Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Taï National Park' has mentioned 'Park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Taxc3xaf National Park (Parc National de Taxc3xaf) is a national park in Cxc3xb4te d'Ivoire that contains one of the last areas of primary rainforest in West Africa.
The park consists of 4,540xc2xa0km2 of tropical evergreen forest located at the south western corner of Cxc3xb4te d'Ivoire, bordering Liberia.
The park is situated on a Precambrian granite peneplain of migmatites, biotites and gneiss which slopes down from the gently undulating drier north to more deeply dissected land in the south where the rainfall is heavy.
A large zone of varied schists runs north-east to south-west across the park, dissected by tributaries of the main watercourses which run parallel to it: the N'zo, Meno and Little Hana and Hana rivers, all draining southwest to the river Cavally.
There is some swamp forest in the northwest of the park and in N'zo.
The park is one of the last remaining portions of the vast primary Upper Guinean rain forest that once stretched across present-day Togo, Ghana, Cxc3xb4te d'Ivoire, Liberia and Sierra Leone to Guinea-Bissau.
The park contains some 1,300 species of higher plants of which 54% occur only in the Guinean zone.
This means that the park is an attic of genetic potential not yet explored by natural science and medicine.
The park contains 140 species of mammal and 47 of the 54 species of large mammal known to occur in the Guinean rain forest, including twelve regional endemics and five threatened species.
Also found in the park are two bats, Buettikofer's epauletted fruit bat and Aellen's roundleaf bat, Pel's flying squirrel, giant pangolin, tree pangolin and long-tailed pangolin, Liberian mongoose, African golden cat, leopard, red river hog, giant forest hog, water chevrotain, bongo, and African forest buffalo.
African forest elephants (Loxodonta africana cyclotis) have also been observed within the park, although in 2001 they numbered only about 100 individuals in the south of the park compared to some 1,800 in 1979.
Also recorded in the park is the Defua rat, which is characteristic of secondary forest.
The dwarf or pygmy hippopotamus (Hexaprotodon liberiensis) numbered at around 500 in the park in 1996, and it is one of the few viable populations remaining[citation needed].
The park lies within one of the world's Endemic Bird Areas.
Two crocodiles, the slender-snouted crocodile and the dwarf crocodile, and several turtles, such as Home's hinge-back tortoise, are amongst about 40 species of reptiles that live in the park.
At least 56 species of amphibians are known from the park;[10] these include a true toad Amietophrynus taiensis and a reed frog found only in 1997 (Hyperolius nienokouensis), both only known from Ivory Coast.
The park is now neighbored by 72 villages, and hundreds of illegal squatters live in the park.
The east side of the park has suffered most from this.
These people neither support the park, nor are informed about it by the authorities (DPN, 2002).
The park was the site of a UNESCO Man & Biosphere project on the effects of human interference within the natural forest ecosystem.
The Dutch Tropenbos Foundation published a detailed fully referenced study of the park in 1994.
In 2002, technical and scientific management of the park was assigned to the national Office Ivoirien des Parcs et Reserves which covers management policy, wardening, research, education and communication for all parks.
A second research station and a canopied walkway on the east side of the park have been.