Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Niokolo-Koba National Park' has mentioned 'Park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The park lies in an upland region through which the upper stretch of the Gambia River flows, towards the northwestern border of Guinea.
The Biosphere park itself covers some 9,130 square kilometres, in a great arc running from Upper Casamance/Kolda Region at the Guinea-Bissau border into the Tambacounda Region to within a hundred kilometers of the Guinean border near the southeast corner of Senegal.
Most of the park is woodland savannah and semi-arid Soudanese forest, with large areas of wooded wetlands and seasonal wetlands.
The park contains over 1500 species of plants and 78% of the gallery forest in Senegal.
The government of Senegal estimates the park contains 20 species of amphibians, 60 species of fish, 38 species of reptiles (of which four are tortoises).
These included (as of 2005) an estimated 11000 buffaloes, 6000 hippopotomii, 400 western giant eland, 50 elephants, 120 lions, 150 chimpanzees (It is inhabited by a banded forest in the park (Lower Rim) and Mount Assirik.
Around 330 species of birds have been sighted in the park, notably the Arabian bustard, black crowned crane, Abyssinian ground hornbill (Bucorvus abyssinicus), martial eagle, bateleur (Terathopius ecaudatus), and white-faced duck (Dendrocygna viduata).
The park is managed by a management administration under the direct supervision of the State through the Ministry of Environment and Nature Protection and the National Parks Directorate.
To this must be added population growth and poor soil in the surrounds, which has led to encroachment on agricultural land and livestock wandering in the park.
The priorities for the protection and management of the property are thus to implement urgent measures to halt poaching, improve the parkxe2x80x99s ecological monitoring programme, develop a plan for survival of endangered species, address premature drying up of the ponds and their invasion by plants or find alternative solutions, and minimize the illegal movement of livestock.
It is also necessary to improve cross-border cooperation and measures to protect buffer zones and ecological corridors outside the park.