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WEATHER |
FLORA in mauritius
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The flora of Mauritius is composed of 700 species of
indigenous plants. Many of these plants are threatened with
extinction. This is because there is less than 2% of their
natural habitat left, and because introduced plants and animals
compete and destroy their fruits and seedlings. In collaboration with the National Parks and the Conservation and Forestry Services, the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation is working to protect these species and the forest for future generations. |
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| Mauritius was once covered in thick evergreen
mountain forest. The waters teemed with armies of giant turtles,
dugongs and fish. Bats, birds and insects feasted on natural
resources and the dodo waddled along deserted beaches blissfully
unaware than when man arrived in the sixteenth century he would
shake the harmony of its existence. In doing so, for want of
survival or commercial gain, he upset forever the delicate
ecological balance that had existed for so many years. Many of these creatures shared the same fate as the dodo. The gigantic turtle-like bird, with a hard twisted beak and tiny wings had never experienced danger. It had forgotten how to fly and made easy prey for the first Dutch settlers. Within a few years it was wiped off the face of the earth. |
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The demise of the dodo was followed by the decimation of virgin forest. Shipbuilding, sugar a road and rail network for its transportation, the creation of upland settlements and the introduction of animals and invasive plants over three centuries of human settlement destroyed the island's indigenous forests. The need to preserve the indigenous forests of Mauritius, as in other countries of the world, was realised too late and today less than 1 per cent of the original forest remains. Most of it lies to the south of Plaine Champagne in the Bel Ombre-Macchabee Forest. Great forts are being made by the government and the Forestry Department to preserve what is left by educating the public to appreciate their ecological value. In this context patches of forest in other parts of the island have been declared natural reserves. |
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Some of them are only a few square kilometres and are fenced off so as to encourage regeneration
of indigenous trees and plants.
Today the forests are classified into three areas essentially
consisting of Crown Forest Lands and privately owned
forest lands. The Crown Forest Lands contain the nature
reserves along with areas given over to tea plantations.
The State owned forms a narrow coastal belt, which is
occupied by public beaches, along much of it is leased
to the hotel industry or used for grazing and tree planting
programmes. Finally the privately owned forest lands
are found in the upper slopes of mountains where many
areas are densely covered with native forest or thickets
of Traveller Palm. In the lowland areas imported trees consist of acacia,
coconut palm, albizia, the badamier or Indian Almond
and the banyan. The mangrove is found in the brackish
swamps of the east coast. |
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