Gadabedji Reserve

The Gadabedji Total Reserve (Réserve totale de Faune du Gadabedji) is a nature reserve in the central region of Niger. It is a Total Faunal Reserve IUCN type IV, covering some 76,000 hectares within the northern tip of the Maradi Region, just north of the town of Dakoro, and south of the border with the Agadez Region. The reserve is also recognized biosphere reserve by the Unesco since 2017.[1]

Réserve total de faune & fôret classée du Gadabedji
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)
LocationMaradi Region, Niger
Nearest cityDakoro, Bader, Niger
Coordinates12°35′59″N 2°36′00″E
Area76,000 hectares
Established1 January 1955
Governing bodyParcs Nationaux & Reserves - Niger

Geography

The reserve, originally established 25 April 1955, by Law No. 3120/S.E. is also a 'fôret classée'. It covers a small area of Sahelian wooded steppe and grassland, south of the Aïr Mountains.

Animal population

Gadabedji Total Reserve was planned to protect Sahelo-Saharan antelopes, mainly the Scimitar-horned Oryx and Dama Gazelle populations which have largely disappeared due to local population pressures.[2] In the 1940s, the area was along an important migration route for the animals from the Tenere desert to the Adar in the south of the country. It remains a transhumance route for domesticated cattle and camels, as well as some wild Dorcas and Ménas Gazelles[3] The reserve is a proposed site of future Oryx reintroduction.[4]

gollark: Not all of it. Probably not the mantle.
gollark: I'm trying to look up the composition of the Earth, because I figure a good way to remove the oxygen would be to react it with some readily available metal or whatever.
gollark: Use it directly, I mean.
gollark: Though I guess you just need to reduce it to 10% or so to stop humans from being able to use it.
gollark: A complicating factor here is that whatever process you need to either remove the oxygen from earth or bind it in some chemical will probably run less efficiently as the oxygen content declines.

References

  1. http://www.unesco.org/new/en/natural-sciences/environment/ecological-sciences/biosphere-reserves/africa/niger/gadabedji/
  2. Pierre Devillers and Jean Devillers-Terschuren. Report on the status and perspectives of a species : Gazella dama Archived 2007-11-27 at the Wayback Machine. Seminar on the Conservation and Restoration of Sahelo-Saharan Antelopes. Djerba, Tunisia, 19–23 February 1998 UNEP, Convention on Migratory Species
  3. SAHELO-SAHARAN ANTELOPES - Concerted Action - CMS, DB 2007 report.
  4. FFEM /FGEM Project : SAHELO-SAHARAN ANTELOPES Archived 2008-09-20 at the Wayback Machine.
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