Difference between revisions of "Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area"
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Latest revision as of 13:01, 29 July 2023
West Africa > Liberia > Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area
Summary
- Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) are present in Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area.
- It has been estimated that more than 60 individuals occur at the site.
- The chimpanzee population trend is unknown.
- This site has a total size of 238.13 km².
- Key threats to chimpanzees are.
- The chimpanzees on Marshall Island depend on a team of caretakers for survival, as there is no food or fresh water on the islands.
- Margibi Mangrove forms part of a Key Biodiversity Area (KBA) spanning Kpelle Forest and Lorma National Forest.
Site characteristics
Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area is an important mangrove area and estuary of the Junk and Farmington Rivers, Margibi Mangrove is home to the Liberia Chimpanzee Colony (Johnson 2015). The area has approximately 35 kilometres of Atlantic coastline. The six islands on the wetland have been used by New York Blood Center (NYBC) who established a chimpanzee virus laboratory in West Africa in 1974. One of the purposes of VILAB II, at the Liberian Institute for Biomedical Research in Robertsfield, Liberia, was to develop the hepatitis B vaccine in chimpanzees. Chimpanzees were captured from various parts of West Africa and brought to VILAB. When the lab closed down in 2005, the remaining chimpanzees were released on islands in Marshall Wetland. Currently, more than 60 chimpanzees inhabit the islands. Their original carers, many of whom have worked with the chimps since the 1970s, were paid to take them food and water every other day. Then, at the height of the Ebola epidemic in 2014, the caretakers stopped going to the island and the apes began to starve. In 2015, the Humane Society decided to take on the care of the chimps and in 2017 the NYBC pledged £5 million to pay for their future food and medical needs.
Table 1. Basic site information for Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area
Area | 238.13 km² |
Coordinates | 6.160000, -10.370000 |
Designation | Proposed Protected Area |
Habitat types | Subtropical/Tropical Moist Lowland Forest |
IUCN habitat categories Site designations
Ape status
No information was found about how many chimpanzees were initially released on the islands. Apparently, 63 chimpanzees currently still inhabit the islands. They are taken care of by staff of the Humane Society, financed by the NYBC after much public outcry in 2015, when NYBCs original funding to care for the released lab chimpanzees ran out Mail Online.
Table 2. Great ape population estimates in Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area
Species | Year | Abundance estimate (95% CI) | Density estimate [ind./ km²] (95% CI) | Encounter rate (nests/km) | Area | Method | Source | Comments | A.P.E.S. database ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pan troglodytes verus | 2017 | 63 | Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area | Full count | Mail Online 2017 | Chimpanzees introduced into non-inhabited habitat on islands on the Liberian coast |
Threats
The chimpanzees who are trapped on the islands (which is artificial habitat for them) depend on humans to bring them food and drinking water on a daily basis for survival. If funding ends or if there is nobody taking care of them, they will die of thirst or starve to death.
Table 3. Threats to great apes in Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area
Category | Specific threats | Threat level | Quantified severity | Description | Year of threat |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Residential & commercial development | Absent | ||||
2. Agriculture & aquaculture | Absent | ||||
3. Energy production & mining | Absent | ||||
4. Transportation & service corridors | Absent | ||||
5. Biological resource use | Absent | ||||
6. Human intrusions & disturbance | Unknown | ||||
7. Natural system modifications | Absent | ||||
8. Invasive & other problematic species, genes, diseases | Unknown | ||||
9. Pollution | Unknown | ||||
10. Geological Events | Absent | ||||
11. Climate change & severe weather | Unknown | ||||
12. Other options | Absent |
Conservation activities
Although chimpanzee reintroduction/translocation and rehabilitation are conservation activities listed for primates (Junker et al. 2017), we refrain from listing the release of the Liberian laboratory chimpanzees on Marshall islands as a conservation activity, as this was a way for the NYBC to allow these chimpanzees to “retire” from the invasive research that was done on them in the center for more than 30 years. It was not a conservation activity per se.
Table 4. Conservation activities in Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area
Category | Specific activity | Description | Year of activity |
---|---|---|---|
1. Residential & commercial development | Not reported | ||
2. Agriculture & aquaculture | Not reported | ||
3. Energy production & mining | Not reported | ||
4. Transportation & service corridors | Not reported | ||
5. Biological resource use | Not reported | ||
6. Human intrusions & disturbance | Not reported | ||
7. Natural system modifications | Not reported | ||
8. Invasive & other problematic species, genes, diseases | Not reported | ||
9. Pollution | Not reported | ||
10. Education & Awareness | Not reported | ||
11. Habitat Protection | Not reported | ||
12. Species Management | Not reported | ||
13. Livelihood; Economic & Other Incentives | Not reported |
Conservation activities list (Junker et al. 2017)
Challenges
Table 5. Challenges reported for Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area
Challenge | Source |
---|---|
Not reported |
Research activities
No information on research activities has been documented.
Documented behaviours
Table 6. Great ape behaviors reported for Margibi Mangrove Proposed Protected Area
Behavior | Source |
---|---|
Not reported |
References
Johnson S. 2015. Aggregated Biodiversity Offsets: A Roadmap for Liberia’s Mining Sector. Unpublished report by the World Bank Group (WBG) and Program On Forests (PROFOR).
Junker J, Orth L, Kühl H S, Smith R K, Sutherland W J 2017. Primate Conservation: Global Evidence for the Effects of Interventions. University of Cambridge.
Mail Online. 2017. Hand of friendship: Chimps left to starve on monkey island by health research company are thriving after volunteers canoe in to feed them bananas and coconuts. Online: www.dailymail.co.uk
Page completed by: A.P.E.S. Wiki Team Date: 25/10/2019