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Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve

The 950 hectares (2,300 acres) Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve is situated on the slopes of Mount Selinda, 30 km (19 miles) south of Chipinge, in the Chipinge Highlands of Manicaland, Zimbabwe,[2][3] and is administered by the Forestry Commission.[4] The reserve is situated at between 900 and 1,200 m (3,000 and 3,900 ft) in altitude,[5] and receives some 1,370 mm (54 in)[6] to 1,466 mm (57.7 in) of annual rainfall. 606 hectares (1,500 acres) of its higher levels, above 1,076 m (3,530 ft), is covered by moist evergreen forest,[7] specifically Zanzibar-Inhambane transitional rain forest,[8] of which it represents the southernmost occurrence. The headwaters of three streams, namely the Zona, Chinyika and Musangazi, drain the two broad highlands which it encloses. The boundaries of the reserve are not strictly enforced, so that cattle grazing and plant harvesting are ongoing.[5] The reserve is surrounded by communal settlements, commercial timber plantations (eucalypts and pines) and small-scale commercial farming units. The naturalist Charles Swynnerton was appointed manager of the nearby Gungunyana farm in 1900, and a number of plant, bird and insect names commemorate his collecting activities of the next two decades.[9] Chirinda means "lookout" or "vantage point" in the chiNdau language, or perhaps "place of refuge".[10]

Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve
Chirinda State Forest
Forest dracaena (Dracaena fragrans) in the understorey of the forest
Location of Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve
LocationChipinge District, Manicaland, Zimbabwe
Nearest cityChipinge
Coordinates20°25′27″S 32°41′40″E / 20.42417°S 32.69444°E / -20.42417; 32.69444 (Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve)
Area9.5 km2 (3.7 sq mi)
Designated1951

Ecology edit

The medium altitude forest is likely the southernmost patch of subtropical rainforest in Africa. Phytogeographically it is classed as Afromontane forest, but with lowland and Guineo-Congolian elements. It is situated on two hill tops on dolerite-derived soils, and Müller (1991) proposed that these soil types determine its extent.[7] Goldsmith (1876) however suggested that it is only a relic of a once much larger forest which has been reduced by gradual climatic changes in a few hundred years.

Year-round moisture, in the form of rain, mist or dew, provides for a substantial and intact moist leaf litter layer, on which its ecological processes depend. Decomposition is fungal, and not by termites or similar insects as would be the case in drier woodlands of the region.[7] Several tree species bear fleshy fruit, resulting in a good representation of mammal and bird frugivores,[7] which impact both negatively and positively on seed dispersal. Much of the fauna shows affinities to forests elsewhere, particularly those at lower altitudes along the East Africa coastal plains.[7]

Protection edit

Protection from fires is expected to facilitate the regeneration and expansion of the forest. During his time of residence, Swynnerton noted that recurring fires had been gradually reducing outlying forest patches. Destruction of portions of the Chipete and Chipungambira satellite forest patches occurred during the 1860s.[11] It may have been aided by elephants which opened up forest, but more likely resulted from indigenous people who regularly cleared land by fire in spring time.[11] Fire-resistant mobola plum and mahobohobo trees are pioneer species in such areas.[11]

Maupare (1993) however noted that the forest boundary was stable and that former logging operations in the northern section had no lasting effect on the plant diversity.[11] This extraction of red mahogany, peawood and tannodia during the 1940s also had little effect on its extent.[7]

Flora and fauna edit

 
A forest tree draped in climbing nettle (Urera trinervis) in Chirinda Forest

The area is home to a high diversity of plants,[12] fungi, birds, butterflies, insects and reptiles.

Flora edit

Rare tree species which seldom occur elsewhere in Zimbabwe include the fluted milkwood (dominant canopy species), Chirinda fig, undershrub big-leaf, Chirinda stinkwood, yellow bitterberry and forest strychnos.[6] The type of the latter species was obtained in the forest by Swynnerton.[13]

The dominant canopy species, besides fluted milkwood, are forest mahogany and peawood.[14] The sub-canopy is occupied by tannodia, forest strychnos and forest ironplum. The Big Tree grows in the southern part of the reserve in the "Valley of the Giants". It is the largest red mahogany tree in southern Africa and the tallest native tree in Zimbabwe. The 600- to 1,000-year-old (some estimate 2,000-year-old)[15] leviathan has a trunk diameter of about 6 metres. Other forest tree species include colossal specimens of strangling figs, brown mahogany, white stinkwood, forest climbing acacia, ironwood, giant diospyros, apricot vine, forest peach, forest rothmannia, strombosia and forest toad-tree. The forest edge is characterized by smooth-barked flat-crown, forest num-num, forest sword-leaf, horsewood, forest croton, climbing turkey-berry, Manica bride's bush, green flower tree, small-fruited teclea, elbow-leaf, mitzeerie, eastern blue-bush, magic guarri, orange-milk tree, lavender tree, mobola plum, wild currant and climbing orange are common species of the surrounding savannah.

Thousands of specimens of the yucca-like Dracaena fragrans populate the forest floor, and numerous ferns, creepers, vines, epiphytes and orchids (including Calanthe sylvatica) are to be found. Montbretia and flame lilies are also present, while guava, lantana and ginger are exotic invasive species.

Fauna edit

Mammals edit

Samango monkeys are regularly seen, and leopard on the odd occasion. The local races of the mutable sun squirrel (H. m. chirindensis) and red-bellied coast squirrel (i.e. Selinda mountain squirrel, P. p. swynnertoni) are mountain isolates.[7] The Selinda veld rat occurs in tangled vegetation on rocky areas, and is only known from two other sites in Zimbabwe.[16]

Birds edit

 
P. a. swynnertoni Sclater, 1921

A few highland bird species reach their southernmost occurrence here, namely the Chirinda apalis (type locality), Swynnerton's robin, a globally threatened monotypic genus, stripe-cheeked greenbul (A. m. disjunctus), moustached warbler (M. m. orientalis), white-tailed flycatcher and yellow-bellied waxbill.[17] Wide-ranging African species include crowned eagle, trumpeter and silvery-cheeked hornbills, both breeders,[17] Livingstone's turaco, lemon dove, green pigeon, owls, nightjars, bee-eaters, pygmy kingfisher, yellow-streaked (P. f. dendrophilus) and sombre greenbuls, yellow-throated (S. r. alacris), Barratt's (B. b. priesti) and broad-tailed warblers, olive and black-fronted bushshrikes, Cape batis, sunbirds and firefinches. Various bird races were first described from this location: a strikingly coloured race of red-necked spurfowl (P. a. swynnertoni),[18] a fulvous-coloured race of wailing cisticola (C. l. mashona),[19] a race of bar-throated apalis (A. t. arnoldi), the smallish, dusky and streaky-throated Swynnerton's thrush (T. o. swynnertoni)[20] which is endemic to the Eastern Highlands, and a race of olive sunbird (C. o. sclateri). The forest is situated too low for orange thrush, Roberts's warbler, malachite or bronze sunbirds, and too high for yellow-spotted nicator, white-eared barbet or grey waxbill.[17] Crested guineafowl however inhabits its lower elevations and green malkoha recently populated the forest from lower altitudes.[21] Blue-mantled flycatchers occupy the lower altitudes or fringing thickets, but remain segregated from white-tailed flycatchers which occupy the forest proper or higher canopy.[17]

Reptiles edit

The reptile fauna includes pythons, cobras, vipers, mambas, adders, chameleons, geckos, skinks and lizards. Marshall's leaf chameleon, an endemic of the Eastern Highlands, is found within the forest and along its margins. The type species C. swynnertoni of the worm lizard genus Chirindia was described from this locality, while another worm lizard, Zygaspis ferox, is endemic to the forest and its vicinity.[22]

Amphibians edit

The types of Broadley's forest treefrog, Hewitt's long-nosed frog and the Chirinda toad were obtained in the forest. The Chirinda toad is known from Chirinda and the forest north of Dombé in adjacent Mozambique.[4] It is a terrestrial species that lives on leaf-litter, and takes refuge under rotten logs.[4]

Insects edit

The Mount Selinda acraea mimic butterfly (Mimacraea neokoton) is found nowhere else.[7] The type of the ebony bush brown was obtained from Chirinda forest, and it is also known from the Vumba. It flies all year and has distinct seasonal forms.[23] The Chirinda bush brown is named for the forest, but it is in fact a widespread species. Its type was obtained at an unknown location in the Eastern Highlands, and it is distinguished from the previous species by its lighter upperside ground colour, and the contrasting hair-pencils of the male.[23]

Facilities edit

The well-marked route to the campsite leaves the main road just east of the mission hospital in Mount Selinda. It is located 4 km into the forest, and also has chalets with clean facilities and braai stands.[15]

Site locations edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ UNEP-WCMC (2022). Protected Area Profile for Chirinda from the World Database of Protected Areas. Accessed 18 March 2022. [1]
  2. ^ Shaw, Phil; Timberlake, Jonathan (1994). Chirinda Forest: a visitors' guide. Harare: Division of Research & Development, Forestry Commission. ISBN 0797413626.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Spriggs, Amy. "Zimbabwe, Mozambique: Montane grasslands and shrublands". worldwildlife.org. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  4. ^ a b c IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group.; South African Frog Re-assessment Group; et al. (SA-FRoG) (2020). "Mertensophryne anotis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T54887A153065342. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T54887A153065342.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Chirinda Forest". Sites - Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs). BirdLife International. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  6. ^ a b Hyde, M.; et al. "Location: Chirinda forest". Flora of Zimbabwe. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Timberlake, Jonathan (6 November 2002). "The Biodiversity and Ecology of Chirinda Forest" (PDF). BFA SEMINAR SERIES NO. 17. Bulawayo Club. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  8. ^ "Chapter 9: Zanzibar-Inhambane transitional rain forest (Fg)" (PDF). VECEA, Volume 2. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  9. ^ Goodier, R. (2007). "Swynnerton, Charles Francis Massy". Flora of Zimbabwe. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  10. ^ Neville, Marilyn (1961). "Scenic Splendours of the Eastern Districts". OurStory. U.G.H.S Borderer. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  11. ^ a b c d Spinage, Clive A. (2012). African ecology: benchmarks and historical perspectives (1 ed.). Berlin: Springer. p. 295. ISBN 3642228712.
  12. ^ Hyde, M.A.; et al. "Plant records: Chirinda Forest". Flora of Zimbabwe. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  13. ^ Leeuwenberg, A. J. M. "Strychnos mellodora S. Moore". Flora Zambesiaca: FZ volume:7 part:1 (1983) Loganiaceae. Kew. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  14. ^ Müller, Tom (2006). "The distribution, classification and conservation of rainforests in eastern Zimbabwe" (PDF). Occasional Publications in Biodiversity No. 19. Biodiversity Foundation for Africa. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  15. ^ a b Murray, Paul (2013). Zimbabwe (2 ed.). [S.l.]: Bradt Pubns. pp. 337–338. ISBN 1841624608.
  16. ^ Taylor, P. (2017). "Aethomys silindensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T567A22457809. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-2.RLTS.T567A22457809.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  17. ^ a b c d Irwin, Michael P. Stuart (1981). The birds of Zimbabwe. Salisbury, Zimbabwe: Quest Pub. ISBN 0-86925-156- 2.
  18. ^ Sclater, W. L. (1921). Bull. Brit. Orn. Club 41 (134)
  19. ^ Lynes (1930). Ibis. Suppl: 229
  20. ^ Bannerman, 1913. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 31:56
  21. ^ "Chirinda Forest (Eastern Highlands)". Birding in Zimbabwe. Birdlife Zimbabwe. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
  22. ^ Branch, Bill (1998). Field guide to snakes and other reptiles of southern Africa (3 ed.). Cape Town: Struik. p. 122. ISBN 9781868720408.
  23. ^ a b Pringle, et al., 1994

Further reading edit

  • Armitage FB (1965). Project Document: Chirinda Forest. Forestry Commission (Ref. 784/FBA/EHC), Gungunyana Forest Research Station, Chipinge.
  • Goldsmith B (1976). The trees of Chirinda forest. Rhod. Sci. News 10:41-50.
  • Hoffmann, Annette. Chirinda Forest Reserve in Simbabwe – südlichster tropischer Regenwald Afrikas, afrikascout.de
  • Mapaure I (1997). A floristic classification of the vegetation of a forest-savanna boundary in south-eastern Zimbabwe. Bothalia 27(2):185-195.
  • Mujuru L, Kundhlande A (2007). Small-scale vegetation structure and composition of Chirinda Forest, southeast Zimbabwe. Afr. J. Ecol. 45:624-632.
  • Müller T (1991). Rainforests of Zimbabwe. Unpublished report, National Herbarium and Botanic Garden, Department of Research Specialist Services, Harare.
  • Swynnerton, CFM (1918). Some factors in the replacement of the ancient East African forest by wooded pasture land. S. Afr. J. Sci. 14, 493-518
  • Timberlake J (1991). Tour report - Chirinda, Haroni and Rusitu Forests. Internal report, Forest Research Centre, Harare.
  • Timberlake J (1992a). Findings from a comparison of aerial photographs of Chirinda forest from 1959 to 1987. Unpublished Report, Forest Research Centre, Harare.
  • Timberlake J (1992b). Chirinda Forest: Conservation of a Rainforest in Zimbabwe. Paper presented at the SAREC International Symposium on Ecology and Conservation of Indigenous Forests, July 1992, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe.
  • Timberlake J (1994b). Changes in the extent of moist forest patches in the Eastern Highlands: Case studies based on aerial photographs. Forest Research Paper No. 7. Forestry Commission, Harare.

External links edit

  Media related to Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve at Wikimedia Commons

  • Photos of Peawood in the Eastern Highlands, Iziko Museums

chirinda, forest, botanical, reserve, hectares, acres, situated, slopes, mount, selinda, miles, south, chipinge, chipinge, highlands, manicaland, zimbabwe, administered, forestry, commission, reserve, situated, between, altitude, receives, some, annual, rainfa. The 950 hectares 2 300 acres Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve is situated on the slopes of Mount Selinda 30 km 19 miles south of Chipinge in the Chipinge Highlands of Manicaland Zimbabwe 2 3 and is administered by the Forestry Commission 4 The reserve is situated at between 900 and 1 200 m 3 000 and 3 900 ft in altitude 5 and receives some 1 370 mm 54 in 6 to 1 466 mm 57 7 in of annual rainfall 606 hectares 1 500 acres of its higher levels above 1 076 m 3 530 ft is covered by moist evergreen forest 7 specifically Zanzibar Inhambane transitional rain forest 8 of which it represents the southernmost occurrence The headwaters of three streams namely the Zona Chinyika and Musangazi drain the two broad highlands which it encloses The boundaries of the reserve are not strictly enforced so that cattle grazing and plant harvesting are ongoing 5 The reserve is surrounded by communal settlements commercial timber plantations eucalypts and pines and small scale commercial farming units The naturalist Charles Swynnerton was appointed manager of the nearby Gungunyana farm in 1900 and a number of plant bird and insect names commemorate his collecting activities of the next two decades 9 Chirinda means lookout or vantage point in the chiNdau language or perhaps place of refuge 10 Chirinda Forest Botanical ReserveChirinda State ForestIUCN category Ib wilderness area 1 Forest dracaena Dracaena fragrans in the understorey of the forestLocation of Chirinda Forest Botanical ReserveLocationChipinge District Manicaland ZimbabweNearest cityChipingeCoordinates20 25 27 S 32 41 40 E 20 42417 S 32 69444 E 20 42417 32 69444 Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve Area9 5 km2 3 7 sq mi Designated1951 Contents 1 Ecology 2 Protection 3 Flora and fauna 3 1 Flora 3 2 Fauna 3 2 1 Mammals 3 2 2 Birds 3 2 3 Reptiles 3 2 4 Amphibians 3 2 5 Insects 4 Facilities 5 Site locations 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEcology editThe medium altitude forest is likely the southernmost patch of subtropical rainforest in Africa Phytogeographically it is classed as Afromontane forest but with lowland and Guineo Congolian elements It is situated on two hill tops on dolerite derived soils and Muller 1991 proposed that these soil types determine its extent 7 Goldsmith 1876 however suggested that it is only a relic of a once much larger forest which has been reduced by gradual climatic changes in a few hundred years Year round moisture in the form of rain mist or dew provides for a substantial and intact moist leaf litter layer on which its ecological processes depend Decomposition is fungal and not by termites or similar insects as would be the case in drier woodlands of the region 7 Several tree species bear fleshy fruit resulting in a good representation of mammal and bird frugivores 7 which impact both negatively and positively on seed dispersal Much of the fauna shows affinities to forests elsewhere particularly those at lower altitudes along the East Africa coastal plains 7 Protection editProtection from fires is expected to facilitate the regeneration and expansion of the forest During his time of residence Swynnerton noted that recurring fires had been gradually reducing outlying forest patches Destruction of portions of the Chipete and Chipungambira satellite forest patches occurred during the 1860s 11 It may have been aided by elephants which opened up forest but more likely resulted from indigenous people who regularly cleared land by fire in spring time 11 Fire resistant mobola plum and mahobohobo trees are pioneer species in such areas 11 Maupare 1993 however noted that the forest boundary was stable and that former logging operations in the northern section had no lasting effect on the plant diversity 11 This extraction of red mahogany peawood and tannodia during the 1940s also had little effect on its extent 7 Flora and fauna edit nbsp A forest tree draped in climbing nettle Urera trinervis in Chirinda ForestThe area is home to a high diversity of plants 12 fungi birds butterflies insects and reptiles Flora edit Rare tree species which seldom occur elsewhere in Zimbabwe include the fluted milkwood dominant canopy species Chirinda fig undershrub big leaf Chirinda stinkwood yellow bitterberry and forest strychnos 6 The type of the latter species was obtained in the forest by Swynnerton 13 The dominant canopy species besides fluted milkwood are forest mahogany and peawood 14 The sub canopy is occupied by tannodia forest strychnos and forest ironplum The Big Tree grows in the southern part of the reserve in the Valley of the Giants It is the largest red mahogany tree in southern Africa and the tallest native tree in Zimbabwe The 600 to 1 000 year old some estimate 2 000 year old 15 leviathan has a trunk diameter of about 6 metres Other forest tree species include colossal specimens of strangling figs brown mahogany white stinkwood forest climbing acacia ironwood giant diospyros apricot vine forest peach forest rothmannia strombosia and forest toad tree The forest edge is characterized by smooth barked flat crown forest num num forest sword leaf horsewood forest croton climbing turkey berry Manica bride s bush green flower tree small fruited teclea elbow leaf mitzeerie eastern blue bush magic guarri orange milk tree lavender tree mobola plum wild currant and climbing orange are common species of the surrounding savannah Thousands of specimens of the yucca like Dracaena fragrans populate the forest floor and numerous ferns creepers vines epiphytes and orchids including Calanthe sylvatica are to be found Montbretia and flame lilies are also present while guava lantana and ginger are exotic invasive species Fauna edit Mammals edit Samango monkeys are regularly seen and leopard on the odd occasion The local races of the mutable sun squirrel H m chirindensis and red bellied coast squirrel i e Selinda mountain squirrel P p swynnertoni are mountain isolates 7 The Selinda veld rat occurs in tangled vegetation on rocky areas and is only known from two other sites in Zimbabwe 16 Birds edit nbsp P a swynnertoni Sclater 1921A few highland bird species reach their southernmost occurrence here namely the Chirinda apalis type locality Swynnerton s robin a globally threatened monotypic genus stripe cheeked greenbul A m disjunctus moustached warbler M m orientalis white tailed flycatcher and yellow bellied waxbill 17 Wide ranging African species include crowned eagle trumpeter and silvery cheeked hornbills both breeders 17 Livingstone s turaco lemon dove green pigeon owls nightjars bee eaters pygmy kingfisher yellow streaked P f dendrophilus and sombre greenbuls yellow throated S r alacris Barratt s B b priesti and broad tailed warblers olive and black fronted bushshrikes Cape batis sunbirds and firefinches Various bird races were first described from this location a strikingly coloured race of red necked spurfowl P a swynnertoni 18 a fulvous coloured race of wailing cisticola C l mashona 19 a race of bar throated apalis A t arnoldi the smallish dusky and streaky throated Swynnerton s thrush T o swynnertoni 20 which is endemic to the Eastern Highlands and a race of olive sunbird C o sclateri The forest is situated too low for orange thrush Roberts s warbler malachite or bronze sunbirds and too high for yellow spotted nicator white eared barbet or grey waxbill 17 Crested guineafowl however inhabits its lower elevations and green malkoha recently populated the forest from lower altitudes 21 Blue mantled flycatchers occupy the lower altitudes or fringing thickets but remain segregated from white tailed flycatchers which occupy the forest proper or higher canopy 17 Reptiles edit The reptile fauna includes pythons cobras vipers mambas adders chameleons geckos skinks and lizards Marshall s leaf chameleon an endemic of the Eastern Highlands is found within the forest and along its margins The type species C swynnertoni of the worm lizard genus Chirindia was described from this locality while another worm lizard Zygaspis ferox is endemic to the forest and its vicinity 22 Amphibians edit The types of Broadley s forest treefrog Hewitt s long nosed frog and the Chirinda toad were obtained in the forest The Chirinda toad is known from Chirinda and the forest north of Dombe in adjacent Mozambique 4 It is a terrestrial species that lives on leaf litter and takes refuge under rotten logs 4 Insects edit The Mount Selinda acraea mimic butterfly Mimacraea neokoton is found nowhere else 7 The type of the ebony bush brown was obtained from Chirinda forest and it is also known from the Vumba It flies all year and has distinct seasonal forms 23 The Chirinda bush brown is named for the forest but it is in fact a widespread species Its type was obtained at an unknown location in the Eastern Highlands and it is distinguished from the previous species by its lighter upperside ground colour and the contrasting hair pencils of the male 23 Facilities editThe well marked route to the campsite leaves the main road just east of the mission hospital in Mount Selinda It is located 4 km into the forest and also has chalets with clean facilities and braai stands 15 Site locations editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Big Tree Valley of the Giants 20 26 29 S 32 42 15 E 20 44139 S 32 70417 E 20 44139 32 70417 Big Tree Chipete forest 20 24 40 S 32 42 46 E 20 41111 S 32 71278 E 20 41111 32 71278 Chipete forest campsite Chirinda forest campsite 20 24 37 S 32 41 57 E 20 41028 S 32 69917 E 20 41028 32 69917 Chirinda forest campsite Gungunyana farm 20 24 29 S 32 43 09 E 20 40806 S 32 71917 E 20 40806 32 71917 Gungunyana Swynnerton memorial 20 25 18 S 32 41 56 E 20 42167 S 32 69889 E 20 42167 32 69889 Swynnerton memorial See also editAllophylus chirindensis Anthene chirinda Chirinda wild medlar Neoceratitis chirinda Plectranthus swynnertonii type locality Rhus chirindensis Reptiles and frogs of the Eastern HighlandsReferences edit UNEP WCMC 2022 Protected Area Profile for Chirinda from the World Database of Protected Areas Accessed 18 March 2022 1 Shaw Phil Timberlake Jonathan 1994 Chirinda Forest a visitors guide Harare Division of Research amp Development Forestry Commission ISBN 0797413626 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Spriggs Amy Zimbabwe Mozambique Montane grasslands and shrublands worldwildlife org Retrieved 24 November 2014 a b c IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group South African Frog Re assessment Group et al SA FRoG 2020 Mertensophryne anotis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T54887A153065342 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T54887A153065342 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b Chirinda Forest Sites Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas IBAs BirdLife International Retrieved 24 November 2014 a b Hyde M et al Location Chirinda forest Flora of Zimbabwe Retrieved 27 November 2014 a b c d e f g h Timberlake Jonathan 6 November 2002 The Biodiversity and Ecology of Chirinda Forest PDF BFA SEMINAR SERIES NO 17 Bulawayo Club Retrieved 27 November 2014 Chapter 9 Zanzibar Inhambane transitional rain forest Fg PDF VECEA Volume 2 Retrieved 24 November 2014 Goodier R 2007 Swynnerton Charles Francis Massy Flora of Zimbabwe Retrieved 27 November 2014 Neville Marilyn 1961 Scenic Splendours of the Eastern Districts OurStory U G H S Borderer Retrieved 1 December 2014 a b c d Spinage Clive A 2012 African ecology benchmarks and historical perspectives 1 ed Berlin Springer p 295 ISBN 3642228712 Hyde M A et al Plant records Chirinda Forest Flora of Zimbabwe Retrieved 5 December 2014 Leeuwenberg A J M Strychnos mellodora S Moore Flora Zambesiaca FZ volume 7 part 1 1983 Loganiaceae Kew Retrieved 27 November 2014 Muller Tom 2006 The distribution classification and conservation of rainforests in eastern Zimbabwe PDF Occasional Publications in Biodiversity No 19 Biodiversity Foundation for Africa Retrieved 27 November 2014 a b Murray Paul 2013 Zimbabwe 2 ed S l Bradt Pubns pp 337 338 ISBN 1841624608 Taylor P 2017 Aethomys silindensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T567A22457809 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 2 RLTS T567A22457809 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b c d Irwin Michael P Stuart 1981 The birds of Zimbabwe Salisbury Zimbabwe Quest Pub ISBN 0 86925 156 2 Sclater W L 1921 Bull Brit Orn Club 41 134 Lynes 1930 Ibis Suppl 229 Bannerman 1913 Bull Brit Orn Club 31 56 Chirinda Forest Eastern Highlands Birding in Zimbabwe Birdlife Zimbabwe Retrieved 29 September 2015 Branch Bill 1998 Field guide to snakes and other reptiles of southern Africa 3 ed Cape Town Struik p 122 ISBN 9781868720408 a b Pringle et al 1994Further reading editArmitage FB 1965 Project Document Chirinda Forest Forestry Commission Ref 784 FBA EHC Gungunyana Forest Research Station Chipinge Goldsmith B 1976 The trees of Chirinda forest Rhod Sci News 10 41 50 Hoffmann Annette Chirinda Forest Reserve in Simbabwe sudlichster tropischer Regenwald Afrikas afrikascout de Mapaure I 1997 A floristic classification of the vegetation of a forest savanna boundary in south eastern Zimbabwe Bothalia 27 2 185 195 Mujuru L Kundhlande A 2007 Small scale vegetation structure and composition of Chirinda Forest southeast Zimbabwe Afr J Ecol 45 624 632 Muller T 1991 Rainforests of Zimbabwe Unpublished report National Herbarium and Botanic Garden Department of Research Specialist Services Harare Swynnerton CFM 1918 Some factors in the replacement of the ancient East African forest by wooded pasture land S Afr J Sci 14 493 518 Timberlake J 1991 Tour report Chirinda Haroni and Rusitu Forests Internal report Forest Research Centre Harare Timberlake J 1992a Findings from a comparison of aerial photographs of Chirinda forest from 1959 to 1987 Unpublished Report Forest Research Centre Harare Timberlake J 1992b Chirinda Forest Conservation of a Rainforest in Zimbabwe Paper presented at the SAREC International Symposium on Ecology and Conservation of Indigenous Forests July 1992 Victoria Falls Zimbabwe Timberlake J 1994b Changes in the extent of moist forest patches in the Eastern Highlands Case studies based on aerial photographs Forest Research Paper No 7 Forestry Commission Harare External links edit nbsp Media related to Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve at Wikimedia Commons Photos of Peawood in the Eastern Highlands Iziko Museums Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve amp oldid 1125482885, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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