Country: Cameroon
Administrative region: South (Region)
Central co-ordinates: 2.40410 N, 10.37810 E
Area: 33km²
A(i)Site contains one or more globally threatened species
The site qualifies as a potential IPA under criterion A(i) due to the presence of several globally threatened species, particularly members of the genus Inversodicraea, which are narrowly endemic to the site alone or also occur at a few nearby parts of the river system which are also threatened by the hydro-power project. The site might best be treated together with the Partie Camerounaise du fleuve Ntem and Forêt de protection reserve Ma’an/Boucles du Ntem but little plant data is available for these areas.
The Memv’ele Falls at Nyabessan in Cameroon’s South Region is located on the Ntem river, approximately 60 km east of the coastal town of Campo and close to the border of both Equatorial Guinea and Gabon. It lies immediately to the south of the Campo Ma’an National Park. The Memv'ele falls is the site of a large hydroelectric project on the Ntem river which flows through a narrow gorge in this area downstream from the confluence of a network of backwater channels (Boucles du Ntem) that branch South of Ma’an as the Mvila and Ntem tributaries meet.
The site lies within a relatively sparsely populated area with remaining valuable forest habitat. The falls themselves are significant for the presence of several important rheophytic species, including Critically Endangered local endemics Inversodicraea tchoutoi, I. ntemensis, I. achoundongii, I. senei and Psychotria torrenticola. All of these species are narrowly endemic to a small area of the Ntem river around Memv'ele. The site has the greatest species diversity for the genus Inversodicraea globally (Cheek et al., 2020), and at least 10 species of Podostemaceae have been recorded from the Ntem river (Schenk et al., 2015). Growing close to the falls but not in the river itself, the tree rare tree Xylopia calva (EN) has also been collected at one of only three known global locations (Johnson & Murray, 2018). A collection of the genus Cola (Ngansop 327) from the site is thought to represent an undescribed new species, and the surrounding forest is thought likely to contain further rare species although it has been previously logged (X. van der Burgt, 2020, pers. comm., 29 September).
The larger area incorporating Memv'ele has been described as a refuge for plant species during quaternary glaciations when humid forest contracted in Central Africa (Idriss, 2012). A total of 1,471 species of vascular plants were recorded from Campo Ma’an by Tchouto et al (2006a), with 114 national endemics (Tchouto et al, 2006b). To the South and incorporating Memv’ele, the RAMSAR site (no. 2067) Partie Camerounaise du fleuve Ntem is also botanically important.
The Ntem river flows westwards to the Atlantic between the Ntem massif of Campo Ma’an to the north and the mountains of Equatorial Guinea to the South. Geologically, the area lies within the South Cameroon Plateau and is dominated by Precambrian metasedimentary basement complex rocks such as gneisses, migmatites and schists (Idriss, 2012; Nkoungou et al., 2012). At the site of the falls themselves, the solid outcroppings are granitic gneiss (Nkoungou et al, 2012). These hard rocks give the river its black colour due to the low silt content. The rocks might be some kind of conglomerate as loose material appears to become consolidated into the bed of the river channels (X. van der Burgt, 2020, pers. comm., 29 September).
The topography rises to around 1,000 m on either side of the valley and is very steep in places. After the Boucles du Ntem, where there are multiple backwater channels and marshy areas, the river enters a gorge at Nyabessan as it cuts through hills blocking the valley to the West. Here at the spectacular Memv'ele Falls the energy of the concentrated and rapidly descending river with a catchment area of 26,350 km2 has been exploited through a hydro-power station (Chen & Landry, 2016).
Soils in the area are predominantly acidic, ferralitic and lateritic and can be deep but are shallow on steep slopes; they have good physical properties but low nutrient content (Idriss, 2012).
Average annual temperature in the region varies little around 25 °C. Annual rainfall at Nyabessan is 1,670 mm, considerably less than at Campo on the coast where there is 2,800 mm (Tchoutou et al., 2006a,b). The climate pattern is bimodal, with a dry season between July and August and a longer one between December and February (Schenk et al., 2015; Cheek et al., 2020). However, due to the extensive buffer provided by the marshy area of upstream river loops, seasonal variation in waterflow is less than at some sites, enabling the use of a run-of-the-river style hydro station with limited reservoir capacity (Chen and Landry, 2016).
The forest in this area is at the interface of Letouzey's (1985) types 228 (Atlantic Biafran forest rich in Caesalpinioid/Detarioid
legume species) and types 233 and 166 (mixed Atlantic evergreen and semi-deciduous forest.
The Memv’ele falls is the site of a major 200 MW hydro-electric project which is close to completion (Chen & Landry, 2016). At the main falls a 20 m high earthfill dam of 1.5 miles length has been built which will create a 19 million m3 reservoir, flooding the villages of Nyabessan and Alem and an area of the Campo Ma’an national park according to Chen and Landry (2016). As well as destroying the main waterfalls or channeling water away from them, the project will flood rocky channels above the falls and disrupt water levels downstream where other populations of some of the Critically Endangered species are also found (Cheek et al., 2020; Schenk et al., 2015). Seasonal fluctuation in water levels is crucial to the reproductive cycle of the rheophytic Podostemaceae species which flower and fruit during drier periods when water levels drop (Schenk et al., 2015; Cheek et al., 2017) and therefore the dam severely threatens all populations of these species at the site or downstream.
In addition to the impact of the dam itself, the construction of roads and transmission infrastructure, as well as the influx of migrant labour, will impact an area which was previously sparsely populated and hard to access (Carrière et al., 1999). Typical threats such as logging and habitat clearance for cultivation are likely to increase (Idriss, 2012). These issues, in addition to construction directly associated with the hydro-power project, also threaten rheophytic species through increased pollution and water turbidity; Podostemaceae in particular normally require clear water and their growth and reproduction is impaired by silt (Cheek et al., 2015, 2020).
The site is closely adjacent to two conservation areas, the protected Campo Ma'an National Park to the North and the Partie Camerounaise du fleuve Ntem (2067) to the South, a RAMSAR wetland of international significance (one of only seven in Cameroon) (Idriss, 2012). The latter incorporates the Memv'ele falls site along with a larger upstream area; a further, smaller area is designated as a Forêt de protection reserve Ma’an/Boucles du Ntem (WDPA ID 146,629; 12,083 ha). A large logging concession (FMU 09-024) lies to the south.
The river Ntem is an important habitat for fish biodiversity with 249 species recorded including 2 endemics. Fishing is also relied upon by local people for food and income (Idriss, 2012; Dounais et al, 2016). The local forest area supports 80 species of large and medium sized mammals, including elephants and 13 threatened primates such as the Critically Endangered western gorilla (Gorilla gorilla).
Clear, oligotrophic, highly oxygenated water and seasonal fluctuation in levels are also crucial for downstream populations of rheophytic species.
The falls were described by Schenk (2015) as the main tourist attraction in the region, while the nearby National Park is also a lure to visitors. This has the potential to encourage conservation of the natural environment and to provide alternative employment and income. While the hydro project has already likely partly destroyed this habitat, it also brings improved access for ecotourism and conservation. The potential for tourism would be enhanced by efforts to mitigate the impact of the hydro project on the natural landscape and organisms, and to discover further sites for the endemic rheophytic species, while encouraging conservation of the surrounding forest. The Ebianemeyong tourist camp (Site ecotouristique et communautaire des chutes de Memv’ele) has been built near the falls, partly financed by the European Union.
Bruce Murphy, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Martin Cheek, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew
Xander van der Burgt, 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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Psychotria torrenticola O.Lachenaud & Séné | A(i) | ||||||
Begonia microsperma Warb. | A(i) | ||||||
Nothospondias staudtii Engl. | A(i) | ||||||
Psychotria camerunensis E.M.A.Petit | A(i) | ||||||
Pavetta mpomii S.D.Manning | A(i) | ||||||
Hymenostegia viridiflora Mackinder & Wieringa | A(i) | ||||||
Inversodicraea achoundongii J.J.Schenk, Herschlag & D.W.Thomas | A(i) | ||||||
Inversodicraea ntemensis (Y.Kita, Koi, Rutish. & M.Kato) J.J.Schenk, Herschlag & D.W.Thomas | A(i) | ||||||
Inversodicraea senei Cheek | A(i) | ||||||
Inversodicraea tchoutoi Cheek | A(i) | ||||||
Virectaria salicoides (C.H.Wright) Bremek. | A(i) | ||||||
Ledermaniella bifurcata (Engl.) C.Cusset | A(i) | ||||||
Thecacoris lancifolia Pax & K.Hoffm. | A(i) | ||||||
Liparis hallei Szlach. | A(i) | ||||||
Guibourtia tessmannii (Harms) J.Léonard | A(i) | ||||||
Xylopia calva D.M.Johnson & N.A.Murray | A(i) | ||||||
Englerodendron graciliflorum (Harms) Estrella & Ojeda | A(i) | ||||||
Macropodiella heteromorpha (Baill.) C.Cusset | A(i) | ||||||
Oddoniodendron gambanum Ngok & Breteler | A(i) |
Psychotria torrenticola O.Lachenaud & Séné
Begonia microsperma Warb.
Nothospondias staudtii Engl.
Psychotria camerunensis E.M.A.Petit
Pavetta mpomii S.D.Manning
Hymenostegia viridiflora Mackinder & Wieringa
Inversodicraea achoundongii J.J.Schenk, Herschlag & D.W.Thomas
Inversodicraea ntemensis (Y.Kita, Koi, Rutish. & M.Kato) J.J.Schenk, Herschlag & D.W.Thomas
Inversodicraea senei Cheek
Inversodicraea tchoutoi Cheek
Virectaria salicoides (C.H.Wright) Bremek.
Ledermaniella bifurcata (Engl.) C.Cusset
Thecacoris lancifolia Pax & K.Hoffm.
Liparis hallei Szlach.
Guibourtia tessmannii (Harms) J.Léonard
Xylopia calva D.M.Johnson & N.A.Murray
Englerodendron graciliflorum (Harms) Estrella & Ojeda
Macropodiella heteromorpha (Baill.) C.Cusset
Oddoniodendron gambanum Ngok & Breteler
General site habitat | Percent coverage | Importance |
---|---|---|
Wetlands (inland) - Permanent Rivers, Streams, Creeks [includes waterfalls] | Major |
Wetlands (inland) - Permanent Rivers, Streams, Creeks [includes waterfalls]
Threat | Severity | Timing |
---|---|---|
Agriculture & aquaculture - Annual & perennial non-timber crops - Shifting agriculture | Low | Ongoing - trend unknown |
Transportation & service corridors - Roads & railroads | Medium | Ongoing - increasing |
Pollution - Agricultural & forestry effluents - Soil erosion, sedimentation | High | Future - inferred threat |
Pollution - Agricultural & forestry effluents - Nutrient loads | High | Future - inferred threat |
Energy production & mining - Renewable energy | High | Ongoing - stable |
Natural system modifications - Dams & water management/use - Large dams | High | Ongoing - stable |
Biological resource use - Logging & wood harvesting | Medium | Ongoing - trend unknown |
Agriculture & aquaculture - Annual & perennial non-timber crops - Shifting agriculture
Transportation & service corridors - Roads & railroads
Pollution - Agricultural & forestry effluents - Soil erosion, sedimentation
Pollution - Agricultural & forestry effluents - Nutrient loads
Energy production & mining - Renewable energy
Natural system modifications - Dams & water management/use - Large dams
Biological resource use - Logging & wood harvesting
Protected area name | Protected area type | Relationship with IPA | Areal overlap |
---|---|---|---|
Campo Ma'an National Park | National Park | protected/conservation area overlaps with IPA |
Campo Ma'an National Park
Designation name | Protected area | Relationship with IPA | Areal overlap |
---|---|---|---|
Partie Camerounaise du fleuve Ntem | Ramsar | protected/conservation area encompasses IPA |
Partie Camerounaise du fleuve Ntem
Management type | Description | Year started | Year finished |
---|---|---|---|
No management plan in place |
No management plan in place
Étude Phytogéographique du Cameroun
Notice de la carte phytogéographique du Cameroun au 1: 500,000.
Partie Camerounaise du fleuve Ntem ( 2067). Fiche descriptive sur les zones humides Ramsar (FDR)
Capturing the Rains: A Comparative Study of Chinese Involvement in Cameroon’s Hydropower Sector. Working Paper No. 2016/6
Geophysical Contribution for the Determination of Aquifer Properties in Memve Ele, South Cameroon
Journal of Water Resource and Protection, Vol 4, page(s) 885-890 Available online
Le dilemme de la route dans la vallée du Ntem. APFT-Working Paper: La route en forêt tropicale, portes ouvertes sur l'avenir ? WP N°6.
In La route en forêt tropicale: porte ouverte sur l'avenir? Chapter: 4.3. Edition: APFT (Avenir des peuples des forêts tropicales) (pub. UE DG VIII), page(s) 8-42 Available online
A synoptic revision of Inversodicraea (Podostemaceae)
Blumea, Vol 62, page(s) 125–156
Describing a New Species into a Polyphyletic Genus: Taxonomic Novelty in Ledermanniella s.l. (Podostemaceae) from Cameroon
Systematic Botany, Vol 40(2), page(s) 539-552
Three new Critically Endangered Inversodicraea (Podostemaceae) species from Tropical Africa: I. senei, I. tanzaniensis and I. botswana
Kew Bulletin, Vol 75:31, page(s) 14
Biodiversity hotspots and conservation priorities in the Campo-Ma‘an rain forests, Cameroon
Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol 15, page(s) 1219–1252
Diversity patterns in the flora of the Campo-Ma’an rain forest, Cameroon: do tree species tell it all?
Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol 15, page(s) 1353–1374
The safety net role of inland fishing in the subsistence strategy of multi-active forest dwellers in Southern Cameroon
Revue d’ethnoécologie, Vol 10(10), page(s) 46 pp Available online
Un nouveau Psychotria (Rubiaceae) rhéophyte du sud Cameroun
Plant Ecology and Evolution, Vol 145 (3), page(s) 423–427
Ledermanniella lunda sp. nov. (Podostemaceae) of Lunda Norte, Angola.
Kew Bulletin, Vol 70(1), page(s) 10–15
A revision of Xylopia L. (Annonaceae): the species of Tropical Africa.
PhytoKeys, Vol 97, page(s) 1-252
Bruce Murphy, Martin Cheek, Xander van der Burgt (2024) Tropical Important Plant Areas Explorer: Memv'ele Falls (Cameroon). https://tipas.kew.org/site/memvele-waterfalls/ (Accessed on 22/12/2024)