Country: Mozambique
Administrative region: Cabo Delgado (Province)
Central co-ordinates: 11.4682 S, 39.56070 E
Area: 2200km²
A(i)Site contains one or more globally threatened species
The Mueda Plateau and Escarpments qualify as an Important Plant Area under criterion A(i) as they hold populations of 19 globally threatened plant taxa, of which eight are assessed as Vulnerable, nine as Endangered and two as Critically Endangered. This IPA includes the entire known global population of Uvaria rovumae, and is the only Mozambican IPA known to contain populations of Celosia patentiloba, Lannea welwitschii var. ciliolata, Momordica henriquesii, Monodora carolinae and Paropsia grewioides var. orientalis. Mueda does not yet qualify under criterion B as only ten (ca. 2%) of the B2 qualifying species have so far been recorded from this locality, although this figure is likely to increase with further exploration of the remnant patches of natural vegetation on the plateau and escarpment. Given the extent of transformation and fragmentation of the natural habitats on the plateau, and the very limited extent of Rovuma forest and thicket still present, this site does not qualify as an IPA under criterion C.
The Mueda Plateau (sometimes referred to as the Makonde or Maconde Plateau) is located in northern Cabo Delgado Province close to the border with Tanzania. The IPA is located mainly within Mueda and Muidumbe Districts, but also extends into Nangade District in the northeast section. This low plateau rises rather gradually on its eastern side and reaches just over 1,000 m elevation at its highest point around Chomba in the west. The northern, southern and particularly the western scarps of the plateau are typically steep and with complex gulley systems. It is bounded to the north by the broad valley of the Rovuma River and to the south by the Messalo River valley. The IPA covers an area of 2,251 km2, extending for ca. 100 km from north to south, and is slightly under 30 km wide at its widest point.
The Mueda Plateau has been settled for at least two centuries and was the cradle of Mozambique’s independence movement in the 1960s. A large number of settlements are well established across the site, including the towns of Mueda in the southwest and Mocimboa do Rovuma in the northwest of the escarpment. The plateau is traversed by route 509 which connects Mueda to the coastal town of Mocimboa da Praia, before continuing inland to Montepuez.
This site was previously covered by extensive thickets and dry forests of high botanical importance. The natural vegetation is, however, under severe threat due to the high population and associated habitat transformation, with the key habitats now largely restricted to steeper slopes and inaccessible areas along the plateau escarpments. For this reason, the IPA primarily covers the escarpments, as well as the somewhat less densely populated northern section of the plateau; the main towns and the heavily populated central and southern parts of the plateau are excluded. For the Mueda Plateau to retain its biodiversity value, there is an urgent need for protection and management of the remaining natural habitats, and potentially for a programme of habitat restoration in the less densely populated areas.
The botanical significance of the Mueda Plateau is associated primarily with the extensive thickets, woodlands and dry forests that are believed to have originally covered much of this site. These habitats contain a number of rare and range-restricted species of the proposed Rovuma Centre of Plant Endemism (Burrows & Timberlake 2011; Darbyshire et al. 2019). It is a critical site for several species, notably Hugonia grandiflora (EN), for which the majority of known localities are on the Mueda Plateau (Wabuyele et al. 2020), as well as Monodora carolinae (EN) and Paropsia grewioides var. orientalis (EN), for which this IPA is the only known Mozambican site. Tarenna sp. 53 if Degreef (2006), which is currently under description (I. Darbyshire et al., unpubl. data) is also present in the remnant forest patches. Although the herbaceous flora is not well documented, the discovery in 2009 of a population of Celosia patentiloba (CR) on the plateau (A. Banze #106) is of particular note as this is only the second confirmed record of this Critically Endangered species, the type being from Newala on the adjacent Makonde Plateau in Tanzania where it is highly threatened by extensive losses of suitable habitat (Howard et al. 2020). Potential records of this species from the Rondo Plateau in Tanzania in fact refer to a closely related but distinct and apparently undescribed species (I. Darbyshire, pers. obs.).
The southeastern escarpment near Muidumbe holds an important outlier population of the rock-dwelling Aloe ribauensis (EN), otherwise known only from the Ribáuè Mountains in Nampula Province (McCoy et al. 2014; Osborne et al. 2019).
Also included within the IPA boundary is an area of lowland woodland-dry forest mosaic along the northeastern side of the plateau and south of the town of Nangade, which supports the only known population globally of the Critically Endangered species Uvaria rovumae (Deroin & Lötter 2013). Although heavily disturbed, there are still reasonably extensive patches of this lowland mosaic away from the Nangade to Namau road. Additional new species may still be discovered here; for example, Lagynias (=Vangueria) sp. A of Burrows et al. (2018) is known only from a single collection from close to the locality for U. rovumae.
In total, 19 globally threatened plant taxa are known to occur on the Mueda Plateau and adjacent footslopes, although in some cases their continued existence at this site requires confirmation given the scale of habitat transformation. The loss of most of the natural woody vegetation is likely to have had a profound impact on many of these species. This site is also of interest as the only known locality in Mozambique for a number of taxa including Ancylobothrys tayloris (LC), Cassia angolensis, C. burttii, Vernonia (Jeffreycia) zanzibarensis (LC) and Whitfieldia orientalis; one of only two known Mozambican localities for the rare Streblus usambarensis; and a noted locality for the scarce and over-exploited timber tree Pterocarpus megalocarpus (J. Burrows, pers. comm. 2021). It is also worth noting that there are some highly localised species have been recorded from the lowlands to the west of the Plateau and towards Negomano, including the only Mozambican site for two species, Blepharispermum brachycarpum (EN) and Crotalaria misella (DD), as well as populations of Paranecepsia alchorneifolia (VU) and Stylochaeton euryphyllus (VU). It is possible that these species will be recorded in the lower elevation areas of the Mueda Plateau IPA in the future.
Mueda is one of a series of low plateaux in the Mozambique-Tanzania coastal border region, including the Makonde Plateau which is separated from Mueda only by the Rovuma River valley. Further north, inland from Lindi in Tanzania, lies the Rondo Plateau which is renowned for its botanical importance (Clarke 2001). The dominant underlying geology of the Mueda Plateau is thought to comprise iron-rich sandstone and conglomerates of the Mikindani Formation of mid-Neogene origin (c. 10-15 mya), giving rise to red soils that are well-drained, sand-rich and poorly structured. Along the escarpments there are outcrops of the Cretaceous Maconde Formation conglomerates and sandstones (I.N.G. 1987, reproduced in Timberlake et al. 2010; Hancox et al. 2002). The older formations are overlain by Quaternary or Neogene sedimentary deposits which form a gentle isocline running northwest from the coast, and reaching its highest points on the Mueda Plateau in Mozambique and the Makonde Plateau in Tanzania, with the Rovuma River cutting a sharp channel of c. 10 km wide into the deposits (Clarke 2011). Elsewhere within the coastal Cabo Delgado region, outcrops of the Mikindani sandstones are associated with dry forest patches of high botanical importance (Timberlake et al. 2010).
Given the long history of human impact on this area (see Conservation issues), the original vegetation of the plateau is difficult to ascertain with certainty. The vegetation map of Wild & Barbosa (1968) indicates that much of the Mueda Plateau, particularly on the eastern side, was dominated by a formation of Dry Deciduous Lowland Forest on sandstone and conglomerates (their type 6), a vegetation type that was largely confined in this region to Mueda. Dominant species in this community included Adansonia digitata, Balanites maughamii, Bombax rhodognaphalon, Cordyla africana, Dialium holtzii, Milicia excelsa, Millettia stuhlmannii and Sterculia spp. (Wild & Barbosa 1968). Much of the woody vegetation of the plateau has been removed and replaced with farmland and areas of fallow, and this forest vegetation type is now reduced to small remnants (Lotter et al., in prep.). Even more severely impacted appears to be moist semi-deciduous forest on the highest parts of the plateau, which is today evident only by the presence of scattered moist forest indicator species, such as Casearia gladiiformis, Dracaena mannii, Erythrophleum suaveolens, Harungana madagascariensis and Rinorea ferruginea (Lotter et al., in prep.). A patch of swamp forest is recorded on the western edge of the plateau, this being the source of water for the town of Mueda), and is dominated by Albizia adianthifolia, Synsepalum brevipes, Syzygium owariensis and Voacanga thouarsii together with the climbing swamp fern, Stenochlaena tenuifolia (Lotter et al., in prep.).The remaining woodland and thicket is mostly secondary in nature, with denser and more intact areas largely confined to steeper slopes and gulleys along the escarpments. The areas of the escarpment near Mocímboa da Rovuma and towards Ngapa appear more intact than elsewhere. Miombo woodland , is widespread along the escarpments, typically dominated by Julbernardia globiflora with Brachystegia spp., Diplorhynchus condylocarpon, Oxytenanthera abyssinica, Pericopsis angolensis, Pterocarpus angolensis, Sterculia quinqueloba and Terminalia stenostachya (Lotter et al., in prep.).
The climate of the Mueda Plateau is highly seasonal, with a prolonged dry season from May to November and a short hot and wet season mainly between December and April. Annual rainfall at Mueda town is approximately 1,100 mm per year (Timberlake et al. 2010), which is comparable to that of the Rondo Plateau in Tanzania.
The Mueda Plateau and the surrounding lowlands are not currently under any formal protection and this is one of the most severely threatened and degraded IPAs in Mozambique. The plateau has a long history of settlement, starting at least as early as the beginning of the nineteenth century. This was driven in part by the establishment of slaving routes along the Rovuma, which drove local populations onto the adjacent plateaus which were much less accessible and densely wooded (Israel 2005). Indeed, the plateau settlers were named “Makonde” after the densely vegetated uplands. The Makonde (colloquially named the Mavia, or “the nervous”) were mentioned in Livingstone’s journals and were visited in 1882 by Henry O’Neill, British Consul to Mozambique (Timberlake et al. 2010). Timberlake et al. (2010) note that much of the Dry Deciduous Forest of the eastern plateau is likely to have been destroyed through agricultural expansion and logging in the pre-independence period. During the 1960s, the Mueda Plateau became the focus point of the independence struggles, with FRELIMO establishing their main base there, supported by the Makonde and their strong ties to independent and socialist Tanzania immediately to the north (Israel 2005). The area saw much military action, with associated environmental impacts. Following independence, larger and more formal settlements were established on the plateau and it is from this time that clearance of the remaining dense woodlands and thickets is believed to have accelerated.
The reasonably fertile soils and reliable rainfall mean that the plateau is attractive for agriculture, with a variety of grains grown both for subsistence and some export, including millet, vegetables and particularly maize, as well as cashew cultivation. As a result, the vast majority of the original wooded vegetation has been cleared in all but the steeper and less inaccessible areas. Dense vegetation cover (woodland, thicket and forest) is estimated to have declined from an estimated 2,332 km2 historically to only 89 km2 at present, a decline of over 96% (Timberlake et al. 2011), with losses particularly severe on the eastern slopes of the plateau. The steeper escarpments and some areas of the northern portion of the plateau have escaped the worst of the clearance, and a portion of the northwest plateau, escarpment and footslopes (within the current IPA boundary) was proposed as a potential conservation area by Timberlake et al. (2010). However, even the northern parts of the plateau have experienced recent heavy logging following increased settlement there (J. Burrows, pers. comm. 2021).
Studies on the adjacent Makonde Plateau of Tanzania have revealed that the sandy soils have a weakly developed structure and are highly prone to gully erosion in areas where the vegetation has been denuded (Achten et al. 2008; Kabanza et al. 2013). This situation is likely to be equally applicable to the Mueda Plateau which has similar soils (Achten et al. 2008). A further threat is from increased frequency of uncontrolled wildfires due to deliberate burning; such fires are noted to be impacting the populations of Aloe ribauensis in the vicinity of Muidumbe on the southern edge of the plateau (Osborne et al. 2019).
The most urgent conservation priorities on the Mueda Plateau are to raise community awareness and support for sustainable management of the existing remnants of dry forest and thicket vegetation and, potentially, to develop a restoration scheme for these habitats in areas that are not so densely inhabited. Some optimism for such an approach can be taken from the Rondo Nature Forest Reserve in southeast Tanzania, where considerable regeneration of forest has occurred since the cessation of logging in the 1980s. Without such conservation schemes, the Mueda Plateau may soon lose its remaining biodiversity value. Ex situ conservation measures are also required for some of the most range-restricted species that occur on the plateau and adjacent lowlands, such as Celosia patentiloba, Hugonia grandiflora and Uvaria rovumae, given the high extinction risk they face in the wild.
The ecosystem services provided by this IPA are yet to be fully documented. The natural vegetation appears to provide important provisioning services to local communities, including harvesting of wood for charcoal production and construction, although these practices have clearly been unsustainable in the past. The more intact areas of the IPA are also likely to provide important regulatory services, particularly in terms of preventing erosion of the rather vulnerable, poorly structured soils. The area also has some cultural importance given the long history of the Makonde settlement and the role that this site and its people played in the independence movement.
Iain Darbyshire, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Species | Qualifying sub-criterion | ≥ 1% of global population | ≥ 5% of national population | 1 of 5 best sites nationally | Entire global population | Socio-economically important | Abundance at site |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monodora carolinae Couvreur | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Aloe ribauensis T.A.McCoy, Rulkens & O.J.Baptista | A(i) | Scarce | |||||
Salacia orientalis N.Robson | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Baphia macrocalyx Harms | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Hugonia grandiflora N.Robson | A(i) | Scarce | |||||
Cuviera schliebenii Verdc. | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Oxyanthus biflorus J.E.Burrows & S.M.Burrows | A(i) | Scarce | |||||
Tricalysia semidecidua Bridson | A(i) | Occasional | |||||
Erianthemum lindense (Sprague) Danser | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Paropsia grewioides Mast. var. orientalis Sleumer | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Sterculia schliebenii Mildbr. | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Cuviera tomentosa Verdc. | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Uvaria rovumae Deroin & Lötter | A(i) | Scarce | |||||
Celosia patentiloba C.C.Towns. | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Acacia latistipulata Harms | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Vismianthus punctatus Mildbr. | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Momordica henriquesii Cogn. | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Rothmannia macrosiphon (K.Schum. ex Engl.) Bridson | A(i) | Unknown | |||||
Lannea welwitschii (Hiern) Engl. var. ciliolata Engl. | A(i) | Unknown |
Monodora carolinae Couvreur
Aloe ribauensis T.A.McCoy, Rulkens & O.J.Baptista
Salacia orientalis N.Robson
Baphia macrocalyx Harms
Hugonia grandiflora N.Robson
Cuviera schliebenii Verdc.
Oxyanthus biflorus J.E.Burrows & S.M.Burrows
Tricalysia semidecidua Bridson
Erianthemum lindense (Sprague) Danser
Paropsia grewioides Mast. var. orientalis Sleumer
Sterculia schliebenii Mildbr.
Cuviera tomentosa Verdc.
Uvaria rovumae Deroin & Lötter
Celosia patentiloba C.C.Towns.
Acacia latistipulata Harms
Vismianthus punctatus Mildbr.
Momordica henriquesii Cogn.
Rothmannia macrosiphon (K.Schum. ex Engl.) Bridson
Lannea welwitschii (Hiern) Engl. var. ciliolata Engl.
Habitat | Qualifying sub-criterion | ≥ 5% of national resource | ≥ 10% of national resource | 1 of 5 best sites nationally | Areal coverage at site |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rovuma Coastal Dry Forest | C(iii) |
Rovuma Coastal Dry Forest
General site habitat | Percent coverage | Importance |
---|---|---|
Forest - Subtropical/Tropical Dry Forest | Minor | |
Shrubland - Subtropical/Tropical Dry Shrubland | Major | |
Savanna - Moist Savanna | Major | |
Artificial - Terrestrial - Arable Land | Major | |
Artificial - Terrestrial - Subtropical/Tropical Heavily Degraded Former Forest | Major |
Forest - Subtropical/Tropical Dry Forest
Shrubland - Subtropical/Tropical Dry Shrubland
Savanna - Moist Savanna
Artificial - Terrestrial - Arable Land
Artificial - Terrestrial - Subtropical/Tropical Heavily Degraded Former Forest
Land use type | Percent coverage | Importance |
---|---|---|
Agriculture (arable) | Major | |
Residential / urban development | Minor | |
Harvesting of wild resources | Major |
Agriculture (arable)
Residential / urban development
Harvesting of wild resources
Threat | Severity | Timing |
---|---|---|
Agriculture & aquaculture - Annual & perennial non-timber crops - Small-holder farming | High | Ongoing - trend unknown |
Residential & commercial development - Housing & urban areas | Medium | Ongoing - trend unknown |
Biological resource use - Logging & wood harvesting | High | Ongoing - trend unknown |
Natural system modifications - Fire & fire suppression - Increase in fire frequency/intensity | High | Ongoing - trend unknown |
Pollution - Agricultural & forestry effluents - Soil erosion, sedimentation | Unknown | Ongoing - trend unknown |
Agriculture & aquaculture - Annual & perennial non-timber crops - Small-holder farming
Residential & commercial development - Housing & urban areas
Biological resource use - Logging & wood harvesting
Natural system modifications - Fire & fire suppression - Increase in fire frequency/intensity
Pollution - Agricultural & forestry effluents - Soil erosion, sedimentation
Management type | Description | Year started | Year finished |
---|---|---|---|
No management plan in place |
No management plan in place
Trees and Shrubs Mozambique
Coastal Dry Forests in Cabo Delgado Province, Northern Mozambique: Botany and Conservation.
Mozambique’s centres of endemism, with special reference to the Rovuma Centre of Endemism of NE Mozambique and SE Tanzania.
South African Journal of Botany, Vol 77, page(s) 518
Coastal dry forests in northern Mozambique.
Plant Ecology and Evolution, Vol 144, page(s) 126-137
Observations on the vegetation and ecology of Palma and Nangade Districts, Cabo Delgado Province, Mozambique.
Historical Vegetation Map and Red List of Ecosystems Assessment for Mozambique – Version 1.0 – Final report
Revision of continental African Tarenna (Rubiaceae-Pavetteae).
Opera Botanica Belgica, Vol 14, page(s) 1-150
An extraordinary new species of Aloe from the Republic of Mozambique.
Cactus and Succulent Journal, Vol 86, page(s) 48-53
Gully erosion in South Eastern Tanzania: spatial distribution and topographic thresholds.
Zeitschrift fur Geomorphologie, Vol 52, page(s) 225-235
The Lindi local centre of endemism in SE Tanzania.
Systematics and Geography of Plants, Vol 71, page(s) 1063-1072
Kummwangalela Guebuza. The Mozambican General Elections of 2004 in Muidumbe and the Roots of the Loyalty of Makonde People to Frelimo.
Lusotopie, Vol 13, page(s) 103-125
Effectiveness of soil conservation measures in two contrasting landscape units of South Eastern Tanzania.
Zeitschrift fur Geomorphologie, Vol 57, page(s) 269-288
Aloe ribauensis. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019: e.T110780332A110780364.
A new Uvaria L. species (Annonaceae) from northern Mozambique.
Adansonia, Vol 35, page(s) 227-234
Sequence stratigraphic analysis of the Early Cretaceous Maconde Formation (Rovuma basin), northern Mozambique.
Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 34, page(s) 291-297
Iain Darbyshire (2024) Tropical Important Plant Areas Explorer: Mueda Plateau and Escarpments (Mozambique). https://tipas.kew.org/site/mueda-plateau-and-escarpments/ (Accessed on 26/12/2024)