fbpx
Wikipedia

Ngorongoro Conservation Area

The Ngorongoro Conservation Area (UK: /(ə)ŋˌɡɔːrəŋˈɡɔːr/,[3] US: /ɛŋˌɡɔːrŋˈɡɔːr, əŋˌɡrɔːŋˈɡr/[4][5]) is a protected area and a UNESCO World Heritage Site located in Ngorongoro District, 180 km (110 mi) west of Arusha City in Arusha Region, within the Crater Highlands geological area of northern Tanzania. The area is named after Ngorongoro Crater, a large volcanic caldera within the area. The Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority administers the conservation area, an arm of the Tanzanian government, and its boundaries follow the boundary of the Ngorongoro District in Arusha Region. The western portion of the park abuts the Serengeti National Park (also a UNESCO World Heritage Site), and the area comprising the two parks and Kenya's Maasai Mara game reserve is home to Great Migration, a massive annual migration of millions of wildebeest, zebras, gazelles, and other animals. The conservation area also contains Olduvai Gorge, one of the most important paleoanthropological sites in the world.

Ngorongoro Conservation Area
View of the crater
LocationNgorongoro District, Arusha Region, Tanzania
Coordinates03°12′36″S 35°27′36″E / 3.21000°S 35.46000°E / -3.21000; 35.46000Coordinates: 03°12′36″S 35°27′36″E / 3.21000°S 35.46000°E / -3.21000; 35.46000
Area8,292 km2 (3,202 sq mi)[1]
Established1959
VisitorsOver 500,000 per year[2]
Governing bodyNgorongoro Conservation Area Authority
TypeMixed
Criteria(iv)(vii)(viii)(ix)(x)
Designated1979 (3rd session)
Reference no.39
RegionAfrica
Endangered1984–1989
Inside the crater

The 2009 Ngorongoro Wildlife Conservation Act placed new restrictions on human settlement and subsistence farming in the Crater, displacing Maasai pastoralists, most of whom had been relocated to Ngorongoro from their ancestral lands to the north when the British colonial government established Serengeti National Park in 1959.[6][7]

History and geography

The name of the crater has an onomatopoeic origin; it was named by the Maasai pastoralists after the sound produced by the cowbell (ngoro ngoro). Based on fossil evidence found at the Olduvai Gorge, various hominid species have occupied the area for 3 million years.

Hunter-gatherers were replaced by pastoralists a few thousand years ago. The Mbulu[8] came to the area about 2,000 years ago and were joined by the Datooga around the year 1700. Both groups were driven from the area by the Maasai in the 1800s.[9][10]

No Europeans are known to have set foot in the Ngorongoro Crater until 1892 when it was visited by Oscar Baumann. Two German brothers (Adolph and Friedrich Siedentopf) farmed in the crater until the outbreak of World War I, after leasing the land from the administration of German East Africa. The brothers regularly organized shooting parties to entertain their German friends. They also attempted to drive the wildebeest herds out of the crater.[1][9][11]

In 1921, the first game preservation ordinance was passed, which restricted hunting to permit holders throughout Tanzania. In 1928, hunting was prohibited on all land within the crater rim, except the former Siedentopf farms. The National Park Ordinance of 1948 (implemented in 1951) created the Serengeti National Park (SNP). This, however, caused problems with the Maasai and other tribes, resulting in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Ordinance (1959) that separated the conservation area from the national park.[12] Maasai pastoralists living in Serengeti National Park were systematically relocated to Ngorongoro, increasing the population of Maasai and livestock living in the Crater.[13][7]: 48  The Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority was established by the Game Park Laws (miscellaneous amendments) Act, 1976, and owns the majority of Ngorongoro Conservation Area land, including the Crater. The area became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979, originally inscribed for its natural significance.[14] It then received Mixed Heritage Status in 2010.[15] Its cultural recognition stemming from “an exceptionally long sequence of crucial evidence related to human evolution and human-environment dynamics…including physical evidence of the most important benchmarks in human evolutionary development”. This recognition, however, has not included the Maasai community, hence the longstanding conflict surrounding the use and management of the park.[16][17] The Wildlife Conservation Act of 2009 further restricted human use of Ngorongoro Crater and created a legal framework to politically disenfranchise and forcibly displace traditional pastoralists.[7]: 57–59  The restriction on land use generates tension between the local Maasai communities and conservation authorities. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) is seeking solutions to ease conflict and improve collaborative efforts toward conservation with the locals.[18]

The conservation area land is multi-use and unique because it is the only conservation area in Tanzania that protects wildlife while allowing human habitation. Land use is controlled to prevent negative effects on the wildlife population. For example, cultivation is prohibited at all but subsistence levels.[19]

The area is part of the Serengeti ecosystem and, to the northwest, adjoins the SNP and is contiguous with the southern Serengeti plains. These plains also extend to the north into the unprotected Loliondo division and are kept open to wildlife through transhumance pastoralism practiced by the Maasai. The south and west of the area are volcanic highlands, including the famous Ngorongoro Crater and the lesser-known Empakaai Crater. The southern and eastern boundaries are approximately defined by the rim of the East African Rift wall, which also prevents animal migration in these directions.[citation needed]

Geology

The Pliocene Ngorongoro volcanic group consists of eight extinct shield volcanoes within the Eyasi half-graben, the eastern boundary marked by the Gregory Rift Western Escarpment. The Lake Eyasi escarpment bounds the half-graben on the southwest. Within the complex, five volcanoes are dome-shaped cones, while three have calderas. Ngorongoro Volcano (2.5–1.9 Ma) is primarily basaltic trachyandesite. The caldera is fed by the Munge and Oljoro Nyuki Rivers, while the Ngoitokitok hot springs feed into the Goringop swamp. Lake Magadi is a shallow (1.7 m) alkaline lake. Other volcanoes within the complex include Olmoti (2.01–1.79 Ma), Empakaai, Loolmalasin, Sadiman (3.7 Ma), Lemagrut, and Oldeani. The northwest portion of the conservation area consists of the Serengeti Plains, the Salei Plains, the Oldupai Gorge, and the Gol Mountains inselbergs. These inselbergs are part of the Mozambique Belt quartzite and mica schist about (800–500 Ma) in age.[20]

 
Panoramic view of Ngorongoro Crater

Ngorongoro Crater

 
Ngorongoro from inside the crater

The main feature of the Ngorongoro Conservation Authority is the Ngorongoro Crater, the world's largest inactive, intact and unfilled volcanic caldera.[21] The crater, which formed when a large volcano exploded and collapsed on itself two to three million years ago, is 610 metres (2,000 feet) deep and its floor covers 260 square kilometres (100 square miles).[11][22] Estimates of the height of the original volcano range from 4,500 to 5,800 metres (14,800 to 19,000 feet) high.[22] The crater floor is 1,800 metres (5,900 feet) above sea level.[1] The crater was voted by Seven Natural Wonders[23] as one of the Seven Natural Wonders of Africa in Arusha, Tanzania, in February 2013.[24] The Ngorongoro volcano was active from about 2.45 to 2 million years ago.[11]

Volcanic eruptions like that of Ngorongoro, which resulted in the formation of Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania, were very common. Similar collapses occurred in the case of Olmoti and Empakaai, but they were much smaller in magnitude and impact.[citation needed]

Out of the two recent volcanoes to the northeast of the Empakaai caldera, Kerimasi and Ol Doinyo Lengai, Doinyo Lengai is still active and had major eruptions in 2007 and 2008. Smaller ash eruptions and lava flows continue to slowly fill the current crater. Its name in Maasai means 'Mountain of God'.[21]

 
Lake Magadi

The Munge Stream drains Olmoti Crater to the north and is the main water source draining into the seasonal salt lake in the center of the crater. This lake is known by two names: Makat as the Maasai called it, meaning salt; and Magadi.[25] The Lerai Stream drains the humid forests to the south of the Crater and feeds the Lerai Forest on the crater floor – when there is enough rain, the Lerai drains into Lake Magadi as well. Extraction of water by lodges and Ngorongoro Conservation Area headquarters reduces the amount of water entering Lerai by around 25%.[26]

The other major water source in the crater is the Ngoitokitok Spring, near the eastern crater wall. There is a picnic site here open to tourists and a huge swamp fed by the spring, and the area is inhabited by hippopotamuses, elephants, lions, and many others. Many other small springs can be found around the crater's floor, and these are important water supplies for the animals and local Maasai, especially during times of drought.[27] Masai were previously permitted to graze their cattle within the crater, but as of 2015 were restricted from doing so.[13]

 
Because of the variety of animals present, the Ngorongoro Crater is a well-known tourist attraction.

Oldupai or Olduvai Gorge

The Ngorongoro Conservation Area also protects Oldupai or Olduvai Gorges, situated in the plains area. It is considered to be the seat of humanity after the discovery of the earliest known specimens of the human genus, Homo habilis as well as early hominidae, such as Paranthropus boisei.[citation needed]

The Olduvai Gorge is a steep-sided ravine in the Great Rift Valley, which stretches along eastern Africa. Olduvai is in the eastern Serengeti Plains in northern Tanzania and is about 50 kilometres (31 mi) long. It lies in the rain shadow of the Ngorongoro highlands and is the driest part of the region.[28] The gorge is named after 'Oldupaai', the Maasai word for the wild sisal plant, Sansevieria ehrenbergii.[citation needed]

It is one of the most important prehistoric sites in the world and research there has been instrumental in furthering understanding of early human evolution. Excavation work there was pioneered by Mary and Louis Leakey in the 1950s and is continued today by their family. Some believe that millions of years ago, the site was that of a large lake, the shores of which were covered with successive deposits of volcanic ash. Around 500,000 years ago seismic activity diverted a nearby stream which began to cut down into the sediments, revealing seven main layers in the walls of the gorge.[citation needed]

Wildlife

Approximately 25,000 large animals, mostly ungulates, live in the crater.[29] Large mammals in the crater include the black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis michaeli), the local population of which declined from about 108 in 1964-66 to between 11–14 in 1995, the African buffalo or Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer), and the hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius).[29] There also are many other ungulates: the blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) (7,000 estimated in 1994), Grant's zebra (Equus quagga boehmi) (4,000), the eland (Taurotragus oryx), and Grant's (Nanger granti) and Thomson's gazelles (Eudorcas thomsonii) (3,000).[29] Waterbucks (Kobus ellipsiprymnus) occur mainly near Lerai Forest.[29]

Absent are Giraffe, impala (Aepyceros melampus), topi (Damaliscus lunatus), oribi (Ourebia oribi), crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus).[1][21]

Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus raineyi), East African wild dog (Lycaon pictus lupinus), and African leopard (Panthera pardus pardus) are rarely seen.[1][30] Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) have been the subject of a long-term research study in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area since 1996.

Although thought of as "a natural enclosure" for a very wide variety of wildlife, 20 percent or more of the wildebeest and half the zebra populations vacate the crater in the wet season, while Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer) stay; their highest numbers are during the rainy season.[21]

Since 1986, the crater's wildebeest population has fallen from 14,677 to 7,250 (2003-2005).[21] The numbers of eland and Thomson's gazelle also have declined while the buffalo population has increased greatly, probably due to the long prevention of fire which favors high-fibrous grasses over shorter, less fibrous types.[21][29]

Serval (Leptailurus serval) occurs widely in the crater.[29]

Lake Magadi, a large lake in the southwest of the crater, is often inhabited by thousands of mainly lesser flamingoes.[31]

The crater has one endemic species of mammal: Mduma's shrew (Crocidura mdumai), which is restricted to montane forests on the edge of the crater. This shrew is considered endangered due to deforestation from smallholder farming.[32][33]

Lions

 
Lioness yawns in Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania

The crater has one of the densest known population of lions,[34] numbering 62 in 2001.[29]

A side effect of the crater being a natural enclosure is that the lion population is significantly inbred. This is due to the very small amount of new bloodlines that enter the local gene pool, as very few migrating male lions enter the crater from the outside. Those who do enter the crater are often prevented from contributing to the gene pool by the crater's male lions, who expel any outside competitors.[1]

Long-term data imply that lions in the crater were struck by four deadly disease outbreaks between 1962 and 2002.[35] Drought in 1961 and rains throughout the 1962 dry season caused a massive build-up of blood-sucking stable flies (Stomoxys calcitrans) by May 1962. They drained blood and caused painful skin sores that became infected, causing lion numbers to crash from 75-100 to 12. The population recovered to around 100 by 1975 and remained stable until 1983 when a persistent decline began. Numbers have generally remained below 60 animals since 1993, reaching a low of 29 in 1998. In 2001, 34 percent of the lion population died between January and April from a combination of tick-borne disease and canine distemper.[36][21][37]

The lion population is also influenced to some extent by the takeover of prides by incoming males, which typically kill small cubs.[35] The biggest influence, however, appears to be disease, particularly canine distemper.[38]

Outside Ngorongoro Crater

The Ngorongoro Conservation Area has a healthy resident population of most species of wildlife. The Ndutu Lake area to the west of the conservation area has particularly strong cheetah and lion populations. Common in the area are hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus), spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta), and jackals.[29] The population of African wild dog may have declined recently.[when?][29] Servals occur widely on the plains to the west of the Ngorongoro Crater.[29]

The annual ungulate migration passes through the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, with 1.7 million wildebeest, 260,000 zebra, and 470,000 gazelles moving into the area in December and moving out in June. This movement changes seasonally with the rains, but the migration traverses almost the entire plains in search of food.[29]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "The historical ecology of the large mammal populations of Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania, east Africa", Mammal Review, authored by Louise Oates and Paul A. Rees, 2012
  2. ^ . Daily News (Tanzania). 20 August 2012. Archived from the original on 22 September 2012. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  3. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 22 March 2020.
  4. ^ "Ngorongoro Crater". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  5. ^ "Ngorongoro Crater". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  6. ^ 'Tourism is a curse to us', Guardian, 6 September 2009
  7. ^ a b c Laltaika, Elifuraha (2013). "Pastoralists' Right to Land and Natural Resources in Tanzania" (PDF). Oregon Review of International Law. 15 (1): 43–62. ISSN 1543-9860. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  8. ^ "Mbulu", Information about northern Tanzania: a personal scrapbook of "cuttings" from published sources
  9. ^ a b Northern Tanzania: The Bradt Safari Guide with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar, authored by Phillip Briggs, 2006, pages 197, 198 ISBN 1-84162-146-3
  10. ^ "Hanby, Jeannette & Bygott, David: Ngorongoro Conservation Area". ntz.info. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  11. ^ a b c Africa's Great Rift Valley. Harry N. Abrams. September 2001. ISBN 978-0-8109-0602-0.
  12. ^ "Ngorongoro Conservation Area | Tanzania". Wild Safari Guide. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  13. ^ a b Robert M. Poole. "Heartbreak on the Serengeti". National Geographic. p. 4. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 21 February 2008.
  14. ^ Homewood, K. M.; Rodgers, W. A. (2004). Maasailand Ecology: Pastoralist Development and Wildlife Conservation in Ngorongoro, Tanzania. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521607490.
  15. ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "34 COM 8B.13 - Decision". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  16. ^ ICOMOS, UNESCO (2010). "Advisory Body Evaluation ICOMOS (Ngorongoro Conservation Area)".
  17. ^ Melubo, Kokel; Lovelock, Brent (4 March 2019). "Living Inside a UNESCO World Heritage Site: The Perspective of the Maasai Community in Tanzania". Tourism Planning & Development. 16 (2): 197–216. doi:10.1080/21568316.2018.1561505. ISSN 2156-8316. S2CID 134262021.
  18. ^ Hodgetts, Timothy; Lewis, Melissa; Bauer, Hans; Burnham, Dawn; Dickman, Amy; Macdonald, Ewan; Macdonald, David; Trouwborst, Arie (2 June 2018). "Improving the role of global conservation treaties in addressing contemporary threats to lions". Biodiversity and Conservation. 27 (10): 2747–2765. doi:10.1007/s10531-018-1567-1. ISSN 0960-3115. PMC 6435094. PMID 30996533.
  19. ^ Boone, Randall B.; Galvin, Kathleen A.; Thornton, Philip K.; Swift, David M.; Coughenour, Michael B. (1 December 2006). "Cultivation and Conservation in Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania". Human Ecology. 34 (6): 809–828. doi:10.1007/s10745-006-9031-3. S2CID 56251977. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  20. ^ Scoon, R. (2018). Geology of National Parks of Central/Southern Kenya and Northern Tanzania: Geotourism of the Gregory Rift Valley, Active Volcanism and Regional Plateaus. Springer. pp. 103–114. ISBN 9783319737843.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Estesa, R. D.; Atwood, J. L.; Estes, A. B. (2006). (PDF). Biological Conservation. 131: 107. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2006.02.009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 September 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2007.
  22. ^ a b Sinclair, A. R. E.; Packer, C.; Mduma, S. A. R.; Fryxell, J. M. (2009). Serengeti III: Human Impacts on Ecosystem Dynamics. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226760353. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  23. ^ "About – Seven Natural Wonders". sevennaturalwonders.org. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  24. ^ Sharaf, Yasir (12 April 2017). "Ngorongoro Crater Conservation Area | Seven Natural Wonders of Africa". XPATS International. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  25. ^ Deocampo, D.M. (2004). "Hydrogeochemistry in the Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania, and implications for land use in a World Heritage Site". Applied Geochemistry. 19 (5): 755−767. Bibcode:2004ApGC...19..755D. doi:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2003.10.006.
  26. ^ "Management of Black Rhino in the Ngorongoro Crater" (PDF). African Wildlife Foundation. 2003. Retrieved 21 February 2008.
  27. ^ Estesa, R. D.; Atwood, J. L. & Estes, A. B. (2006). (PDF). Biological Conservation. 131 (1): 116–117. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2006.02.009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 September 2016.
  28. ^ Pavitt, N. (2001). Africa's Great Rift Valley. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Incorporated. ISBN 0-8109-0602-3.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Ngorongoro Conservation Area". United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization – World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 3 June 2014. In summer enormous numbers of Serengeti migrants pass through the plains of the reserve, including 1.7 million wildebeest, 260,000 zebra, and 470,000 gazelle.
  30. ^ Kissui, B. M.; Mosser, A.; Packer, C. (2010). "Persistence and local extinction of lion prides in the Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania". Population Ecology. 52: 103–111. doi:10.1007/s10144-009-0176-y. S2CID 21028139.
  31. ^ Education, Jacana; Watson, Dave (12 August 2008). Ngorongoro Visitor Map Guide. Jacana Media. ISBN 9781770091733. Retrieved 12 June 2018 – via Google Books.
  32. ^ Stanley, William T.; Hutterer, Rainer; Giarla, Thomas C.; Esselstyn, Jacob A. (21 April 2015). "Phylogeny, phylogeography and geographical variation in theCrocidura monax(Soricidae) species complex from the montane islands of Tanzania, with descriptions of three new species". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 174 (1): 185–215. doi:10.1111/zoj.12230. ISSN 0024-4082.
  33. ^ Giarla, T.; Dando, T.; Kennerley, R. (2017). "Crocidura mdumai". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T112503346A112503349. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T112503346A112503349.en. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  34. ^ . PBS. Archived from the original on 11 October 2008. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  35. ^ a b na. ISBN 9780549678335. Retrieved 12 June 2018 – via Google Books.
  36. ^ "Stomoxys", Information about northern Tanzania: a personal scrapbook of "cuttings" from published sources
  37. ^ na. ISBN 9780549678335. Retrieved 12 June 2018 – via Google Books.
  38. ^ na. ISBN 9780549678335. Retrieved 12 June 2018 – via Google Books.

Further reading

  • Ngorongoro Conservation Area[permanent dead link] at the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre
  • Deocampo, D.M. (2004). "Hydrogeochemistry in the Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania, and implications for land use in a World Heritage Site". Applied Geochemistry. 19 (5): 755–767. Bibcode:2004ApGC...19..755D. doi:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2003.10.006.
  • Deocampo, D.M. (2005). "Evaporative evolution of surface waters and the role of aqueous CO2 in magnesium silicate precipitation: Lake Eyasi and Ngorongoro Crater, northern Tanzania". South African Journal of Geology. 108 (4): 493–504. doi:10.2113/108.4.493.

External links

  • Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority
  • Ngorongoro crater facts
  • Explore Ngorongoro Conservation Area in the UNESCO collection on Google Arts and Culture
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 September 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site Datasheet

ngorongoro, conservation, area, ngorongoro, redirects, here, district, ngorongoro, district, ɔːr, ɔːr, ɔːr, ɔːr, ɔː, protected, area, unesco, world, heritage, site, located, ngorongoro, district, west, arusha, city, arusha, region, within, crater, highlands, g. Ngorongoro redirects here For the district see Ngorongoro District The Ngorongoro Conservation Area UK e ŋ ˌ ɡ ɔːr e ŋ ˈ ɡ ɔːr oʊ 3 US ɛ ŋ ˌ ɡ ɔːr oʊ ŋ ˈ ɡ ɔːr oʊ e ŋ ˌ ɡ oʊ r ɔː ŋ ˈ ɡ oʊ r oʊ 4 5 is a protected area and a UNESCO World Heritage Site located in Ngorongoro District 180 km 110 mi west of Arusha City in Arusha Region within the Crater Highlands geological area of northern Tanzania The area is named after Ngorongoro Crater a large volcanic caldera within the area The Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority administers the conservation area an arm of the Tanzanian government and its boundaries follow the boundary of the Ngorongoro District in Arusha Region The western portion of the park abuts the Serengeti National Park also a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the area comprising the two parks and Kenya s Maasai Mara game reserve is home to Great Migration a massive annual migration of millions of wildebeest zebras gazelles and other animals The conservation area also contains Olduvai Gorge one of the most important paleoanthropological sites in the world Ngorongoro Conservation AreaView of the craterLocationNgorongoro District Arusha Region TanzaniaCoordinates03 12 36 S 35 27 36 E 3 21000 S 35 46000 E 3 21000 35 46000 Coordinates 03 12 36 S 35 27 36 E 3 21000 S 35 46000 E 3 21000 35 46000Area8 292 km2 3 202 sq mi 1 Established1959VisitorsOver 500 000 per year 2 Governing bodyNgorongoro Conservation Area AuthorityUNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeMixedCriteria iv vii viii ix x Designated1979 3rd session Reference no 39RegionAfricaEndangered1984 1989Inside the crater The 2009 Ngorongoro Wildlife Conservation Act placed new restrictions on human settlement and subsistence farming in the Crater displacing Maasai pastoralists most of whom had been relocated to Ngorongoro from their ancestral lands to the north when the British colonial government established Serengeti National Park in 1959 6 7 Contents 1 History and geography 2 Geology 3 Ngorongoro Crater 4 Oldupai or Olduvai Gorge 5 Wildlife 5 1 Lions 6 Outside Ngorongoro Crater 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory and geography EditThe name of the crater has an onomatopoeic origin it was named by the Maasai pastoralists after the sound produced by the cowbell ngoro ngoro Based on fossil evidence found at the Olduvai Gorge various hominid species have occupied the area for 3 million years Hunter gatherers were replaced by pastoralists a few thousand years ago The Mbulu 8 came to the area about 2 000 years ago and were joined by the Datooga around the year 1700 Both groups were driven from the area by the Maasai in the 1800s 9 10 No Europeans are known to have set foot in the Ngorongoro Crater until 1892 when it was visited by Oscar Baumann Two German brothers Adolph and Friedrich Siedentopf farmed in the crater until the outbreak of World War I after leasing the land from the administration of German East Africa The brothers regularly organized shooting parties to entertain their German friends They also attempted to drive the wildebeest herds out of the crater 1 9 11 In 1921 the first game preservation ordinance was passed which restricted hunting to permit holders throughout Tanzania In 1928 hunting was prohibited on all land within the crater rim except the former Siedentopf farms The National Park Ordinance of 1948 implemented in 1951 created the Serengeti National Park SNP This however caused problems with the Maasai and other tribes resulting in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Ordinance 1959 that separated the conservation area from the national park 12 Maasai pastoralists living in Serengeti National Park were systematically relocated to Ngorongoro increasing the population of Maasai and livestock living in the Crater 13 7 48 The Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority was established by the Game Park Laws miscellaneous amendments Act 1976 and owns the majority of Ngorongoro Conservation Area land including the Crater The area became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979 originally inscribed for its natural significance 14 It then received Mixed Heritage Status in 2010 15 Its cultural recognition stemming from an exceptionally long sequence of crucial evidence related to human evolution and human environment dynamics including physical evidence of the most important benchmarks in human evolutionary development This recognition however has not included the Maasai community hence the longstanding conflict surrounding the use and management of the park 16 17 The Wildlife Conservation Act of 2009 further restricted human use of Ngorongoro Crater and created a legal framework to politically disenfranchise and forcibly displace traditional pastoralists 7 57 59 The restriction on land use generates tension between the local Maasai communities and conservation authorities The International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN is seeking solutions to ease conflict and improve collaborative efforts toward conservation with the locals 18 The conservation area land is multi use and unique because it is the only conservation area in Tanzania that protects wildlife while allowing human habitation Land use is controlled to prevent negative effects on the wildlife population For example cultivation is prohibited at all but subsistence levels 19 The area is part of the Serengeti ecosystem and to the northwest adjoins the SNP and is contiguous with the southern Serengeti plains These plains also extend to the north into the unprotected Loliondo division and are kept open to wildlife through transhumance pastoralism practiced by the Maasai The south and west of the area are volcanic highlands including the famous Ngorongoro Crater and the lesser known Empakaai Crater The southern and eastern boundaries are approximately defined by the rim of the East African Rift wall which also prevents animal migration in these directions citation needed Geology EditThe Pliocene Ngorongoro volcanic group consists of eight extinct shield volcanoes within the Eyasi half graben the eastern boundary marked by the Gregory Rift Western Escarpment The Lake Eyasi escarpment bounds the half graben on the southwest Within the complex five volcanoes are dome shaped cones while three have calderas Ngorongoro Volcano 2 5 1 9 Ma is primarily basaltic trachyandesite The caldera is fed by the Munge and Oljoro Nyuki Rivers while the Ngoitokitok hot springs feed into the Goringop swamp Lake Magadi is a shallow 1 7 m alkaline lake Other volcanoes within the complex include Olmoti 2 01 1 79 Ma Empakaai Loolmalasin Sadiman 3 7 Ma Lemagrut and Oldeani The northwest portion of the conservation area consists of the Serengeti Plains the Salei Plains the Oldupai Gorge and the Gol Mountains inselbergs These inselbergs are part of the Mozambique Belt quartzite and mica schist about 800 500 Ma in age 20 Panoramic view of Ngorongoro CraterNgorongoro Crater Edit Ngorongoro from inside the crater The main feature of the Ngorongoro Conservation Authority is the Ngorongoro Crater the world s largest inactive intact and unfilled volcanic caldera 21 The crater which formed when a large volcano exploded and collapsed on itself two to three million years ago is 610 metres 2 000 feet deep and its floor covers 260 square kilometres 100 square miles 11 22 Estimates of the height of the original volcano range from 4 500 to 5 800 metres 14 800 to 19 000 feet high 22 The crater floor is 1 800 metres 5 900 feet above sea level 1 The crater was voted by Seven Natural Wonders 23 as one of the Seven Natural Wonders of Africa in Arusha Tanzania in February 2013 24 The Ngorongoro volcano was active from about 2 45 to 2 million years ago 11 Volcanic eruptions like that of Ngorongoro which resulted in the formation of Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania were very common Similar collapses occurred in the case of Olmoti and Empakaai but they were much smaller in magnitude and impact citation needed Out of the two recent volcanoes to the northeast of the Empakaai caldera Kerimasi and Ol Doinyo Lengai Doinyo Lengai is still active and had major eruptions in 2007 and 2008 Smaller ash eruptions and lava flows continue to slowly fill the current crater Its name in Maasai means Mountain of God 21 Lake Magadi The Munge Stream drains Olmoti Crater to the north and is the main water source draining into the seasonal salt lake in the center of the crater This lake is known by two names Makat as the Maasai called it meaning salt and Magadi 25 The Lerai Stream drains the humid forests to the south of the Crater and feeds the Lerai Forest on the crater floor when there is enough rain the Lerai drains into Lake Magadi as well Extraction of water by lodges and Ngorongoro Conservation Area headquarters reduces the amount of water entering Lerai by around 25 26 The other major water source in the crater is the Ngoitokitok Spring near the eastern crater wall There is a picnic site here open to tourists and a huge swamp fed by the spring and the area is inhabited by hippopotamuses elephants lions and many others Many other small springs can be found around the crater s floor and these are important water supplies for the animals and local Maasai especially during times of drought 27 Masai were previously permitted to graze their cattle within the crater but as of 2015 were restricted from doing so 13 Because of the variety of animals present the Ngorongoro Crater is a well known tourist attraction Oldupai or Olduvai Gorge EditMain article Olduvai Gorge The Ngorongoro Conservation Area also protects Oldupai or Olduvai Gorges situated in the plains area It is considered to be the seat of humanity after the discovery of the earliest known specimens of the human genus Homo habilis as well as early hominidae such as Paranthropus boisei citation needed The Olduvai Gorge is a steep sided ravine in the Great Rift Valley which stretches along eastern Africa Olduvai is in the eastern Serengeti Plains in northern Tanzania and is about 50 kilometres 31 mi long It lies in the rain shadow of the Ngorongoro highlands and is the driest part of the region 28 The gorge is named after Oldupaai the Maasai word for the wild sisal plant Sansevieria ehrenbergii citation needed It is one of the most important prehistoric sites in the world and research there has been instrumental in furthering understanding of early human evolution Excavation work there was pioneered by Mary and Louis Leakey in the 1950s and is continued today by their family Some believe that millions of years ago the site was that of a large lake the shores of which were covered with successive deposits of volcanic ash Around 500 000 years ago seismic activity diverted a nearby stream which began to cut down into the sediments revealing seven main layers in the walls of the gorge citation needed Wildlife EditApproximately 25 000 large animals mostly ungulates live in the crater 29 Large mammals in the crater include the black rhinoceros Diceros bicornis michaeli the local population of which declined from about 108 in 1964 66 to between 11 14 in 1995 the African buffalo or Cape buffalo Syncerus caffer and the hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibius 29 There also are many other ungulates the blue wildebeest Connochaetes taurinus 7 000 estimated in 1994 Grant s zebra Equus quagga boehmi 4 000 the eland Taurotragus oryx and Grant s Nanger granti and Thomson s gazelles Eudorcas thomsonii 3 000 29 Waterbucks Kobus ellipsiprymnus occur mainly near Lerai Forest 29 Absent are Giraffe impala Aepyceros melampus topi Damaliscus lunatus oribi Ourebia oribi crocodile Crocodylus niloticus 1 21 Cheetah Acinonyx jubatus raineyi East African wild dog Lycaon pictus lupinus and African leopard Panthera pardus pardus are rarely seen 1 30 Spotted hyenas Crocuta crocuta have been the subject of a long term research study in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area since 1996 Although thought of as a natural enclosure for a very wide variety of wildlife 20 percent or more of the wildebeest and half the zebra populations vacate the crater in the wet season while Cape buffalo Syncerus caffer stay their highest numbers are during the rainy season 21 Since 1986 the crater s wildebeest population has fallen from 14 677 to 7 250 2003 2005 21 The numbers of eland and Thomson s gazelle also have declined while the buffalo population has increased greatly probably due to the long prevention of fire which favors high fibrous grasses over shorter less fibrous types 21 29 Serval Leptailurus serval occurs widely in the crater 29 Lake Magadi a large lake in the southwest of the crater is often inhabited by thousands of mainly lesser flamingoes 31 The crater has one endemic species of mammal Mduma s shrew Crocidura mdumai which is restricted to montane forests on the edge of the crater This shrew is considered endangered due to deforestation from smallholder farming 32 33 Lions Edit Lioness yawns in Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania The crater has one of the densest known population of lions 34 numbering 62 in 2001 29 A side effect of the crater being a natural enclosure is that the lion population is significantly inbred This is due to the very small amount of new bloodlines that enter the local gene pool as very few migrating male lions enter the crater from the outside Those who do enter the crater are often prevented from contributing to the gene pool by the crater s male lions who expel any outside competitors 1 Long term data imply that lions in the crater were struck by four deadly disease outbreaks between 1962 and 2002 35 Drought in 1961 and rains throughout the 1962 dry season caused a massive build up of blood sucking stable flies Stomoxys calcitrans by May 1962 They drained blood and caused painful skin sores that became infected causing lion numbers to crash from 75 100 to 12 The population recovered to around 100 by 1975 and remained stable until 1983 when a persistent decline began Numbers have generally remained below 60 animals since 1993 reaching a low of 29 in 1998 In 2001 34 percent of the lion population died between January and April from a combination of tick borne disease and canine distemper 36 21 37 The lion population is also influenced to some extent by the takeover of prides by incoming males which typically kill small cubs 35 The biggest influence however appears to be disease particularly canine distemper 38 Outside Ngorongoro Crater EditThe Ngorongoro Conservation Area has a healthy resident population of most species of wildlife The Ndutu Lake area to the west of the conservation area has particularly strong cheetah and lion populations Common in the area are hartebeest Alcelaphus buselaphus spotted hyena Crocuta crocuta and jackals 29 The population of African wild dog may have declined recently when 29 Servals occur widely on the plains to the west of the Ngorongoro Crater 29 The annual ungulate migration passes through the Ngorongoro Conservation Area with 1 7 million wildebeest 260 000 zebra and 470 000 gazelles moving into the area in December and moving out in June This movement changes seasonally with the rains but the migration traverses almost the entire plains in search of food 29 See also EditList of reduplicated place names List of Ngorongoro Crater plantsReferences Edit a b c d e f The historical ecology of the large mammal populations of Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania east Africa Mammal Review authored by Louise Oates and Paul A Rees 2012 Dar registers three wonders Daily News Tanzania 20 August 2012 Archived from the original on 22 September 2012 Retrieved 28 January 2013 Ngorongoro Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Ngorongoro Crater The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 2 August 2019 Ngorongoro Crater Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 2 August 2019 Tourism is a curse to us Guardian 6 September 2009 a b c Laltaika Elifuraha 2013 Pastoralists Right to Land and Natural Resources in Tanzania PDF Oregon Review of International Law 15 1 43 62 ISSN 1543 9860 Retrieved 12 June 2017 Mbulu Information about northern Tanzania a personal scrapbook of cuttings from published sources a b Northern Tanzania The Bradt Safari Guide with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar authored by Phillip Briggs 2006 pages 197 198 ISBN 1 84162 146 3 Hanby Jeannette amp Bygott David Ngorongoro Conservation Area ntz info Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b c Africa s Great Rift Valley Harry N Abrams September 2001 ISBN 978 0 8109 0602 0 Ngorongoro Conservation Area Tanzania Wild Safari Guide Retrieved 4 February 2021 a b Robert M Poole Heartbreak on the Serengeti National Geographic p 4 Archived from the original on 29 June 2012 Retrieved 21 February 2008 Homewood K M Rodgers W A 2004 Maasailand Ecology Pastoralist Development and Wildlife Conservation in Ngorongoro Tanzania Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521607490 Centre UNESCO World Heritage 34 COM 8B 13 Decision UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 9 August 2022 ICOMOS UNESCO 2010 Advisory Body Evaluation ICOMOS Ngorongoro Conservation Area Melubo Kokel Lovelock Brent 4 March 2019 Living Inside a UNESCO World Heritage Site The Perspective of the Maasai Community in Tanzania Tourism Planning amp Development 16 2 197 216 doi 10 1080 21568316 2018 1561505 ISSN 2156 8316 S2CID 134262021 Hodgetts Timothy Lewis Melissa Bauer Hans Burnham Dawn Dickman Amy Macdonald Ewan Macdonald David Trouwborst Arie 2 June 2018 Improving the role of global conservation treaties in addressing contemporary threats to lions Biodiversity and Conservation 27 10 2747 2765 doi 10 1007 s10531 018 1567 1 ISSN 0960 3115 PMC 6435094 PMID 30996533 Boone Randall B Galvin Kathleen A Thornton Philip K Swift David M Coughenour Michael B 1 December 2006 Cultivation and Conservation in Ngorongoro Conservation Area Tanzania Human Ecology 34 6 809 828 doi 10 1007 s10745 006 9031 3 S2CID 56251977 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Scoon R 2018 Geology of National Parks of Central Southern Kenya and Northern Tanzania Geotourism of the Gregory Rift Valley Active Volcanism and Regional Plateaus Springer pp 103 114 ISBN 9783319737843 a b c d e f g Estesa R D Atwood J L Estes A B 2006 Downward trends in Ngorongoro Crater ungulate populations 1986 2005 Conservation concerns and the need for ecological research PDF Biological Conservation 131 107 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2006 02 009 Archived from the original PDF on 7 September 2016 Retrieved 23 October 2007 a b Sinclair A R E Packer C Mduma S A R Fryxell J M 2009 Serengeti III Human Impacts on Ecosystem Dynamics University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226760353 Retrieved 12 June 2018 About Seven Natural Wonders sevennaturalwonders org Retrieved 12 June 2018 Sharaf Yasir 12 April 2017 Ngorongoro Crater Conservation Area Seven Natural Wonders of Africa XPATS International Retrieved 25 October 2021 Deocampo D M 2004 Hydrogeochemistry in the Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania and implications for land use in a World Heritage Site Applied Geochemistry 19 5 755 767 Bibcode 2004ApGC 19 755D doi 10 1016 j apgeochem 2003 10 006 Management of Black Rhino in the Ngorongoro Crater PDF African Wildlife Foundation 2003 Retrieved 21 February 2008 Estesa R D Atwood J L amp Estes A B 2006 Downward trends in Ngorongoro Crater ungulate populations 1986 2005 Conservation concerns and the need for ecological research PDF Biological Conservation 131 1 116 117 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2006 02 009 Archived from the original PDF on 7 September 2016 Pavitt N 2001 Africa s Great Rift Valley New York Harry N Abrams Incorporated ISBN 0 8109 0602 3 a b c d e f g h i j k Ngorongoro Conservation Area United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization World Heritage Centre Retrieved 3 June 2014 In summer enormous numbers of Serengeti migrants pass through the plains of the reserve including 1 7 million wildebeest 260 000 zebra and 470 000 gazelle Kissui B M Mosser A Packer C 2010 Persistence and local extinction of lion prides in the Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania Population Ecology 52 103 111 doi 10 1007 s10144 009 0176 y S2CID 21028139 Education Jacana Watson Dave 12 August 2008 Ngorongoro Visitor Map Guide Jacana Media ISBN 9781770091733 Retrieved 12 June 2018 via Google Books Stanley William T Hutterer Rainer Giarla Thomas C Esselstyn Jacob A 21 April 2015 Phylogeny phylogeography and geographical variation in theCrocidura monax Soricidae species complex from the montane islands of Tanzania with descriptions of three new species Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 174 1 185 215 doi 10 1111 zoj 12230 ISSN 0024 4082 Giarla T Dando T Kennerley R 2017 Crocidura mdumai IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T112503346A112503349 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T112503346A112503349 en Retrieved 4 August 2022 The Crater Lions Nature United States Public Broadcasting System PBS Archived from the original on 11 October 2008 Retrieved 6 September 2017 a b na ISBN 9780549678335 Retrieved 12 June 2018 via Google Books Stomoxys Information about northern Tanzania a personal scrapbook of cuttings from published sources na ISBN 9780549678335 Retrieved 12 June 2018 via Google Books na ISBN 9780549678335 Retrieved 12 June 2018 via Google Books Further reading EditNgorongoro Conservation Area permanent dead link at the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre Deocampo D M 2004 Hydrogeochemistry in the Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania and implications for land use in a World Heritage Site Applied Geochemistry 19 5 755 767 Bibcode 2004ApGC 19 755D doi 10 1016 j apgeochem 2003 10 006 Deocampo D M 2005 Evaporative evolution of surface waters and the role of aqueous CO2 in magnesium silicate precipitation Lake Eyasi and Ngorongoro Crater northern Tanzania South African Journal of Geology 108 4 493 504 doi 10 2113 108 4 493 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ngorongoro Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority Ngorongoro crater facts Explore Ngorongoro Conservation Area in the UNESCO collection on Google Arts and Culture Tanzania Tourist Bureau UNEP WCMC World Heritage Site Datasheet PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 September 2012 Retrieved 1 September 2012 UNESCO World Heritage Site Datasheet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ngorongoro Conservation Area amp oldid 1130925428, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.