Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Lake Malawi National Park' has mentioned 'Park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Other attributes of the park include the outstanding natural beauty of the area with its craggy landscape contrasting with the clear waters of the lake. | WIKI |
The park includes most of the Nankumbu Peninsula, a mountainous headland that projects northwards into the lake terminating in Cape Maclear, the surrounding areas of water (aquatic zone of the property extends for just 100 metres from the lake shore and covers just 0.02% of the lakexe2x80x99s total area), Mwenya Hills, Nkhudzi Hills, Nkhudzi Spit, and 13 islands: Otter, Domwe, Thumbi West, Mumbo, Zimbawe, Thumbi East, Mpanda, Boadzulu, Chinyankhwazi Rock, Chinyamwezi Rock, Nankoma, Maleri, Nakantenga. | WIKI |
These villages are inside the park but are not part of it. | WIKI |
The criteria under which it qualifies are: Criterion (vii), the natural beauty of the lake beneath the escarpment of the Great African Rift Valley; Criterion (ix), the importance of the lake because of the adaptive radiation and speciation that has taken place there among the cichlid fish population, over 350 species of which are present in the park, almost all of them endemic; and Criterion (x), the global importance of the park for the conservation of biodiversity, both for its freshwater fish populations (perhaps 1000 species) and for the variety of other animal life including birds, mammals and reptiles. | WIKI |
The park is also home to mammals including chacma baboons, vervet monkeys, hippopotamuses, leopards, common duikers, bushbucks, greater kudus, and klipspringers. | WIKI |
The graves of five early missionaries are also in the park. | WIKI |
All but five of over 350 species of mbuna are endemic to Lake Malawi and represented in the park. | UNESCO |
Many other fish species of Lake Malawi are however unprotected due to the limited size of the park in relation to the overall area of the lake. | UNESCO |
Lake Malawi National Park is protected under national legislation and the resources of the park are managed and controlled by the Department of National Parks and Wildlife. | UNESCO |
The park has a management plan and, there is also a strategic tourism management plan for Malawi which describes the tourism development for the site. | UNESCO |
Utilisation of park resources is restricted to curb the illegal harvesting of resources. | UNESCO |
The implementation of the Wildlife Policy that mandates park management to work in collaboration with local communities within and outside park boundaries and share responsibilities and benefits accruing from the management of the park is important to enable effective management to be implemented. | UNESCO |