Country/Territory | Somalia |
Area | 32,000 km2 |
Landform | continental |
Altitude | lowland & montane (300–2100 m) |
Key habitat | forest |
Other habitats | shrubland; rocky areas |
Forest types | subtropical |
Habitat loss | unquantified |
Level of ornithological knowledge | poor |
Priority | urgent |
This EBA includes several isolated areas of Afromontane vegetation in the higher mountains of northern Somalia (see White 1983), and the rocky coastal escarpment of northern and north-east Somalia. Most of this region has been inacessible to ornithologists for years, and the status of the birds and their habitats are exceptionally poorly known.
Restricted-range speciesTwo of the EBA's restricted-range bird species are particularly associated with Afromontane habitats in the northern mountains of Somalia: Turdus ludoviciae is locally very common in mountain-top juniper Juni
Another taxon confined to Afromontane habitats in this EBA which was considered to be a full species by Sibley and Monroe (1990, 1993), Archer's Buzzard Buteo archeri, is here treated as a form of the widespread Augur Buzzard B. augur, following Dowsett and Dowsett-Lemaire (1993).
Restricted-range species | IUCN Red List category |
---|---|
Somali Pigeon (Columba oliviae) | LC |
Somali Thrush (Turdus ludoviciae) | LC |
Warsangli Linnet (Linaria johannis) | NT |
Country | Admin region | IBA Name | Code |
---|---|---|---|
Somalia | Bari | Raas Xaafuun - Raas Gumbax | SO005 |
Somalia | Sanaag | Daalo | SO003 |
Somalia | Togdheer | Gacan Libaax | SO006 |
All three of the restricted-range species are threatened, Columba oliviae because its limited habitat may be under pressure and Turdus ludoviciae and Carduelis johannis because they are known only from a handful of localities where the remaining juniper forests have been degraded. It is feared that the chronic and continuing political crisis in Somalia may be causing further, but as-yet-undocumented, loss of habitat.
According to IUCN (1992b) there are no protected areas within this EBA. Daloh Forest Reserve, just north of Erigavo, is a key site for the conservation of the EBA, but there have been reports of plans to exploit and replant it (Collar and Stuart 1988).
ReferenceStattersfield, A. J., Crosby, M. J., Long, A. J. and Wege, D. C. (1998) Endemic Bird Areas of the World. Priorities for biodiversity conservation. BirdLife Conservation Series 7. Cambridge, UK: BirdLife International.
Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2024) Endemic Bird Area factsheet: North Somali mountains. Downloaded from
https://datazone.birdlife.org/eba/factsheet/92 on 26/12/2024.