East Saharan montane xeric woodlands


The East Saharan montane xeric woodlands is an ecoregion of central Africa, a number of high mountains in the middle of the huge area of savanna on the edge of the Sahara Desert.

Location and description

The ecoregion covers the higher elevations of the Ennedi Plateau and the Ouaddaï Highlands of eastern Chad and the extinct volcano system Jebel Marra in Darfur, western Sudan. These mountain ranges rise above the semi-desert sahelian Acacia savanna at the southern edge of the Sahara Desert. The ecoregion covers an area of. The summer rains are irregular, even more so in Chad than on Jebel Marra, which has two crater lakes.

Flora

Plant life includes many species typical of the sahel belt including Ammania gracilis, the grass Panicum laetum, the forb Chrozophora brocchiana and the herbs Farsetia stenoptera, Indigofera senegalensis and Tephrosia gracilipes. One classic element of the natural flora was Laperrine's Olive .

Fauna

Water from mountain streams makes the area an important habitat for wildlife such as a numbered of threatened antelope species such as addax ', Dama gazelle ', Dorcas gazelle ' and Red-fronted gazelle '. Endemic species include the Arid Thicket Rat ' from Jebel Marra. The mountains are home to birds of both Eurasia and Africa, species include Nubian bustard ' and Cinereous Vulture .

Threats and preservation

Jebel Marra has been inhabited since antiquity and although the steep mountain valley areas are mainly unhinhabited and undisturbed, habitat on the more accessible slopes has been affected. In Chad the ecoregion is thinly populated, mainly by nomadic pastoralists. Recent conflict in both Chad and Darfur have meant that less agriculture is taking place and to an extent original flora is reestablishing.