Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Comoé National Park' has mentioned 'Species' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Some animal and plant species even find their last sanctuary in some of the different savanna types, gallery forests, riparian grasslands, rock outcrops or forest islands.
Comoxc3xa9 National Park has the most biodiverse savannah in the world and forms the northern limit for many animal species, like the yellow-backed duiker and bongo.
[3] There are a total of 135 mammal species in the park.
[2] This includes 11 species of primates like the olive baboon, green monkey, lesser spot-nosed monkey, Mona monkey, black and white colobus, olive colobus, white-collared mangabey and chimpanzee.
A total of 17 carnivore species registered, but at least 3 species are believed to have become extinct in the park - cheetah, wild dog (since 1993) and most recently lion (no signs of lions have been found since 2008).
There are also 21 species of artiodactyl present in the park including hippopotamus, bushpig, bongo, warthog, buffalo, kob, red-flanked duiker, bushbuck, waterbuck, roan antelope and oribi.
[11] Threatened mammal species include the chimpanzee (EN), white-collared mangabey (EN), ursine colobus (VU), African elephant (VU), hippopotamus (VU), giant pangolin (VU), long-tailed pangolin (VU), leopard (VU), African golden cat (VU), Buffon kob (VU), bongo (NT), western hartebeest (NT), Defassa waterbuck (NT), bay duiker (NT), yellow-backed duiker (NT), olive colobus (NT).
There are over 500 species of birds, of which roughly 20% are inter-African migratory birds and another 5% palearctic migratory birds.
Some prominent bird species include the Denham's bustard, yellow-casqued hornbill, brown-cheeked hornbill, hammerkop, black-winged stilt, various raptors, four of the six West African stork species and five vulture species.
The park also contains 36 out of the 38 of the iconic bird species found in Sudo-Guinean savannas.
The Comoxc3xa9 river and its tributaries contain at least 60 different species of fish and allow for an unusually high diversity of amphibian species for a savannah habitat with 35 described species.
There are also a total of 71 described reptile species, of which three are crocodiles: the dwarf crocodile (Vulnerable), Nile crocodile and slender-snouted crocodile (Critically Endangered).
The property contains around 620 plant species, composed of 191 ligneous species (62 trees, 129 shrubs and vines) and 429 herbaceous species, including 104 grasses.
In the flood plains Hyparrhenia rufa is the most common species.
The variety of the habitats engenders a wide diversity of wildlife species.
Currently, the property is one of the rare sanctuaries for a variety of West-African biological species.
Criterion (x): Due to the phytogeographical situation and the crossing of the River Comoxc3xa9 for over 230 kilometres, Comoxc3xa9 National Park teems with a vast variety of animal and plant species.
This location in fact makes this property a zone where the areas of division of numerous west-African plant and animal species mingle.
The property contains around 620 plant species, 135 species of mammals, (including 11 primates, 11 carnivores and 21 species of artiodactyla), 35 amphibian species and 500 bird species (a little less than 20% of which are inter-African migratory birds and roughly 5% palearctic migratory birds).
Several of these bird species enjoy international protection, among which the Denhamxe2x80x99s Bustard (Neotis denhami), the yellow casqued hornbill (Ceratogymna elata) and the brown-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes cylindricus).
The property also contains 36 of the 38 species of the biome of the Sudo-Guinean savanna inventoried in the country as well as resident populations of species that have become rare in West Africa, such as the Jabiru Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis.
The different waters of the Comoxc3xa9 River and its tributaries are the habitat for 60 species of fish.
As concerns reptiles, three species of crocodiles are found in the Park xe2x80x93 including the dwarf crocodile (Osteolaemus tetraspis) xe2x80x93 which are on the IUCN Red List.
The property is sufficiently vast to guarantee the ecological integrity of the species that it contains, on the condition, however, that poaching is reduced.
However, if the boundaries were extended to the Mounts Gorowi and Kongoli, the ecological value of the property would be greatly increased, as this area could provide the elephants with a particularly suitable habitat and also enable the protection of other important species.