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Conservation Concern for the Deteriorating Geographical Range of the Grey Parrot in Cameroon
Author(s) -
Simon Awafor Tamungang,
Robert Cheke,
Gilbert Zechia Mofor,
Richard N. Tamungang,
Fritz Tabi Oben
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.373
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 1687-9716
pISSN - 1687-9708
DOI - 10.1155/2014/753294
Subject(s) - geography , range (aeronautics) , rainforest , population , habitat , mountain range (options) , biodiversity , socioeconomics , habitat destruction , ecology , vegetation (pathology) , forestry , biology , demography , pathology , sociology , financial economics , economics , composite material , medicine , materials science
The need for information on Grey Parrot distribution and vegetation associations for informed management and policy decisions was the basis for this study. A nationwide survey of the Grey Parrot population and habitat status was carried out, using questionnaire and point count methods. From the results, the extent of the contemporary range of the parrots was restricted to Southern Cameroon, which harbours the rainforest. Regional parrot population means ranged from 3,487 parrots in the Littoral to 1,351,275 parrots in the East Regions. The extent of the contemporary range as a percentage of the whole country was 25.4% and as a percentage of the regions with rainforest was 44.5%. The historic range of the bird has been reduced by over 55.5%. Estimated percentage of forest lost per region ranged from 20.4% in the Centre to 57.1% in the East and South Regions. At a global level, Cameroon contributed 9% to the total extent of the range of the Grey Parrot in Africa. The range is increasingly fragmented, contracted, and lost through land-based socioeconomic activities. These degradation pressures on the range called for urgent conservation considerations for long-term survival of the parrot species and its associated biodiversity in Cameroon

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