Crocodiles Crocodylus niloticus as a focal species for conserving water resources in Mauritanian Sahara
Date
2008Abstract
A survey on the Tagant Plateau, Mauritania, to
design a reserve for the crocodile Crocodylus niloticus
revealed that the area is occupied by a crocodile population
larger than expected. Crocodiles occur in lakes and pools
along seasonal rivers that form an inner hydrographical
network. Reported movements of individuals during the
summer floods suggested that it is necessary to protect the
whole 700 km-long hydrological network to preserve interpool
connectivity. However, the basin is occupied by
40,000 people that are completely dependent on water
from the hydrological network. Thus it was important to
propose a reserve network that would reconcile both the
protection of biodiversity and human use of water resources.
Considering the symbolic role of crocodiles for many
Mauritanians, the acceptance of their presence by the
people of Tagant, and the increasing use by tourism
agencies of some pools for crocodile-watching, the species
may be a good focal species for promoting the conservation
of the whole hydrological network of the Tagant Plateau.