Virunga National Park

Virunga National Park (Virunga NP)
At just over 3,000 square miles (8,000 km2), Virunga NP is not the largest Park in DR Congo but in comparison to UK National Parks, it is massive. It is over twice the size of the county of Cornwall, UK.
Virunga National Park Map

Virunga is a long, elongated Park.

It stretches from close to Goma in the south, and bordering Rwanda in the east, up to the Ruhenzori mountains in the north, on the border with Uganda. In the centre, is Lake Edward.

Virunga became a World Heritage Site in 1979. Due to major insecurity during the Great Lakes conflict, it was listed as a ‘World Heritage Site – in Danger’ in 1994.

Virunga has southern, central and northern sectors, with a main ranger station in each. Mutsora in the north, Rwindi in the central sector and Rumangabo in the south, also serving as the National Park Headquarters.

Virunga is not only the oldest National Park in Africa, it’s also the second oldest National Park in the world, only behind America’s Yellowstone NP.

Despite this, the forests and amazing animals of the park, most notably the mountain gorilla, are in a desperate fight for their survival.

Virunga NP is truly the crown jewel of Africa’s Parks. The 8,000 km2  Park contains over 50% of sub-Saharan Africa’s biodiversity and is home to about 200 of the earth’s last 740 critically endangered mountain gorillas.

Along with the mountain gorilla, Virunga is also home to the golden monkey, Rwenzori duiker, Rwenzori otter shrew, elephant, hippo, the large Rwenzori Tauraco and rare chameleon.

Elephants in Virunga Hippos in Virunga
Rare chameleon Rwenzori Tauraco

Virunga plays host to more bird (706) and mammal (196) species than any other Park in Africa and contains 109 reptile, 78 amphibian and an estimated 2,077 plant species. These are dispersed throughout its amazing variety of habitats: lowland forest, wetlands, lava fields, savannah, bamboo, montane forests and the Rwenzori glaciers, up in the far north.

Flycatcher bird Flycatcher in Virunga
Flycatcher Angolan swallow

Animals of Virunga Flowers of Virunga

Lake Edward, in the centre of the Park, is a very large and productive lake, renowned for its tilapia fish. For many years it was renowned for its influx migratory bird species and was subject to much research.

Saddle-billed storks Saddle-billed stork
Saddle-billed storks Saddle-billed stork

Flying in to the Ishango ranger station
Flying in to the Ishango ranger station, the view across the vast Semliki River is stunning….

 

HippoUnfortunately, Lake Edward was the scene of the slaughter of many, many hundreds of hippo by Mai Mai rebels in 2007, in search of ivory from their incisor teeth and meat. Virunga once had the largest concentration of hippo in the world, numbering well over 200,000 thirty years ago. There is now an estimated 300 or so remaining in and around Lake Edward.

Of all the volcanoes, in the extensive ‘Virunga Massif’ area (some shared by DR Congo, Rwanda and Uganda) the two that are still active lie within Virunga NP southern sector; Nyamulagira and Nyiragongo.

volcanoes, in the extensive ‘Virunga Massif’ region
Mt Nyiragongo crater and lava lake



The latter erupted violently in 2002, swamping a fifth of the city of Goma and some of the Park and rendering 120,000 people homeless. Nyiragongo has the largest lava lake in world. At an altitude of 3,470m, it is 250m deep and the bubbling, white hot lake is 2kms wide.

Children playing on the lava in Goma
Children playing on the lava in Goma, with houses being reconstructed with tarpaulins - 2004

 

 

 


 

 

For well over a decade, Virunga NP has faced, and continues to be threatened by, illegal settlement, agriculture and fishing, the presence of various armed militia and the military with resultant IDP camps (Internally Displaced Persons). Basic human demands for land, food and fuel has led to encroachment into the Park, a massive demand for charcoal for cooking and heating and increasing poaching for bushmeat.

An IDP camp just outside the city of Goma Subsistence farming spreads high up into the hills
An IDP camp just outside the city of Goma
Subsistence farming spreads high up into the hills
many live alongside the
Subsistence Goats and cattle need grazingfarming spreads high up into the hills
Goats and cattle need grazing.
many live alongside the
..and many live alongside the
Park boundary

The city of Goma, a short distance from the southern Park boundary has around 2m inhabitants. The demand for charcoal appears insatiable and drives the illegal charcoal burning trade, now the single biggest threat to the mountain gorillas.  
The Park is managed by the Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature (ICCN), with Dr Emmanuel de Merode as its Director, since August 2008.

Park Director, Emmanuel de Merode, Ranger Innocent and Humba the silverback, January 09
Park Director, Emmanuel de Merode, Ranger Innocent and Humba the silverback, January 09

The Director has around 650 rangers stationed throughout the Park, more than in any other ICCN Protected Area. In trying to combat the threats to the Parks future, the past decade has seen over 100 rangers lose their lives in the line of duty.

The gorilla.cd team are based in Goma and travel throughout the Park supporting the rangers. With a very interactive web site, www.gorilla.cd  supporters around the world contribute to Virunga’s future on a daily basis.

Frankfurt Zoological Society is a crucial partner and has been actively working In Virunga for many years, with staff on the ground. Other international conservation organisations contribute to and work with Emmanuel de Merode and his team, in different ways.

Virunga NP is managed in three sections, each with its own main ranger station. Many smaller, satellite patrol posts provide the bases from which rangers operate on a daily basis. Rangers are rotated around these patrol posts and also the different sectors, to gain experience within different areas of the Park.

Mutsora station, in the northern sector, sits on the lower flanks of the Ruhenzori mountain range, bordering Uganda.

Mutsora station, nestled against the Ruhenzori mountains, with its lush vegetation- 2007 Mutsora station, nestled against the Ruhenzori mountains, with its lush vegetation- 2007
Mutsora station, nestled against the Ruhenzori mountains, with its lush vegetation- 2007

weaver birds The intricately woven, hanging nests of the weaver bird
The intricately woven, hanging nests of the weaver bird

Further south, Rwindi is the main central sector station, positioned in the vast savannah plains. It is quite different to Mutsora or Rumangabo, with big, open skies.

Rwindi savannah animals Rwindi savannah
Rwindi savannah Rwindi savannah elephants
Extensive, open savannah of the central sector with elephant and antelope

Rumangabo provides the southern sector base and is also HQ for the Park as a whole. The Mikeno gorilla sector is within this southern area of Virunga NP, mainly bordering Rwanda, but also Uganda.

Virunga NP HQ in the southern sector The view from Rumangabo HQ, towards Nyiragongo volcano
Virunga NP HQ in the southern sector.
The view from Rumangabo HQ, towards Nyiragongo volcano
Virunga National Park Map The southern sector, with the Mikeno sector in green.



Rumangabo is in the centre of the map, with the smaller patrol stations of the gorilla sector marked: Kibumba, Gatovu, Bukima, Bikenge and Jomba.

With all the challenges that face Virunga NP, it is a World Heritage Site in need of the very highest level of protection and assistance.

It is not just a totally unique natural resource that will help bring revenue to the country as a whole and especially the local communities of the area, when visitors can once again marvel at what it has to offer; it is not just the home of 200 of the worlds critically endangered mountain gorillas, nor just the home for many other endangered or endemic species that survive nowhere else; it is not just a jewel of DR Congo….

The Park Director, ICCN rangers, gorilla.cd team and all the Parks many conservation partners, work desperately hard to protect this stunning National Park and its wildlife, on behalf of the world community too. It is the responsibility of all of us, across the globe, to help protect and conserve this unique ‘World Heritage Site – in Danger’.
Gorilla with stick in mouth


 

 

 

© P. Taggart



courtesy of gorila.cd


courtesy of gorila.cd