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Location Tanzania, Iringa,Mbeya
Central coordinates 34o 30.00' East  7o 30.00' South
IBA criteria A3, A4i
Area 1,300,000 ha
Altitude 750 - 1,900m
Year of IBA assessment 2001

Wildlife Conservation Society of Tanzania



Ornithological information See Box and Table 3 for key species. Some 410 species have been recorded for the park, but this figure is almost certainly incomplete as only the main tourist areas are well known. This total includes seven species of the Zambezian biome (see Table 3). Ruaha holds important populations of two Tanzanian endemics of the dry central plateau—both Cosmopsarus unicolor and Agapornis personatus are reasonably common. Large flocks of Ciconia ciconia and Ciconia abdimii frequent the park when conditions are suitable and especially on passage. In the past, significant numbers of Falco eleonorae occurred, but there are few recent records.

Site description The National Park lies on the western bank of the Great Ruaha river in the rain-shadow of the Udzungwa mountains (TZ066), which lie some 80 km to the south-east. The western boundary is formed by the Rungwa Game Reserve. The site is largely a dry habitat southern extension of the Masai steppe. Average annual rainfall is only about 520 mm, making it one of the driest protected areas in Tanzania. The Great Ruaha river runs for 130 km along the south-eastern boundary and is perennial, drying out only in the driest of years. The southern and western areas of the park are mainly miombo woodland dominated by Brachystegia. This grades into CommiphoraCombretum woodland in the north-east with extensive areas of Terminalia- and Adansonia-dominated plains in the central areas.

Populations of IBA trigger species

Species Season Period Population estimate Quality of estimate IBA Criteria IUCN Category
Yellow-necked Spurfowl Francolinus leucoscepus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Dickinson's Kestrel Falco dickinsoni resident  2000    Least Concern 
Eastern Chanting-goshawk Melierax poliopterus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Buff-crested Bustard Eupodotis gindiana resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
White-headed Lapwing Vanellus albiceps winter  1997  500 individuals  A4i  Least Concern 
Black-faced Sandgrouse Pterocles decoratus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Yellow-collared Lovebird Agapornis personatus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
White-bellied Go-away-bird Corythaixoides leucogaster resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Racket-tailed Roller Coracias spatulatus resident  2000    Least Concern 
Abyssinian Scimitarbill Rhinopomastus minor resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Von der Decken's Hornbill Tockus deckeni resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Pale-billed Hornbill Tockus pallidirostris resident  2000  unknown [units unknown]    Least Concern 
Red-and-yellow Barbet Trachyphonus erythrocephalus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
D'Arnaud's Barbet Trachyphonus darnaudii resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Long-tailed Fiscal Lanius cabanisi resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Tabora Cisticola Cisticola angusticauda resident  2000    Least Concern 
Grey Wren-warbler Camaroptera simplex resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Scaly Chatterer Turdoides aylmeri resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Ashy Starling Cosmopsarus unicolor resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Kurrichane Thrush Turdus libonyanus resident  2000    Least Concern 
White-headed Black-chat Myrmecocichla arnoti resident  2000    Least Concern 
Miombo Rock-thrush Monticola angolensis resident  2000  unknown [units unknown]    Least Concern 
African Grey Flycatcher Bradornis microrhynchus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Kenya Violet-backed Sunbird Anthreptes orientalis resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Miombo Double-collared Sunbird Nectarinia manoensis resident  2000    Least Concern 
Shelley's Sunbird Nectarinia shelleyi resident  2000    Least Concern 
Black-capped Social-weaver Pseudonigrita cabanisi resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
White-headed Buffalo-weaver Dinemellia dinemelli resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Blue-capped Cordonbleu Uraeginthus cyanocephalus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Purple Grenadier Uraeginthus ianthinogaster resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Red-rumped Waxbill Estrilda charmosyna resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Grey-headed Silverbill Lonchura griseicapilla resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Steel-blue Whydah Vidua hypocherina resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Straw-tailed Whydah Vidua fischeri resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 
Broad-tailed Paradise-whydah Vidua obtusa resident  2000  unknown [units unknown]    Least Concern 
Golden Pipit Tmetothylacus tenellus resident  2000  present [units unknown]  A3  Least Concern 

Protected areas

Protected area Designation Area (ha) Relationship with IBA Overlap with IBA (ha)  
Ruaha National Park 203,000,000 protected area contains site 1,300,000  

Habitats

IUCN habitat Habitat detail Extent (% of site)
Artificial landscapes (terrestrial)   45%
Shrubland   12%
Grassland   32%
Forest   9%

Land use

Land-use Extent (% of site)
nature conservation and research -
tourism/recreation -

Other biodiversity A large population of elephant Loxodonta africana (EN) occurs, but the population of rhino Diceros bicornis (CR) was wiped out by poachers during the early 1980s. An important population of Lycaon pictus (EN) is present and there are large populations of Tragelaphus strepiceros (LR/cd) and T. imberbis (LR/cd). A small remnant herd of Hippotragus equinus (LR/cd) occurs and H. niger (LR/cd) is not uncommon in the miombo woodland. The park represents the southern limit of the tortoise Malacochersus tornieri (VU), an East African endemic.

Management considerations The National Park was established in 1964 by detachment from Rungwa Game Reserve to protect an important population of elephant and rhino. There are considerable concerns about rainfall in the Kipengire mountains catchment area of the Great Ruaha river. There have been recent attempts to upgrade the Game Controlled Area upstream of the National Park to Game Reserve Status. This is intended to help protect parts of the Usangu flats (TZ038) and would also enhance the biodiversity values of Ruaha National Park. There is a wedge of land downstream of the park and north of the Ruaha river that extends to the shore of Mtera reservoir (TZ029). This land should be considered for incorporation into the National Park. It would provide a safe corridor for the movement of large mammals to permanent water in years of drought and protect part of the shoreline of Mtera from erosion, as well as increasing the value of the park and creating further opportunities for tourism.

References Baker (1997), Barns (1985), Bjornstad (1976), Turner (1978).

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Recommended citation  BirdLife International (2013) Important Bird Areas factsheet: Ruaha National Park. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 24/05/2013

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