A first family of four lions - an adult female and three sub-adult offspring (a male and two females) - were recently released to the uMkhuze section of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park in KwaZulu Natal after a 44-year absence. The four are the first of a total of eight planned for this section of the park. The lions were translocated from Tembe Elephant Park in northern KwaZulu Natal and had spent five weeks in a purpose-built boma to acclimatise them to their new environment before being released. Two more females and a coalition of two males (brothers) will follow to form the base of the new iSimangaliso lion population.
The addition of lions gives the iSimangaliso Wetland Park the Big 7 status because it is now home to the Big 5 (lion, elephant, Cape buffalo, leopard, rhino) as well as whales and sharks in the marine section.
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Showing posts with label Lake St. Lucia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lake St. Lucia. Show all posts
11 July 2012
South Africa: Umfolozi River & Lake St Lucia reunited
update (10 Sept 2012): St Lucia Estuary, to which many scientists in South Africa have been paying very close attention over the past year, has today (07 Sept 2012) been the recipient of excess water from the flooding Umfolozi River. [more]
After 60 years of being separated, the Umfolozi River and Lake St Lucia in the iSimangaliso Wetland Park on KwaZulu-Natal's north coast finally got rejoined to restore the functioning of South Africa's biggest estuarine system.
The Umfolozi River is flowing in an easterly direction to the Indian Ocean at Maphelana (Mapelana), a coastal town located just south of the St Lucia River mouth. Before the two systems got separated, the Umfolozi River used to meander over the Monzi Flats, where it split into numerous slow-flowing channels before entering the St. Lucia Estuary.
View Larger Map
After 60 years of being separated, the Umfolozi River and Lake St Lucia in the iSimangaliso Wetland Park on KwaZulu-Natal's north coast finally got rejoined to restore the functioning of South Africa's biggest estuarine system.
The Umfolozi River is flowing in an easterly direction to the Indian Ocean at Maphelana (Mapelana), a coastal town located just south of the St Lucia River mouth. Before the two systems got separated, the Umfolozi River used to meander over the Monzi Flats, where it split into numerous slow-flowing channels before entering the St. Lucia Estuary.
View Larger Map
The St Lucia estuary mouth was closed to the sea or the better part of the past decade due to below average rainfall conditions between 2002 to 2010, so that Lake St Lucia could not function as an estuary*. To re-link the two waterbodies, a beach spillway between the two mouths was established as far west on the beach as possible along a route previously followed by the Umfolozi River.
The water levels in the system are a steady at 50cm on average in the north and south lakes, and at least 1m in the narrows.
*An estuary is a partly enclosed coastal body of water with one or more rivers or streams flowing into it, and with a free connection to the open sea.
Labels:
kwazulu natal,
Lake St. Lucia,
south africa,
St. Lucia,
tourism,
travel,
umfolozi river
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