Fires in Rwanda’s Kagera National Park

Fires in Rwanda’s Kagera National Park

07 July 2004


(Image based on data from the MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA-GSFCI)

In east-central Africa, numerous fires (marked in yellow), probably agricultural in purpose, were burning when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this image on July 5, 2004. Unfortunately, in the Kagera National Park that hugs the far eastern margin of Rwanda, the fires may not be routine agricultural burning. According to news reports, wildfires started by poachers may have burned as much as one-third of the protected land in the park. The dense vegetation (bright green) of the small park (seen in rectangular inset) is marred by several reddish-brown burn scars, the largest in the northern tip of the park, surrounded by three actively burning fires. Water in the image appears dark blue or nearly black.

In the densely populated country, the natural environment is under extreme pressure from humans in need of fuel, food, and shelter. The park is a last refuge for elephants, lions, hyenas, leopards, buffalo, antelopes, zebra, and other wildlife in the country, whose natural landscapes have been almost completely deforested or otherwise transformed.

(Source: Earth Observatory)

See also the following media articles:

Poachers burn one-third of Rwandan park (published by: ENN, 09 July 2004)

Congo gorillas lose habitat to farmers – Illegal settlers log forest, area could be cut off from park (published by: MSNBC News, 06 July 2004)


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