also visited gorillas in several African countries.

Cross River overview

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