Profiling Ghana - the Mole National Park
General
Description
The Mole National Park lies within the West Gonja District of the Northern
Region of Ghana. Designated as a national park in 1971, Mole is the largest and
best known of Ghana’s national parks. It comprises an area of 4840 square km of
open savannah woodland, boval, riverine forest, floodplain grassland and swamp
that supports a rich diversity of flora and fauna. The main livelihoods of the
27 village communities on the park perimeter are subsistence farming, hunting
and gathering.
Importance for
Conservation
The park provides habitat for 304 bird species including many migrants. Also
recorded are 33 reptile, 9 amphibian and 93 mammal species, including Ghana’s
largest population of African Elephants, as well as Lions, African Buffalos and
Roan Antelopes. Mole is also rich in flora, with 742 species recorded including
4 endemics and 24 rare species.
Conservation
concerns
The key conservation concerns within Mole come from poaching and bushfires.
Hunting and trading of bushmeat is important in the local economy and, as such,
has had a serious impact on wildlife populations within the park. During the dry
season bushfires, often caused by hunting activities, pass through large areas
of the park causing considerable habitat damage.
Achievements to
date
A Rocha Ghana has been partnering with the park authority to set up Community
Resource Management Areas (CREMAs) to enable local communities to improve their
livelihoods through wildlife resource management of designated land buffering
the park. So far A Rocha has helped establish the first CREMA and carried out a
resource assessment for it. It is producing a booklet to raise awareness of the
project in the surrounding villages.
Visions for the
future
The A Rocha Ghana team will continue to work with the park’s Community
Outreach Unit on involving more villages in the CREMA scheme. A Rocha will be
carrying out an environmental awareness campaign with all the communities around
the park. It is hoped that this programme will help to strengthen relationships
between A Rocha, the villages and the park and encourage the local population
toward more sustainable land-use practices.
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