Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary
Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary | |
---|---|
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)[1] | |
Coordinates | 16°42′58″N 88°39′39″W / 16.7162°N 88.6608°W |
Area | 353.36 km2 (136.43 sq mi) |
Designation | Wildlife sanctuary |
Designated | 1984 |
Operator | Belize Forest Department/Belize Audubon Society |
The Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary is a nature reserve in the Stann Creek District of south-central Belize. It was established to protect the forests, fauna and watersheds of an approximately 400 square kilometres (150 sq mi) area of the eastern slopes of the Maya Mountains.
The reserve was established in 1986 as the first protected area for protection of the jaguar (Panthera onca).[2] It is regarded as a premier site for jaguar preservation in the world.[3]
The name 'Cockscomb' derives from the appearance of the Cockscomb Mountain ridge, that resembles a
Geography
The Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary is actually comprised by two adjacent geographic basins. The West Basin is drained by the Swasey Branch, which is one of the main tributaries to the Monkey River. The East Basin consists of the upper watershed of South Stann Creek. The West Basin, being more difficult to access given distance from trailheads and higher forest density, is as of the current time still relatively unexplored from the standpoint of species mapping, Mayan ruins and other environmental details.[5]
The reserve is generally lozenge-shaped, spanning an east–west dimension of approximately 36 km (22 mi) and a north–south dimension of approximately 14 km (9 mi). Elevation extremes are 50 m (160 ft) above sea level in the lower reaches of South Stann Creek to 1,160 m (3,810 ft) atop Victoria Peak.
The West Basin is bounded by the ridge of the Maya Mountains on the west, Cockscomb Mountains on the north, a prominent transverse ridge of the Maya Mountains at the south (of about elevation 1,000 m (3,300 ft)) and a low-lying north–south ridge at the east, which separates the West from East Basin. The Swasey Branch exits through the south transverse range via a deep 300 m (980 ft) gorge. The East Basin is also bounded on the north by the namesake Cockscomb ridge, to the west by the low-lying north–south ridge separating the two basins, to the east by Cabbage Haul Ridge and to the south by Stann Creek Ridge. South Stann Creek flows out of the East Basin on the south in a meandering gentle gradient that was easily navigated by the British explorers in the 1880s.
The site consists of two distinct adjacent watersheds and is accessible via a low-intensity
Natural history
The Maya Mountains and foothills are among the oldest surface rock formations of Central America; these Paleozoic sediments were uplifted about 200 million years ago in the later part (Pennsylvanian) of the Carboniferous period and the Early Permian period. The principal uplifted rock formations in the Sanctuary are quartzite and sandstone.
Flora
Principal
.The principal forest type is
Water
Fast flowing clear mountain
The riparian zone forest areas generally feature lush broadleaf rainforest intruding into the verges of fast flowing steep mountain streams as well as the languid meandering valley drainages. There are particularly interesting assemblages of vegetation along the rocky bedded mountain streams which have frequent rapids, waterfalls and deep pools. Due to the density of vegetation and frequent precipitation events, the forest floor often appears fresh and verdant even after several rainless days.
History
Mayan
Throughout much of the foothills of the eastern slopes in southern Belize, there is evidence of Mayan habitation since at least 10,000 BCE. The Pearce Ruin was the first Mayan site to have been catalogued in modern history archives in a report to the British Museum in 1931; however, the ruin was not re-sighted until 1995 with the Dunham surveys. At that late date two other Mayan sites were documented: Hun' Tul Mo' (one macaw) and Xa'a Yul Ha' (many rivers).
19th century
The first modern explorations that led to recorded features of the Cockscomb Basin were conducted by the British in expeditions of 1888 and 1889. These adventures began with river excursions up the South Stann Creek and resulted in attainment of what these explorers thought to be Victoria Peak, the highest point in Belize; in fact, later reconstructions showed that the mounting of a nearby peak to Victoria had been scaled.
20th century
Further exploration of the Cockscomb Basin did not transpire until 1927, when further British expeditions were launched to assess timber reserves; subsequently, logging began to occur until the year 1984, primarily with extraction of cedar (Cedrela odorata) and mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla). At about the same time as exploitation of these resources was virtually complete, a nationwide study of the jaguar was initiated. This scientific investigation led by Alan Rabinowitz, a recent recipient of the PhD degree from the University of Tennessee, found that the Cockscomb Basin was a particularly important habitat for the jaguar,[7] not only in Belize, but from a Central America perspective.
In 1986, Rabinowitz and Archie Carr III convinced the government of Belize to establish a no hunting zone with respect to jaguars in a portion of the Cockscomb Basin. By 1990, after further convincing, the Belize government expanded the Sanctuary substantially, and in 1995 another 160 km2 were added to connect the holding to the Bladen Branch Nature Reserve.
In 1988, the
See also
- List of protected areas of Belize
- North American jaguar
References
- ^ UNEP-WCMC (2022). Protected Area Profile for Cockscomb Basin from the World Database of Protected Areas. Accessed 28 March 2022. [1]
- S2CID 85151201.)
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ^ Emmons, K. M. et al. (1996). Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary. Producciones de la Hamaca, Belize and Orang-utan Press, Gays Mills, Wisconsin, USA.
- ^ Peter Dunham, Memorandum to Osmany Salas May 23, 1995
- ^ Ecology of Cockscomb Basin, Belize, Lumina Technologies Inc. (2006)
- ^ Hiking in the Cockscomb Basin
- ^ A.R. Rabinowitz, Jaguar: One Man's Battle to Establish the World's First Jaguar Preserve, Arbor House, New York, N.Y. (1986)
- ^ "Victoria Peak National Monument". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-01-19.