Upper Congo
ID
540
Author(s)
Ashley Brown,
Countries
Democratic Republic of Congo
Reviewer(s)
Uli Schliewen, Zoologische Staatssammlung München, Munich,Germany and David Kaeuper, United States Ambassador to the Repub
Major Habitat Type
Tropical and subtropical upland rivers
Drainages flowing into
Main rivers to other water bodies
The upper course of the
Description
Boundaries
The
Topography
The Lualaba in this ecoregion starts at an elevation of about 800 m asl and flows northwards through savanna into the central equatorial plain, where it gradually descends to the Upper Congo Rapids [861] at about 500 m asl (Marlier 1973; Bailey 1986; Library of Congress 1993).
Freshwater habitats
The Lualaba experiences a bimodal flood regime in its northern reaches near the equator. However, some tributaries remain unimodal, including the Elilia and the
Terrestrial habitats
The terrestrial landscape through which the Lualaba flows undergoes a transition from savanna in the south to high equatorial forest in the north. Acacia caffra is common in riparian vegetation, and Nymphaea spp. lives in open waters. The Lualaba is lined by Cyperus papyrus and Typha domingensis, as well as Pycreus mundtii and Paspalidium geminatum. Aeschynomene elaphroxylon and Hibiscus diversifolius comprise areas of swamp woodland (Hughes & Hughes 1992).
Description of endemic fishes
Three cyprinid barbs (Barbus marmoratus, B. nigrifilis, B. papilio), one claroteid catfish (Amarginops platus), kneriiids (Parakneria thysi), one mochokid catfish (Chiloglanis marlieri), and a cichlid (Tylochromis elongatus) are considered endemic.
Justification for delineation
This ecoregion extends from the outlet of
Level of taxonomic exploration
Poor. Surveys have not been conducted in this ecoregion in many years such that recent data is lacking. Much historic data on fish and aquatic invertebrates remain uncatalogued.
References
- Bailey, R. G. (1986). "The Zaire River system" Davies, B. R.;Walker, K. F. ( (Vol. The ecology of river systems, pp. Dr W. Junk Publishers ) 201-214.
- Banister, K. E. (1986). "Fish of the Zaire system" B. R. Davies and K. F. Walker (Ed.) Ecology of river systems ( pp. 215-224 ) Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Dr W. Junk Publishers.
- Beadle, L. C. (1981). "The inland waters of tropical Africa" England: Longman Group Limited.
- Brown, David (1994). "Freshwater snails of Africa and their medical importance" London, UK: Taylor & Francis.
- Hughes, R. H.;Hughes, J. S. (1992). "A directory of African wetlands" Gland, Switzerland, Nairobi, Kenya, and Cambridge, UK: IUCN, UNEP, and WCMC.
- Kingdon, Jonathan (1997). "The Kingdon field guide to African mammals" San Diego, CA, USA: Academic Press.
- Lévêque, C. (1997). Biodiversity dynamics and conservation: The freshwater fish of tropical Africa Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
- Library of, C. (1993) \Country studies: Zaire\ "<"http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/kmtoc.html#km0006 ">" (2001)
- Marlier, G. (1973). "Limnology of the Congo and Amazon rivers" B. J. Meggers, E. S. Ayensu and W. D. Duckworth (Ed.) Tropical forest ecosystems in Africa and South America: A comparative review ( pp. 223-238 ) Washington, DC, USA: Smithsonian Institution Press.
- Poll, M. (1976). "Poissons.Exploration du Parc National de l’Upemba" Fondation pour favoriser les Recherches Scientifiques en Afrique 73 pp. 1-127.
- Riley, J. and Huchzermeyer, F. W. (1999). "African dwarf crocodiles in the Likouala swamp forests of the Congo basin: habitat, density, and nesting" Copeia 199 (2) pp. 313-320.