News

September 11th, 2013

Following the Guinean Cock-of-the-rock on the mountain of Kaw

After having placed transmitters on several Cock-of-the-rocks, a team from GEPOG takes us into…
September 2nd, 2013

GEPOG presents Life+ Cap DOM projects at Paramaribo

At the beginning of August, GEPOG attended the III International Congress on Biodiversity of…
August 26th, 2013

A follow-up on the point census (STOC) on Martinique

Experience a day in an area of farmland with those involved with point-count-census training on…

Kaw Marshes

The world’s largest colony of Agami herons
Sites de la Guyane

Territory : French Guiana
Area : 137,000 ha
Status : RAMSAR site, one part is in the Kaw-Roura National Nature Reserve and another part in the Regional Nature Park
Owner : French state
Management authority : AGEP (Nature Reserve Management Committee)
Habitats : mangrove swamps, swamp forests and flooded savanna
Uses : Eco-tourism, hunting, fishing and scientific research

Part of the Kaw Marshes lie within the Kaw-Roura Nature Reserve, which covers 94,700 ha between the towns of Roura and Régina and also includes the northern part of Kaw Mountain. The Kaw Marshes are an internationally important wetland (RAMSAR site).

Las marismas de Kaw, Guayana, T. Deville

This vast wetland is made up of marshes, large mud flats colonized by mangroves and swamp forests crossed by small rivers and dotted with pools. These diverse habitats and their continuity with the Amazonian basin make the Kaw Marshes an exceptional site for wildlife, in particular for numerous threatened species.

The Kaw Marshes host the largest colony of Agami herons currently known.

Keywords : French Guiana, Kaw Marshes, Agami heron

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