Country/territory: Eritrea
IBA criteria met: A1, A3 (2001)
For more information about IBA criteria, please click here
Area: 130,000 hectares (1,300.00 km2)
Site description (2001 baseline)
The site, also known as ‘the Eritrean Green Belt’ (or by the Italian name ‘Pendice Orientale’), lies between about 20 and 100 km north of Asmara on the coastal (eastern) escarpment of the Central Plateau. It contains the only remaining mixed evergreen tropical woodland in Eritrea. There is magnificent mountain scenery with sheer drops, rock precipices, spurs and deep valleys cutting into the mountains up to high altitudes. The whole montane area is frequently in cloud and there are profuse lichens in some areas. The highest upland areas consist of rough, stony moorland, rocky hillsides and peaks, scrubby tussock-grassland (with exotic cacti including Opuntia vulgaris), and Juniperus procera woodland. Riparian vegetation includes willows in the deep valleys. Below about 2,500 m, Juniperus procera woodland with shrubby undergrowth dominates. Below c.2,100–2,300 m the vegetation is Olea africana-dominated evergreen woodland and upland scrub (Olea, Euphorbia, Dodonaea, Opuntia, Rosa and occasional Acacia spp.), which gives way, at around 1,400 m, to Combretum forest, with Terminalia and Anogeissus spp. This continues down to c.300 m at the edge of the Eastern Plain. Riparian woodland along watercourses in this zone includes Acacia, Ficus, Rhus, Acokanthera, Ricinus, Gymnosporia and Buddleia spp., with dense mats of the herb Flaveria australasiatica adjacent to rivers at intermediate altitudes after rain.
Key biodiversity
See Box and Table 2 for key species. The site qualifies as an IBA partly due to the presence of significant numbers of Falco naumanni. Although he did not visit Semenawi Bahri specifically, Smith reports this species, in the 1950s, as ‘abundant at all altitudes on open grassland and scrub’ and also Circus macrourus as ‘a regular wintering species on the plateau over the moors’ (together with F. tinnunculus). More recently (1995) ‘impressive numbers’ of F. naumanni were recorded near an agricultural scheme by Tom Butynski, walking west from Allet (i.e. close to the proposed area of this IBA), although no information on actual numbers is available. It also seems likely that Rougetius rougetii will be found to occur here, as this species was said by Smith to ‘characterize small upland streams with adjacent willows, rank grass and marshy vegetation, 6,000 feet [1,800 m] and over’.
Non-bird biodiversity: The Semenawi Bahri is said to contain populations of Tragelaphus strepsiceros (LR/cd), T. scripta (LR/nt), Oreotragus oreotragus (LR/cd) and a species of Cephalophus duiker. Particularly high densities of baboons Papio hamadryas (LR/nt) were found in this area (and at sites ER006, ER007 and ER008) in 1997/98 (Zinner et al. 1999). Due to the diversity of altitudes, climates and habitats, it is probably one of the areas of highest species diversity in Eritrea and is known to contain species with small range distributions in Eritrea and some at the northern limit of their distributional range.
Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2024) Important Bird Area factsheet: Semenawi Bahri (Eritrea). Downloaded from
https://datazone.birdlife.org/site/factsheet/semenawi-bahri-iba-eritrea on 23/12/2024.