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MOUNT OKU
including the KILUM-IJIM MOUNTAIN
FOREST
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Mount Oku lies in the Bamenda
Highlands, North West Province and
at 3011m is the second highest
mountain in west central Africa,
after Mt Cameroon (4095m). It
contains the Kilum-Ijim Forest,
which, at 20,000 hectares is one of
the largest remaining patches of
Afro-montane forest in West Africa.
Population density around the forest
is very high with an estimated
250,000 people living within a day’s
walk, so human pressure on the
forest is immense, particularly for
new farmland.
The Kilum-Ijim Forest Project, a
collaborative effort of BirdLife
International and the Cameroon
Ministry of the Environment and
Forestry (MINEF) was established in
1987, to work with communities
surrounding the forest to conserve
the forest, both for its
biodiversity value and for its
sustainable use by the local
population.
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Lake
Oku, at 2200m altitude,
contends as the highest crater
lake in continental West and
Central Africa. The
surrounding forest is the most
diverse in tree species of all
that within the boundary of
the Kilum-Ijim Project,
including several endangered
species, such as Oxyanthus
okuensis (Rubiaceae). Lake
Oku was proposed as a Plant
Life Sanctuary by the
Government of Cameroon in
2002, supported by data from
our surveys in the area. |
The vegetation changes markedly
with altitude, with lower montane
forest and savanna and grassland
(1500–2000m); Hyparrhenia grassland;
waterfalls, rapids, damp shady
cliffs and banks (1300–2000m);
Lake Oku, a volcanic crater lake
(2200m); grassland swamps (1750–2800m);
upper montane forest (2000–3000m)
and upper montane grassland (2800–3011m).
| Kew projects
Since 1996, at the invitation of
BirdLife, RBG Kew has been
conducting botanical inventories in
an area of c. 1500 square kilometres
on and around
the mountain, at altitudes from
1200m up to the summit. The most
comprehensive plant species list
pre-1996 listed 91 taxa (Thomas,
1986). Cheek, Onana & Pollard
(2000) increased this figure to 920
with the publication of their
comprehensive Conservation
Checklist. Also
there is a GIS
project for this region
looking at the change in vegetation
over the years. |
Part
of the 1996 botanical inventory team
above the tree line on Mt Oku. Left
to right: Anne Dillen (Earthwatch
Volunteer), Dr Benoit Satabie, Jean
Michel Onana and Fulbert Tadjouteu
(National Herbarium of Cameroon),
Felix Bafon and Peter Wambeng
(guides from the Kilum Project). |
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New
and threatened species
Newtonia
camerunensis
Kniphofia
reflexa
Several
collections represented species new
to science, some of which have since
been described and published (eg.
Phillips, S.M., 1998 & 2000;
Cheek & Csiba, 2000; Cheek &
Sonké, 2000).
References
Cheek,
M. & Csiba, L. (2000). A new
species and new combination in
Chassalia (Rubiaceae) of western
Cameroon. Kew Bull. 55: 883 - 888.
Cheek,
M. & Sonké, B. A new species of
Oxyanthus (Rubiaceae-Gardeniinae)
from western Cameroon. Kew Bull. 55:
889 - 893.
Phillips,
S.M. (1998). Two new species of
Eriocaulon from West Africa. KewBull.
53: 943 – 948.
Phillips,
S.M. (2000). Two more new species of
Eriocaulon from West Africa. Kew
Bull. 55: 195 – 202.
Cheek,
M., Onana, J.-M. & Pollard, B.J.
(2000). The Plants of Mount Oku and
the Ijim Ridge, a Conservation
Checklist. iv + 211 pp. RBG, Kew.
Thomas,
D.W. (1986). Provisional species
list for Mount Oku flora, pp. 59–62
in McLeod, H.L. (1986). The
Conservation of Oku Mountain Forest,
Cameroon. Study Report No. 15. 90
pp. ICBP. |
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