Wildlife of Algeria
The wildlife of Algeria is composed of its flora and fauna. Mountains, chotts, wetlands, and grassy desert-like regions all support a wide range of wildlife. The most commonly seen animals include the wild boars, jackals, and gazelles, although it is not uncommon to spot fennecs and jerboas. Leopards and cheetahs are seldom seen.
A variety of bird species make the country an attraction for bird watchers. Barbary macaques are the sole native monkey.
Flora
In the north, the native flora includes the Algerian oak, Atlas cedar, and other conifers.[2] The grape vine is indigenous to the coast. In the Sahara region, some oases have date palms. Acacia with wild olives are the predominant flora in the remainder of the Sahara.
Fauna
Mammals
There are 104 mammal species in Algeria, of which three are critically endangered, two are endangered, ten are vulnerable, and three are near-threatened. One of the species listed for Algeria is extinct and one can no longer be found in the wild.
Birds
- North African ostrich
- Guinea fowl
- Egyptian vulture
- Golden eagle
- Bonelli's eagle
- Griffon vulture
- Loons
- Grebes
- Great crested grebe
- Little grebe
- European turtle dove
- Shearwaters
- Black stork
- White stork
- Petrels
- Storm-petrels
- Pelicans
- Gannets
- Cormorant
- Bitterns
- Herons
- Egrets
- Storks
- Ibises
- Spoonbills
- Flamingos
- Ducks
- Geese
- Swans
- Osprey
- Hawks
- Kites
- Eagles
- Caracaras
- Falcon
- Pheasant
- Partridge
- Buttonquail
- Crane
- Rails
- Crakes
- Coots
- Arabian bustard
- Oystercatchers
- Avocet
- Stilt
- Thick-knee
- Pratincole
- Courser
- Plover
- Lapwing
- Sandpiper
- Skuas
- Jaegers
- Gulls
- Terns
- Auks
- Murres
- Puffins
- Sandgrouse
- Pigeons
- Doves
- Cuckoos
- Great spotted woodpecker
- Eurasian wryneck
- Ani
- Barn owls
- Typical owls
- Nightjars
- Swifts
- Kingfishers
- Bee-eaters
- Starling
Reptiles
- Algerian sand racer
- Bedriaga's fringe-fingered lizard
- Boomslang
- Desert monitor
- Egyptian cobra
- Egyptian sand boa
- Erycinae
- European pond terrapin
- False smooth snake
- Greek tortoise
- Horned desert viper
- Iberian wall lizard
- Lataste's viper
- Leatherback turtle (in the Mediterranean Sea)
- Loggerhead sea turtle (in the Mediterranean Sea)
- Mediterranean chameleon
- Mediterranean house gecko
- Moorish gecko
- Müller’s sand boa
- Nile crocodile (extinct in the wild)
- Red-tailed spiny-footed lizard
- Sahara sand viper
- Saharan spiny-tailed lizard
- Saw-scaled viper
- Small-spotted lizard
- Small three-toed skink
- Southern smooth snake
- Two-fingered skink
- Viperine water snake
Amphibians
Fish
- Atlantic bluefin tuna
- Atlantic blue marlin
- Atlantic white marlin
- European eel
- Angular roughshark
- Basking shark
- Bignose shark
- Blacktip shark
- Blacktip reef shark
- Bluntnose sixgill shark
- Bramble shark
- Dusky shark
- Great hammerhead
- Great white shark
- Grey nurse shark
- Gulper shark
- Kitefin shark
- Porbeagle
- Sandbar shark
- Scalloped hammerhead
- Sharpnose sevengill shark
- Shortfin mako
- Spinner shark
- Velvet belly lantern shark
Insects
References
- Black, S. A.; Fellous, A.; Yamaguchi, N.; Roberts, D. L. (2013). "Examining the Extinction of the Barbary Lion and Its Implications for Felid Conservation". PLOS ONE. 8 (4): e60174. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...860174B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0060174. PMC 3616087. PMID 23573239.
- National Audubon Society (2009). Field Guide to African Wildlife. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 43–44. ISBN 978-0-679-43234-0.