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DIGYA
NATIONAL PARK
Created in 1971 with an area of 3,478
sq. km, Digya is located on a lowland peninsula west
of the central shores of the Volta Lake. The vegetation
of the Park is largely savannah woodland and gallery
forest along the riverbanks. Mammals include elephant,
buffalo, water buck, hartebeest, bush pig, baboons and
five other species of monkeys. Crocodiles and the clawless
otter are also found here. Digya is the historical home
of two currently extinct large mammals,: the black rhinoceros,
locally known as the “naree”, and the gregarious
wildebeest, locally called the “gnoo” (gnu)
the manatee omit pr sea cow is the Park’s emblem.
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