Kafue National Park

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Kafue National Park
Map showing the location of Kafue National Park
Map showing the location of Kafue National Park
LocationZambia
Coordinates15°46′S 25°55′E / 15.767°S 25.917°E / -15.767; 25.917Coordinates: 15°46′S 25°55′E / 15.767°S 25.917°E / -15.767; 25.917
Area22,400 km2 (8,600 sq mi)
Established1950s[1]
Governing bodyZambia Wildlife Authority

Kafue National Park is the largest national park in Zambia, covering an area of about 22,400 km² (similar in size to Wales or Massachusetts). It is one of the largest parks in Africa and is home to 152 different species of mammals.[1]

The park is named for the Kafue River. It stretches over three provinces: North Western, Central and Southern. The main access is via the Great West Road from Lusaka to Mongu which crosses the park north of its centre. Seasonal dirt roads also link from Kalomo and Namwala in the south and south-east, and Kasempa in the north.

History[]

Kafue National Park was established in the 1950s by Norman Carr, an influential British-Rhodesian conservationist.[1]

Establishment may have been possible after the British colonial government moved the traditional owners of the area, the Nkoya people of (King) Mwene Kabulwebulwe, from their traditional hunting grounds into the Mumbwa District to the east in 1924. Dissatisfaction with the pace of development in Central Province and a lack of benefit from tourism in the park have led to calls from Nkoya leaders to establish a new province in the area which they have proposed to call Kafue Province.[2][citation needed]

Geology and climate[]

The country is generally flat or gently undulating apart from some small, steep porphyritic granite hills between and Ngoma and occasional sandstone and granite hills around Ngoma rising to 120 metres (390 ft). The southwestern part of the Hook granite massif underlies the central part of the park, including schist, gneiss, granite-gneiss and granite. On the edge of the granite massif there are slates, quartzites and limestones from the Katanga sediments of the inner Lufilian Arc. To the north and south of the massif the soil covers Karroo sediments of shales, siltstones, concreted gravels and various types of laterite.[3]

In the northern end of the park the flood plains have clay soils, but otherwise the soils are strongly leached sandy to loamy soils with low fertility. In most of the drainage of the , and in some of the lands around the , and rivers, there are dark grey alkaline clays. Otherwise, the park is covered by well-drained and relatively infertile pale or orange Kalahari sands mixed with some silt and clay.[3]

The main tributaries to the Kafue river in this park are the and in the north, the Luansanza (or Lwansanza) in the centre and the Musa in the south.[1]

Mean annual rainfall varies from 510 millimetres (20 in) in the south to more than 1,020 millimetres (40 in) in the north. The annual mean temperature is 21 °C (70 °F), with a mean maximum from 26 °C (79 °F) in July to 33 °C (91 °F) in October, the hottest month of the year. Winds are mostly light, blowing from the east. In November–February there are about 5 hours of sunshine daily, and in June–September about 9 hours of sunshine daily.[3]

Habitats and flora[]

Most of the park is covered in miombo woodlands, which are open semi-deciduous forests of trees in the genera Brachystegia, Julbernardia and Isoberlinia, adapted to periodic wildfires. These woodlands have a few small dambos (grasslands which become marshy in the rainy season) interspersed among them. Large termite mounds are found in the forests, and these host their own particular evergreen floras, notably the candelabra tree (Euphorbia ingens), and the jackalberry (Diospyros mespiliformis). Large and small open plains are found throughout the park, often dotted with small termite mounds. Evergreen forests of teak and mopane occur in the south and centre. The Kafue River eventually flows into the man-made Lake Itezhi-tezhi, forming a reservoir partially within the park.[1] An important aquatic plant is the grass Vossia cuspidata, which forms free-floating mats in the river. Aeschynomene elaphroxylon is a problematic weed near Lake Itezhi-tezhi.[3]

The Busanga Plains in the far north-west are a well-known attraction, these are seasonally flooded grasslands along the Lufupa river. There are large herds of herbivores and there is much birdlife here.[1]

Fauna[]

Roan antelope in Kafue National Park

Kafue NP has a large range of antelopes, such as puku, sitatunga, red lechwe, blue duiker, yellow-backed duiker, grysbok, oribi, impala, roan antelope, sable antelope and hartebeest. Elephants are commonly seen.[1]

Since 2005, the protected area is considered a lion 'conservation unit', together with South Luangwa National Park.[4] Cheetahs are not common anywhere, but the can be found throughout this park. Leopards are elusive but frequently seen in certain areas in certain times of the year. Occasional sightings of Cape wild dogs occur all over the park which is one of Zambia's best strongholds for them. Other carnivores include Selous's mongoose, white-tailed mongoose, marsh mongoose, civet, honey badger, otters, serval, caracal and African wild cats.[1]

Other mammals include Cape buffalo, aardvarks, pangolin, bushpig, warthogs, spring hare and bush babies. The Kafue River and its tributaries themselves are a hive of activity and home to pods of hippopotami and a few of the largest crocodiles in southern Africa. There are also monitor lizards in the park.[1]

Birds[]

There are over 500 recorded bird species.[1] Some include Pel's fishing owl, black-cheeked lovebird, crowned crane, African finfoot, Böhm's bee-eaters, paradise flycatchers, sunbirds, numerous kingfisher species and Zambia's only endemic bird, Chaplin's barbet.[1]

Busanga is one of the few known breeding sites for wattled cranes, there are also flocks of pelicans, many species of egrets and large gatherings of open-billed storks. Colonies of skimmers are found on sandbars in the main rivers.[1]

On the small termite mounds of the grasslands sooty chats occur, and in wetter areas of the plains the pink-throated longclaw occurs. When the termite alates fly before the rains, pallid harriers, Montagu's harriers, lesser kestrels and European hobby feed on them.[1]

The woodlands are home to African hawk-eagles, black-chested snake-eagles, racket-tailed rollers, flocks of helmetshrikes, sooty and Arnot's chats.[1]

Fish[]

Important commercial fish species in the area are , , T. rendalli, T. sparrmanii, Clarias gariepinus, , Labeo molybdinus and Hepsetus odoe. In 1992 kapenta (Limnothrissa miodon) from Lake Tanganyika were introduced into Lake Itezhi-tezhi.[3]

Infrastructure[]

Ngoma in the south is the headquarters of the park but this area together with the Nanzhila Plains are less visited since the Itezhi-Tezhi Dam was built and more lodges were developed in the north. The reservoir cut the north-south track through the park and used to make it necessary to detour outside the park to drive between Ngoma and Chunga. The completion of the spinal road once again links the north and south of the park.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Zambia Tourism Board, retrieved 4 April 2021
  2. ^ "Kafue National Park - Ambassador report - Our Actions - Tunza Eco Generation". tunza.eco-generation.org. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e D.B. Fanshawe (December 2010). "VEGETATION DESCRIPTIONS OF THE UPPER ZAMBEZI DISTRICTS OF ZAMBIA" (PDF). Biodiversity Foundation for Africa. Retrieved 2012-06-08.
  4. ^ IUCN Cat Specialist Group (2006). Conservation Strategy for the Lion Panthera leo in Eastern and Southern Africa. IUCN, Pretoria, South Africa.

External links[]

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