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West Africa > Ghana > Ankasa Conservation Area

Summary

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  • Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) may be present in Ankasa Conservation Area.
  • Chimpanzees have not been documented in the area since 2016.
  • The chimpanzee population trend is unknown; possibly absent.
  • The site has a total size of 509 km².
  • Key threats to chimpanzees are agricultural encroachment and hunting.
  • Conservation activities have focused on education, patrolling, and preventing further degradation from farming activities.


Site characteristics

Ankasa Conservation Area (National Park and Resource Reserve) is located in the South Western part of Ghana, borderingIvory Coast. The Park is one of the few remnants of undisturbed Tropical Rainforest in Ghana. It was created in 1976. The site is very rich in biodiversity including forest elephants, bongos, leopards, olive colobus, black and white colobus, mangabey and other monkeys, yellow backed duikers and other duikers, pangolins, over 200 species of birds recorded, over 600 species of butterflies etc. The area is one of the known World Bird Areas and a Key Biodiversity Area (Ofori-Amanfo, R. pers. comm. 2023).

Table 1. Basic site information for Ankasa Conservation Area

Species
Area 509 km²
Coordinates 5.252710, -2.583665
Type of site Conservation Area and Resource Reserve
Habitat types Subtropical/Tropical Moist Lowland Forest
Type of governance

IUCN habitat categories Site designations

Ape status

Chimpanzees have not been documented in the area since 2016.


Threats

There are poaching camps, which the park’s staff has encountered, as well as temporary farm houses in encroached areas, but efforts are being made to clear all these in the park (Ofori-Amanfo pers. obs. 2023).

Table 3. Threats to apes in Ankasa Conservation Area

1 Residential & commercial development 2 Agriculture & aquaculture 3 Energy production & mining 4 Transportation & service corridors 5 Biological resource use 6 Human intrusions & disturbance 7 Natural system modifications 8 Invasive & other problematic species, genes & diseases 9 Pollution 10 Geological events 11 Climate change & severe weather 12 Other threat
2.1 Annual & perennial non-timber crops 5.1 Hunting & collecting terrestrial animals
Unknown Medium Unknown Unknown Low Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown Absent Unknown Absent
The community members are predominantly farmers, embarking on cocoa and rubber plantations affecting the surroundings of the park and the entire landscape (Ofori-Amanfo pers. obs. 2023). Communities surrounding the Park (Ofori-Amanfo pers. obs. 2023).
Ongoing (2023) 2016 - 2020

IUCN Threats list