ET060
Lower Wabi Shebelle river and Warder


Country/territory: Ethiopia

IBA criteria met: A1, A2, A3 (1996)
For more information about IBA criteria, please click here

Area: 1,200,000 ha

Ethiopian Wildlife and Natural History Society

Site description (2001 baseline)
The Wabi Shebelle is the main river in central Somali Region. Rising between the Arsi and Bale mountains, it curves round the Bale massif and flows south-east to Somalia. This site, i.e. the lower section of the Wabi Shebelle, starts at Imi. It then continues for more than 300 km through Gode, Kelafo and Mustahil, dropping gradually to c.250 m near the Somalia border. In this area, the Wabi Shebelle and its main seasonal tributary from the east, the Fafen, cut through a series of wide, flat shelves of sedimentary rock. These are often overlain, as in the Gode valley, by deep, alluvial soils. The highest areas, at around 1,000 m, are east of the Fafen river. Between Imi and Kugno, Tamarix spp. and Terminalia brevipes grow together. Below this, and towards Kelafo, the river flows through a flat plain where the riverbanks and adjacent land are subject to seasonal inundation. Such areas are often covered in a tangled growth of small bushes and herbs that include wild relatives of cotton. At Kelafo, the river cuts through and runs parallel to a low limestone ridge with Acacia–CommiphoraBoswellia bushland on it. In the Mustahil area, the river forms flood-plains: these are covered with tall herbaceous vegetation comprising various salt-tolerant species, e.g. Schoenoplectus maritimus and other sedges, Limonium spp., shrubby Indigofera spp., climbers, and various grasses. Grasses dominate the areas around the flood-plains. Away from the river basin, the vegetation is mostly AcaciaCommiphoraBoswellia bushland. This association contains some interesting succulents, not least several endemic species of Jatropha and Euphorbia.

Key biodiversity
See Box and Tables 2 and 3 for key species. Within this area Eupodotis humilis is not uncommon, and Streptopelia reichenowi is locally fairly common. Sylvietta philippae is considered rare, and is only known from Warder. The site supports a number of Somali–Masai biome species that are little known or relatively uncommon elsewhere in Ethiopia. In addition to the three species mentioned above, biome species include Merops revoilii, Pseudalaemon fremantlii, Eremopterix signata, Neotis heuglinii, Oenanthe phillipsi, Nectarinia hunteri, N. nectarinioides, Ploceus bojeri, Passer castanopterus, P. gongonensis and Speculipastor bicolor. Spizocorys personata, Mirafra collaris and Tmetothylacus tenellus have also been recorded. Other species of interest include Charadrius mongolus, Rhinoptilus chalcopterus and Turdoides squamulatus. There is also an as-yet-unidentified greenbul living in the riverine thickets, and if Laniarius liberatus were to be found in Ethiopia then this would be the most likely site.

Non-bird biodiversity: What little is known of the vegetation in this area is sufficient to show that there are many species restricted to these arid areas which are either very poorly known, or new to science. Examples include Boswellia ogadensis, first collected from Kelafo, and not known from any other locality, and Acacia pseudonigrescens, known only from between Kelafo and Mustahil. Several species of Jatropha and Euphorbia are endemic to this part of Somali Region in Ethiopia, or also to neighbouring areas of Somalia.


Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2024) Important Bird Area factsheet: Lower Wabi Shebelle river and Warder (Ethiopia). Downloaded from https://datazone.birdlife.org/site/factsheet/lower-wabi-shebelle-river-and-warder-iba-ethiopia on 22/11/2024.