Places > Burkina Faso > Boucle du Mouhoun > Bale National Park
Deux Balés National Park
Photo Credit: Flickr user Quinn Norton
Did you know that as an Xploritall member, you can create your own custom Travel Guide? Just register for your FREE account, add places to your wishlist, and the Trip Planner will organize all of your saved places into a Travel Guide for you.
History
Deux Balés National Park was first established in 1937 as the forêts classées des Deux Balés ('the Deux Balés Classified Forests') with an area of 610 square kilometres.[1] At that time, it was part of French West Africa. In 1967, while part of the newly independent Republic of Upper Volta, the area was given the name of a National Park and referred to as 'parc national des Deux Balés'. However, there is still no law establishing it as a national park.
Poaching occurs in the park, and in 1968 there was a considerable reduction of large mammal populations by the 'Service de l'Elevage'.
In 1989, the International Union for Conservation of Nature recommended that "The legal status of Deux Balés National Park should be reviewed, in light of agricultural and mining activities which conflict with the integrity of its elephant populations".
By 2001, Burkina Faso was sheltering the largest number of elephants in West Africa, and Deux Balés (together with Baporo Forest) was home to roughly four hundred of them.
Physical features
The National Park is part of an undulating granitic plain, with outcrops of rock and lateritic plateaux. It lies at an altitude of 235 to 310 metres.
Flora and fauna
The Park has been called "an area of about 200,000 acres (810 km2) of bushland and aging baobab trees". The vegetation comprises Sudano-Zambezian savanna with a carpet of grasses, and trees such as Anogeissus leiocarpus, Isoberlinia doka and Terminalia laxiflora. There is gallery forest on the riverbanks.
Mammals include hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibius, buffalo Syncerus caffer, elephant Loxodonta africana, crocodile Crocodylus sp. and antelopes, although the diversity of fauna has been reported as being reduced.
In Antelopes: Global Survey And Regional Action Plans (1990), Rod East stated the view that the long-term survival of Burkina Faso's antelope populations would depend on developing rational wildlife utilization schemes in areas such as Deux Balés, recognizing the importance of bushmeat, and that giving legal protection to the antelope there would achieve little without other improvements in management.
The forests lying along some one hundred kilometres of the banks of the Black Volta River are protected within the Deux Balés.
Description from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
Your Friends With This Interest (0)
None of your friends have added this place to their Wishlist.
Members With This Interest (0)
None of your friends have added this place to their Wishlist.
Members With This Interest (0)
Your Friends That Visited Here (0)
None of your friends have visited here.
Members Who Visited (0)
None of your friends have visited here.
Members Who Visited (0)
Resources Powered by Barnes & Noble and Maps.com