Mont Péko National Park Explained

Mont Péko National Park
Iucn Category:II
Location:Côte d'Ivoire
Map:Côte d'Ivoire
Relief:1
Coordinates:7.025°N -7.2389°W
Area:340 km2

Mont Péko National Park is a national park in Côte d'Ivoire.

Mont Péko, elevation 833 meters (2723 feet), is located in the northern portion of the park.

It has existed since 1968.[1]

There are two mountains in Mont Peco National Park. The highest and most prominent mountain is Mont Péko with the highest peak of 997 meters.[2]

Forest covers 80% of the park and usually includes tree species such as Triplochiton scleroxylon, Celtis spp., Pterygota macrocarpa, and Mansonia altissima. About 240 species of birds have been recorded in the park.[3]

Status of Great Apes

A recent census carried out by Herbinger and Lia (unpublished reports 2001) found a significant population of chimpanzees in this park. The census was carried out in April 2001 using four different straight transect lines between 2–4 km long and totalling 12.5 km in length. The census suggested a density of 1.6 chimpanzees per km2 and a total population of around 320 weaned chimpanzees for Mont Péko National Park. The classified forest of Haut Sassandra, which is connected through corridors to Mont Péko might still hold up to 400 chimpanzees (Hoppe-Dominik 1991).

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Protected Planet Mont Peko National Park. 2020-12-30. Protected Planet.
  2. Web site: Mont Péko National Park. 2020-12-30. PeakVisor. en.
  3. Web site: BirdLife Data Zone. 2020-12-30. datazone.birdlife.org.