Abstract. Since the construction in 1979 of a dam in the Logone floodplain in the Sahelo‐Sudanian zone of Cameroon, annual inundations have decreased, reducing perennial vegetation as important grazing source for nomadic herds and wildlife during the dry season. Presently, possibilities exist to release excess water for floodplain rehabilitation. In 1994 a pilot release was executed, reflooding 200 km2, to verify predicted advantages. Vegetation has been studied from 1984 onwards along a transect covering flooded, recently reflooded and desiccated parts of the floodplain. Since 1993, the floristic composition has also been monitored in a grid in the centre of the impact zone. Cover of perennial grasses, most notably Echinochloa pyr amidalis and Oryza longistaminata increased from 41 to 61% in the reflooded zone. Vetiveria nigritana, a tussock grass that used to be dominant, disappeared slowly after the dam construction and has not shown a comeback. The cover of annual species, most notably Sorghum arundinaceum, a dominant annual grass only since the mid‐1980s, decreased in the reflooded zone from 58% to 34%. If the present conversion rate of annual into perennial grassland is extrapolated, recovery towards a 100% perennial state may be reached after the 2003 flooding season. Apart from favourable climatic conditions, recovery might be dependent on the restoration of soil fertility, limiting an approach focusing on flooding depth only.
When in 2010 the world's governments pledged to increase protected area coverage to 17% of the world's land surface, several Central African countries had already set aside 25% of their northern savannas for conservation. To evaluate the effectiveness of this commitment, we analyzed the results of 68 multispecies surveys conducted in the seven main savanna national parks in Central Africa . We also assembled information on potential drivers of large herbivore population trends (rainfall and number of rangers) and on tourist numbers and revenues. In six out of the seven parks, wild large herbivore populations declined dramatically over time, livestock numbers increased severalfold, and tourism, the pillar under a once thriving local wildlife industry, collapsed. Zakouma National Park (Chad) stood out because its large herbivore populations increased, an increase that was positively correlated with rainfall and number of rangers (a proxy for management inputs). With increasing insecurity and declining revenues, governments find themselves confronted with too few resources to protect vast areas. To deal with this conversation overstretch, we propose to extend the repeatedly promoted solutions--scaled up funding, enhanced management--with a strategic retreat, focusing scarce resources on smaller areas to save wildlife in the Central African savannas.
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