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Africa - Botswana

Dark-chanting Goshawk
Dark-chanting Goshawk © Steve Huggins
Botswana is a landlocked country in southern Africa bordering Namibia, South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe. About 80% of the country is on Kalahari sands at an altitude of around 1000 m. The main, and only perennial, rivers are in the north: the Okavango and the Linyanti/Chobe Rivers.

Key habitats: Botswana is largely semi-desert covered by dry tree, shrub and grass savanna in the Kalahari-Highveld biotic zone. In the more tropical north there are Zambezian zone woodlands. The Okavango Delta, a Ramsar site, is the most important wetland in southern Africa. In some years the seasonally inundated Makgadikgadi Pans cover around 1.2 million ha. In the south-west, sand dunes form a transitional zone between the Kalahari and Namib-Karoo systems.

Total number of species recorded: 560
Number of globally threatened species: 6
Number of Near Threatened species: 4
Number of Important Bird Areas: 12

Threats: Major concerns are projects by neighbouring countries to abstract water from the Okavango Delta which would reduce sediment run-off before it enters Botswana. Irrigation for agriculture, a proposed hydro-electric scheme and piping water from the Kavango in Namibia could seriously damage this dynamic system. Within Botswana, deforestation, overgrazing, poaching and overfishing, and bush fires threaten the avifauna.

Number of National Parks and Game Reserves: 7

The BirdLife Affiliate: BirdLife Botswana. Date founded: 1980 (as Botswana Bird Club). Number of members: 200

Major programmes/ areas of work: 12 Important Bird Areas (IBAs) within Botswana have been identified. A particularly significant BirdLife Botswana programme has been to monitor the population and breeding success of Wattled Cranes Grus carunculatus in the Okavango Delta. A Species Action Plan for Wattled Cranes in Botswana was recently compiled. Monitoring of most IBAs is ongoing with detailed monitoring of the two Cape Vulture Gyps coprotheres (Vulnerable) colonies and of smaller wetland IBAs. Bi-annual waterbird counts take place and results published in association with Wetlands International.

There are plans to monitor the most important IBA, the Okavango Delta, focusing on the Slaty Egret Egretta vinaceigula (Vulnerable), one of Botswana's most threatened species.

Breeding records of Botswana`s birds have been compiled for many years. Babbler, a biannual journal, publishes articles and notes on surveys and other aspects of birds in Botswana. BirdLife Botswana's website is www.birdlifebotswana.org.bw

A Tour Division is being established to organise and operate birdwatching tours to Botswana. The proceeds will help BirdLife Botswana's conservation efforts. For more details, please contact: birdlifetours@dynabyte.bw

Birdlife International
(text supplied by Birdlife International)


Trip Reports

Botswana, Namibia and Zambia Birding and Wildlife Tour, 15 - 23 February 2008, author Leon Marais (added June 26, 2008)
(Victoria Falls region from Zambia, Chobe region, Botswana and Ntwala Island, Namibia.)

Republic of Botswana & Victoria Falls, Zambia 2nd-16th June 2008, author James Walsh (added June 24, 2008)
(Okavango, Moremi, Savuti, Chobe, Slaty Egret, Lion, Cheetah, African Wild Dog, Leopard)

Botswana, Namibia and Victoria Falls September 2001, author Surfbirds Admin (added August 21, 2004)

Birding the Chobe river - Botswana (Photo Extravaganza), author Surfbirds Admin (added August 21, 2004)


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