Lamu-Kiunga ArchipelagoLocation/ Description/ Jurisdiction/ Features of Potential Outstanding Universal Values/ Threats/ Management status/ Geographic scale, integrity and site type/ Other sites in the region / Key References Location - The site is located at the northern extreme of the Kenya coast, against the border with Somalia. The Kiunga archipelago is some 60 km long, part of the string of islands that starts at Lamu Island, about 50 km to the south. The islands shelter an extensive system of creeks, channels and mangrove forests. The islands are fully enclosed within a protected areas, the Kiunga Marine National Reserve (KMNR) and adjacent to the Dodori and Boni National reserves on land. The marine ecosystem incorporates a chain of about 50 calcareous offshore islands and coral reefs. Description - The area is in the Northern Monsoon Current Coast ecoregion, with closer ties to the Somali coast and northern locations, than to the East African Coastal Current (EACC) to the south. It experiences seasonal reversal in the flow of the two currents with the monsoon seasons. This affects the oceanography of the area, which is characterised by upwellings of cooler, nutrient rich waters. The upwelling results in a highly productive marine ecosystem with rich populations of fish, crustaceans and molluscs, and high abundance of migratory species such as seabirds and turtles. Marine habitats include extensive seagrass beds and patchy coral reefs. The intertidal environment of the creeks and basins of the region holds 60% of Kenya’s mangrove forests, some 345 km² in the greater Lamu area, of which the KMNR hosts about 40%.
Features of Potential Outstanding Universal Values
Threats -
The region is remote, so less exposed to fishing and other direct-uses, though this is changing as waters closer to major markets become depleted. Fisheries in the KMNR and even farther north in Somalia are facilitated by boats and container trucks bearing ice, to buy fish and seafood cheaply locally, and transport it to markets in Kenya and as far afield as Singapore for lobsters. The challenges of regulation and management of fisheries in this remote region result in heavy use of illegal and destructive gears, and no consideration for sustainability. Mangrove poles have been harvested for over a century in the area. Climate change has impacted reefs and mangroves of the area, with significant with over 90% coral bleaching and mortality recorded in 1998, and die-back of mangrove areas due to excessive fresh-water inflow. Because of the area’s remoteness, recruitment of corals is limited, retarding recovery. Management status - The Kiunga Marine National Reserve (KMNR) was established as a protected area in 1979, and the following year (1980) was designated as a Biosphere Reserve (Kiunga and Kiwaiyu) of 60,000 hectares under UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere (MAB) Project with the adjacent Dodori National Reserve in recognition of the international conservation importance of the region. In 1996, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) formed a working partnership to develop long-term management strategies integrating conservation and development priorities, and several private and civil society groups are also active in marine and cultural conservation in the region. Extension of the Lamu Town Cultural World Heritage buffer zone to include other parts of the historic archipelago to Pate Island would mean the entire archipelago would be designated for cultural or natural values under some form of management. Geographic scale, integrity and site type - In geological and natural terms, the KMNR and the broader Lamu-Kiunga archipelago are an integral unit, representing the entire Northern Monsoon Coastal Current eco-region in Kenya. Lamu Town is already a Cultural World Heritage site, complementing the KMNR. However the port development at Magogoni represents the single largest threat to the integrity of the natural and cultural systems of the area. Other sites in the region - None Key References – Bakker et al. (2010); Church & Obura (2004); Gubelman & Weru (1996); Obura & Church (2004); WWF (2004). --> References |