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Environmental importance of lake Victoria and mabira forest. The Mabira Forest is a rainforest area covering about 300 km2. It has been protected as Mabira Forest Reserve since 1932. It is home for many endangered species like the primate Lophocebus ugandae. Located; 13km to L. Victoria At an altitude of 1070-1340km 50km East of Kampala city Has; 312 tree and shrub species 199 butterfly species 287 bird species (30% of Uganda’s bird species) 20 species of small mammals
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BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
UGANDAMABIRA FOREST & L.VICTORA
THE ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNIFICANCE
ROBERT BOB OKELLOBY :
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
UGANDA FACTFILELOCATION & AREA
East Africa: 1.0667° N, 31.8833° ETotal: 241,038 km2 Country comparison to the world: 81 Land: 197,100 km2 Water: 43,938 km2
POPULATION: APPROX. 34MILLION PEOPLE.
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
UGANDA FACTFILECAPITAL CITY KAMPALA
Area: 180.1 km² Population 1,723,300 (2011)
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
MABIRA FACTFILE The Mabira Forest is a rainforest area covering about 300 km2. It has been protected as Mabira Forest Reserve since 1932. It is home for many endangered species like the primate
Lophocebus ugandae.
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
MABIRA FACTFILE
Located;13km to L. VictoriaAt an altitude of 1070-1340km 50km East of Kampala city
Has; 312 tree and shrub species199 butterfly species287 bird species (30% of Uganda’s bird species)20 species of small mammals
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
Milicia excelsa
Can be used in the control of erosion.
It makes a good shade tree and is useful as a roadside tree in urban areas.
The tree is nitrogen fixing and the leaves are used for mulching. [4]
The tree is also used in herbal medicine. The powdered bark is used for coughs, heart problems and lassitude.
The latex is used as an anti-tumour agent and to clear stomach and throat obstructions.
The leaves and the ashes also have medicinal uses
OTHER BIODIVERSITY 5 tree species under international concern;
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
Cordia milenii
Cordia species are used as food plants by the caterpillars of some Lepidoptera species, such as Endoclita malabaricus, Bucculatrix caribbea, and Bucculatrix cordiaella.
The Wild Olive Tortoise Beetle (Physonota alutacea) feeds on C. boissieri, C. dentata, C. inermis, and C. macrostachya
OTHER BIODIVERSITY 5 tree species under international concern;
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
Irringia gabonensis
Irvingia gabonensis is pollinated by Coleoptera, Diptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera.
Seeds are dispersed by specialized vertebrates as elephants and gorillas. By reducing the number of those animals, the spread and regeneration of dika decreases and it becomes dependent on human planting
Various medicinal uses mostly depend on the bark and leaves. It is employed as a purgative, for gastrointestinal and liver conditions, for hernias and urethral discharge or for sores and wounds.
OTHER BIODIVERSITY 5 tree species under international concern;
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
Entandrophragma angolense
Is a genus of eleven species of deciduous trees in the mahogany family Meliaceae, restricted to tropical Africa.
At least some of the species attain large sizes, reaching 40–50 m tall, exceptionally 60 m, and 2 m in trunk diameter.
OTHER BIODIVERSITY 5 tree species under international concern;
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
Lovoa swynnertoni
This timber species occurs sparsely in small patches of remaining wet evergreen forest.
Major ThreatsHabitat loss and excessive exploitation of the seed-producing individuals are resulting in poor regeneration and a global population decline. Plantations have been unsuccessful because of infestation by Hypsipyla.
OTHER BIODIVERSITY 5 tree species under international concern;
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
ENDANGERED SPECIES
Nahan’s FrancolinPapyrus Gonolek
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
MAJOR THREATS
Deforestation Forest give-away for sugar
plantation (71km2) Human settlement Forest fires
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
SUGAR PRODUCTION THREAT
IN 2008, THE GOVERNMENT DARED TO GIVE AWAY 71KM2 OF THE FOREST LAND TO NEARBY SUGAR PLANTATION TO BOOST SUGAR PRODUCTION.
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
FACING THE THREATS
Citizen act through demonstrations (this stopped the give-away plans of the gov’t)
Legislations put in place to control poaching Forest rangers have been deployed to monitor the forest and
curb down cases of forest fires.Mass sensitization of the locals about the environmental
importance of forests
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
L.VICTORIA FACTFILE It is Africa's largest lake and has a surface
area of 68,800km2
It is the largest tropical lake in the world. It is the world's second largest freshwater lake
measured by surface area. The only larger freshwater lake is Lake Superior in North America.
Lake Victoria is about 400,000 years old.The average depth is 130 feet (40 meters) with
the deepest point being 276 feet (84 meters).
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
L.VICTORIA FACTFILE
UGANDAKENYA
TANZANIA
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
L.VICTORIA FACTFILE
Approximately 80 percent of the lakes water comes from rain. The other 20 percent comes from small streams flowing into the lake.
Geological studies have shown that the lake has dried up completely a few times in the past. The last time was approximately 17,300 years ago.
The Kagera River is the largest river that flows into the lake.
Two rivers flow out of the lake. They are the White Nile (called the "Victoria Nile" where it leaves the lake), and the Katonga River.
It’s the source of the world longest lake.
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
SIGNIFICANCE
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
L.VICTORIA THREATS
BY ROBERT BOB OKELLO
FACING THE THREATS Cooperation between E. African countries to
conserve the Lake Control of industrial waste Water patrolling to curb down illegal fishing
methods Mass sensitization on importance of water
bodies.
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