Key Biodiversity Areas

Kalakpa Resource Reserve (24267)
Ghana, Africa

Site overview


KBA status: confirmed
Year of last assessment: 2005
National site name: Kalakpa Resource Reserve
Central coordinates: Latitude: 6.4167, Longitude: 0.4167
System: terrestrial
Area of KBA (km2): 366.50538
Protected area coverage (%): 17.35
KBA classification: Global/Regional TBD
Legacy site: Yes

Site details


Site description: It lies within the forest/savanna transition zone. The dominant vegetation is a rather uniform type of dry Borassus-Combretum woodland; several rocky hills in the west bear some dry deciduous forest or transition woodland. There are several broad galleries of dry semi-evergreen rain forest crossing the reserve from north to south.
Rationale for qualifying as KBA: This site qualifies as a Key Biodiversity Area of international significance because it meets one or more previously established criteria and thresholds for identifying sites of biodiversity importance (including Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas, Alliance for Zero Extinction sites, and Key Biodiversity Areas)
Additional biodiversity: While savanna woodlands are rather poor (with only seven Sudanian biome endemics), the forest avifauna is surprisingly rich, with at least 36 Guineo-Congolian endemics (Appendix 1). Some of these were previously unknown from Ghana east of the Volta, e.g. Dryotriorchis spectabilis and the rail Himantornis haematopus (both discovered later in 2005 at Kyabobo), the latter being unexpectedly common in dry Diospyros mespiliformis forest. The bee-eater Merops malimbicus is a localized Guineo-Congolian species which is particularly common at Kalakpa; it is not yet known to breed in Ghana but there is circumstantial evidence that it might do so in the Kalakpa area. Further investigation is needed.

Habitats


IUCN HabitatCoverage %Habitat detail
Forest100

Threats


Summary of threats to biodiversity at KBA: The main problem is in the existence of several villages in the reserve, especially one large village in the centre. Yet the main galleries of forest remain largely untouched and density of small game in the west (away from villages) is high, including large numbers of Cephalophus maxwelli (LR/nt), C. rufilatus (LR/cd), and several groups of Colobus vellerosus (VU).