| Location | Afghanistan, Kondoz |
| Central coordinates | 68o 50.00' East 37o 15.00' North |
| IBA criteria | A1, A4iii |
| Area | 20,000 ha |
| Altitude | 500 m |
| Year of IBA assessment | 2008 |
Ornithological information Virtually unstudied ornithologically but, together with Darqad (site 001) further east along the river, the site was known in the 1970s to harbour the last remnants of Phasianus colchicus bianchii in Afghanistan. Other (probable) breeding species include Marmaronetta angustirostris (not proven but likely), Vanellus leucurus, Acrocephalus concinens, A. melanopogon, Panurus biarmicus and Riparia paludicola. Large numbers of unspecified wildfowl utilize the area on migration.
Site description Lowland flood-plains of the Amu Darya (Oxus) river in northern Afghanistan, c.60 km north of Kunduz, at c.500 m. Extensive swamp woodland formerly dominated this region: vast tracts of reeds Phragmites interspersed with thickets of Tamarix and Salix trees and quite large stands of Elaeagnus woodland. However in recent years no doubt much has been destroyed and turned into cultivation as it has been on the north side of the river in Tajikistan and elsewhere on the river.
| Species | Season | Period | Population estimate | Quality of estimate | IBA Criteria | IUCN Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marbled Teal Marmaronetta angustirostris | breeding | 1975 | unknown [units unknown] | - | A1 | Vulnerable |
| A4iii Species group - waterbirds | passage | 1975 | 20,000 individuals | poor | A4iii |
| IUCN habitat | Habitat detail | Extent (% of site) |
|---|---|---|
| Artificial landscapes (terrestrial) | major | |
| Forest | minor | |
| Wetlands (inland) | major | |
| Shrubland | major |
| Land-use | Extent (% of site) |
|---|---|
| agriculture | major |
| Notes: Agric/cultiv/Rangeland: Cultivation and rangeland | |
| hunting | major |
| Notes: Hunting | |
| rangeland/pastureland | minor |
| Notes: Agric/cultiv/Rangeland: Cultivation and rangeland | |
| forestry | minor |
Other biodiversity Mammals: in the 1960s the area was extremely important for the last remnants of the threatened subspecies Cervus elaphus bactrianus.
Management considerations Although formerly declared a Royal Hunting Preserve in the early part of the century, with restrictions on settlement, access, conversion to agriculture and hunting, it was never gazetted as such. No conservation measures have been formally proposed. Habitat destruction is a very great threat which may already have reached dramatic proportions: the swamp woodland was being destroyed and turned into cultivation by settlers in the late 1970s, following the overthrow of the monarchy, and the area is currently a war zone. The lack of protected areas severely compromises the survival of any remaining significant areas of woodland. Both Cervus elaphus bactrianus and Phasianus colchicus bianchii were hunted extensively and without control in the 1970s, and their survival is in doubt unless surveys are carried out and hunting regulated. In the future, the potential damming of the Amu Darya river upstream in Tajikistan is also a threat to the integrity of the site, of unknown magnitude.
Acknowledgements A total of 16 IBAs have been identified in Afghanistan. Responsibility for maintenance and update of the IBA information in WBDB is held by BirdLife Secretariat. The baseline survey of IBAs took place during 1991-1993 and was published in Evans (1994). The site accounts and introduction were compiled from information supplied by S. C. Madge, who acknowledges the impressive series of detailed reports compiled principally by Dr R. G. Petocz and Dr J. A. Sayer, team leaders of the National Parks and Wildlife Management Project, which was initiated at the request of the Government of Afghanistan and administered by the Food and Agriculture Organization under the United Nations Development Programme, and which ran from 1972 to 1980, although most ornithological data were collected in the latter years. Waterfowl counts are based mostly on data collected for the International Waterfowl and Wetlands Research Bureau, chiefly by F. J. Koning, during brief winter and early spring visits in 1970–1972. A. Jamil carried out a survey of Ab-i-Istada for this project, with invaluable assistance from A. Fitzherbert and J. Harris (International Crane Foundation). E. Smith supplied valuable information for the site accounts, and Dr K. Habibi reviewed the first draft of the inventory.
References Sayer and van der Zon (1981).
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Recommended citation BirdLife International (2013) Important Bird Areas factsheet: Imam Sahib. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 22/05/2013
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