The Greater St. Lucia Wetland Park is a United Nations World Heritage Site located on the Indian Ocean coast of South Africa near the borders with Mozambique and Swaziland. The park
encompasses several different conservation areas (marked with yellow lines) centered on Lake St. Lucia, its
tidal estuary, neighboring game reserves, and the St. Lucia Marine Reserve, which
extends offshore into the Mozambique Strait (image right). The oldest of the reserves
within this park, St. Lucia Game Reserve, was established in 1895.
Like many tidal estuaries, Greater St. Lucia has diverse wildlife reflecting
the concentration of diverse ecosystems created by variations in the degree of
salinity from season to season, year to year, and location to location within the
park. The estuary is the largest in Africa and boasts, among other attractions,
the world’s largest forested sand dunes, which reach up to 600 feet. Swamps along
the border of the lake, and “sponge” areas are fed by water seeping through the
dunes; these provide critical refuges to freshwater life when the lake salinity
is particularly high.
Though less well known than larger southern African parks like Kruger National Park
and the Okavango Delta, St. Lucia supports more species, and for some, St. Lucia is
critical habitat. These include the white-backed and pink-backed pelican, greater and lesser flamingos, fish eagles, and some 530 other bird species. It is
also home to the largest population of hippopotamus in South African parks. Elephants were reintroduced in
2001. Two sea turtle species use the beaches for laying eggs. The coastal reserve
includes not only beaches but
offshore coral reefs, and humpback whales migrate along this section of the
coast. It is the one park in Africa where you can find hippopotamus, crocodiles, and
sharks all in the same area.
But of all the interesting species in the area, perhaps none is so exotic, exciting,
and peculiar as the coelacanth. It is a fish species from millions of years ago that was
known to scientists from fossil records and presumed to have been extinct
until a live specimen was found in a trawler net in 1938 just off the African coast.
Scientists have since found a number of these bizarre four-legged fish in very deep,
rocky, marine environments, but it is still a very rare fish and protected under
international law. On November 27, 2000, three living specimens of coelacanth were
found and photographed in a submarine canyon off the coast near Sodwana Bay inside
the UN World Heritage Site, adding this living fossil to the collection of
species known to live in the St. Lucia Reserve.
The image above was created from data collected by the Landsat 7
satellite’s Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) instrument. This true-color image was
created by combining the red, green, and blue wavelengths (ETM+ bands 3, 2, and 1).
GIS layers were added to show UN conservation area.
NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using
Landsat and GIS data obtained from the University of Maryland’s
Global Land Cover Facility.