Arasbaran Protected Area (8065)
Iran, Islamic Republic of, Middle East
Site overview
KBA status: confirmed
Year of last assessment: 2004
National site name: Arasbaran Protected Area
Central coordinates: Latitude: 38.7500, Longitude: 46.8333
System: terrestrial
Elevation (m): 700 to 2770
Area of KBA (km2): 3691.44167
Protected area coverage (%): 22.59
KBA classification: Regional
Legacy site: Yes
Site details
Site description: The site comprises the Kalibar Mountains, to the south of the Aras river in northern Azarbayjan c.90 km north-east of Tabriz. It extends from the semi-arid steppic foothills at c.1,500 m in the south, over the mountain tops at c.2,500 m, and down into the valley of the Aras river (in the Caspian drainage basin) at c.700 m in the north. The relatively dry, southern slopes are covered with steppic vegetation. The northern slopes are deeply dissected into parallel ridges and steep-sided valleys. Moisture-laden winds from the Caspian support deciduous forest up to c.2,000 m, and lush alpine meadows above the tree-line. There are numerous perennial springs and streams draining north into the Aras river. This rather isolated patch of deciduous forest forms an outlier of the extensive forests of the Caucasus to the north. Summers are generally warm and pleasant, but winters are extremely cold with heavy snow. There are many small villages, but access has remained difficult because of the absence of all-weather roads. The wide range of habitats in the Protected Area includes Artemisia steppe and wheat cultivation on southern slopes, alpine tundra on the rocky summits, alpine meadows above the tree-line, and deciduous forest and scrub dominated by Quercus and Rosa on the northern slopes. Large areas of forest have been cleared for the cultivation of cereals and vegetables and for orchards and pastureland, and much of the remaining forest has been degraded by grazing and cutting of fuelwood. Land ownership is public.
Rationale for qualifying as KBA: This site qualifies as a Key Biodiversity Area of international significance that was identified using previously established criteria and thresholds for the identification of Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs) and for which available data indicate that it does not meet global KBA criteria and thresholds set out in the Global Standard. KBA identified in the CEPF Ecosystem Profile of the Caucasus Hotspot (2003, updated 2004). Taxonomy, nomenclature and threat category follow the 2002 IUCN Red List.
Additional biodiversity: See box for key species. This is Iran's only locality for Tetrao mlokosiewiczi, which is restricted to the upper deciduous forest and alpine meadow zones in the south-central part of the reserve at 1,800–2,100 m. This population was discovered in 1971, and was estimated to number 200-300 birds, but there has since been some decline due to forest clearance in the early 1970s. By 1977, the grouse were confined to two areas (Dogorun valley and an area north of Kharil), and the population was thought to be only c.110 birds. The reserve supports a diverse forest and montane avifauna, including a number of species with very restricted breeding ranges in Iran, such as Turdus philomelos, T. merula, Locustella naevia, Acrocephalus palustris, Sylvia curruca, Saxicola rubetra, Parus caeruleus, Pyrrhula pyrrhula, Serinus pusillus and Emberiza hortulana. Phylloscopus trochiloides nitidus is particularly common in the forest. Aquila chrysaetos is resident. At least 104 species have been recorded in the reserve. Non-bird biodiversity: Mammals: unusually high densities of Ursus arctos (rare) and Canis lupus (V), as well as populations of Lynx lynx (rare), Ovis ammon (rare) and Capra hircus (rare).
Habitats
Land use: agriculture | forestry | nature conservation and research (100%) | rangeland/pastureland
| IUCN Habitat | Coverage % | Habitat detail |
|---|---|---|
| Forest | 28 | |
| Rocky Areas(e.g., inland cliffs, mountain peaks) | 5 | |
| Shrubland | 5 | |
| Grassland | 28 | |
| Wetlands(Inland) | 5 | |
| Artificial - Terrestrial | 28 |
Threats
Summary of threats to biodiversity at KBA: The entire area was declared a Restricted Region (no hunting allowed) in 1971, but this gave no habitat protection. In 1975, the southern half of the Restricted Region (including the entire range of the population of T. mlokosiewiczi) was given full protection as a Wildlife Refuge (38,320 ha), while the remainder was reclassified as a Protected Area (34,145 ha). The Wildlife Refuge has since been downgraded to Protected Area, leaving a single Protected Area of 72,460 ha (wrongly given as 7,240 ha in IUCN 1991). 52,000 ha of the Protected Area were designated as a Biosphere Reserve in 1976. No conservation measures are known to have been proposed. Hunting has probably never posed a serious threat to T. mlokosiewiczi: shepherds and farmers rarely molest it, and the area has remained remote and difficult of access. The principal threat is the progressive clearance of forest for agriculture, particularly at lower elevations, and overgrazing by domestic livestock. The clearance of forest on steep slopes and subsequent terracing for wheat cultivation in the 1970s led to severe soil erosion, loss of topsoil, and exposure of bare rock over large areas of former grouse habitat.
Additional information
References: Argyle (1977c), Eftekhar (1973c), Gharamani (1971), Mansoori (1974), Scott (1973c, 1976d), Scott and Howell (1976).
Contributors: Data-sheet compiled by Dr D. A. Scott, reviewed by Dept of Environment.