Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Cabañeros National Park

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Nearest city
  
Toledo

Province
  
Province of Ciudad Real

Established
  
November 20, 1995

Area
  
409 km²

Phone
  
+34 926 78 32 97

Cabañeros National Park

Location
  
Navas de Estena, Retuerta del Bullaque, Alcoba de los Montes, Horcajo de los Montes, Hontanar.

Visitors
  
75000 approx. (in 2007)

Governing body
  
Parques, (Spanish Ministry of Environment)

Address
  
13194 Pueblo Nuevo del Bullaque, Ciudad Real, Spain

Hours
  
Closed now Sunday9AM–2PMMonday9AM–7PMTuesday9AM–7PMWednesday9AM–7PMThursday9AM–7PMFriday9AM–6PMSaturday9AM–6PM

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Cabañeros National Park (in Spanish: Parque Nacional de Cabañeros) is a national park in the Montes de Toledo, Spain. It falls within two provinces, the northwest of Ciudad Real and the southwest of Toledo.

Contents

The Park was designated in 1995 and has an area of 390 square kilometres (150 sq mi). It lies between the Estena and Bullaque rivers, extending into the Chorito and Miraflores mountain ranges.

It is the best and largest surviving area of Iberian Mediterranean forest, with an enormous variety of plant species. It also includes sites of geological interest (Paleozoic sites known as Cámbrico y Ordovícico del Parque Nacional de Cabañeros).

As a curiosity, their exact antipodes coincide with Tongariro National Park, in New Zealand.Tongariro National Park.

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Fauna

The fauna of the park is notable, both for its variety (276 species of vertebrates) and for the high percentage of endangered species. Mammals include the otter in the Estena river and four species of ungulates: wild boar, red deer, roe deer and (in the most forested areas) fallow deer.

The park is potentially a habitat for the Iberian lynx, a critically endangered feline. However, lynx have been sighted only intermittently in the area in recent years, perhaps because of a shortage of rabbits, the main prey species. The Toledo Mountains have been used as a site for the reintroduction of the lynx as part of a LIFE project.

The Park is a Special Protection Area for birdlife, and provides a home for the following notable species:

  • Black stork (rare but not threatened)
  • Eurasian black vulture (near threatened), second largest breeding population
  • Spanish imperial eagle (threatened)
  • Conservation issues

    In theory there is a ban on hunting at Cabañeros, as at other Spanish national parks. However, some hunting is allowed for purposes of "population control" (as opposed to sporting purposes).

    References

    Cabañeros National Park Wikipedia