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182:, surveys show that this region holds a major population of Congo's great ape, the bonobo, as well as the last significant elephant population between the Tshuapa and the Lualaba rivers. The concentrations of these two flagship species also correspond with the highest concentrations of many other large mammals, including primates, throughout this continuously forested landscape.
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in the landscape are now restricted mainly to a single area in the watershed of the Tutu River, a tributary of the Lomami. It is an area of approximately 5000 km, and only a scattering of elephants, all highly mobile, occur elsewhere in the landscape. There is a reasonable prognosis for
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maintenance of forest elephants over the long term, but existing populations were nearly decimated after a decade of intense poaching, associated with the war and the widespread availability of military-grade firearms.
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flows through its center. This region covers over 40,000 km and is one of the largest blocks of intact forest in DRCongo. It has both low human population densities and little immigration.
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270:"A New Conservation Landscape for Bonobo: Discovery and Conservation of the Tshuapa-Lomami-Lualaba Landscape, in the Democratic Republic of Congo"
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occur on both sides of the Lomami River, representing an extension of the species’ known range. Okapi are, however, uncommon in the landscape.
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The forests in the Lomami-Lualaba watersheds are the eastern range limit of Congo’s endemic
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This landscape is known by three principal rivers, the
Tshuapa, the Lomami, and the
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are limited in their distribution to the TL2 landscape region.
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293:"First Year Report -- March 2008 to the ARCUS FOUNDATION"
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Protected areas of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo
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The most important populations of key fauna, including
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A new species of primate, known vernacularly as the
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55:"Tshuapa–Lomami–Lualaba Conservation Landscape"
128:Tshuapa–Lomami–Lualaba Conservation Landscape
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244:On 13 September 2012, the discovery of the
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178:). Along with a third smaller sector in
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317:"New monkey identified in Africa"
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345:Searching for Bonobo in Congo
132:Democratic Republic of Congo
315:Davies, Ella (2012-09-13).
122:A Map of the TL2 Landscape.
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356:Categories
327:2012-09-14
301:2024-03-24
278:2024-03-23
256:References
66:newspapers
187:great ape
138:Geography
224:primates
218:Primates
164:elephant
377:Maniema
199:ecotone
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382:Tshopo
246:lesula
231:lesula
191:bonobo
189:, the
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154:Fauna
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