Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Two Parks Taken Under Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund Protection

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Two Parks Taken Under Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund Protection

    TWO PARKS TAKEN UNDER CRITICAL ECOSYSTEM PARTNERSHIP FUND PROTECTION

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    11.03.2010 15:05 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia has established two new protected areas that
    will not only help globally threatened species, but will also protect
    water resources, provide job opportunities and potentially nurture
    transboundary cooperation in a region rife with political tension.

    Both parks-Arevik National Park and Zangezur Sanctuary-are in the
    southernmost region of Armenia, and Critical Ecosystem Partnership
    Fund (CEPF) grant recipients worked toward their declaration as
    protected areas.

    "Southern Armenia is one of the key priority conservation areas in
    the Caucasus," said Nugzar Zazanashvili, conservation director of the
    WWF Caucasus Program. He added that the creation of these protected
    areas creates a strong basis for developing an ecological network in
    the South Caucasus.

    Arevik National Park, at about 34,000 hectares, is on Armenia's
    borders with Iran and Azerbaijan. It encompasses broad-leaf forest,
    Juniper open woodlands, subalpine and alpine meadows, semidesert
    and mountain steppes. Caucasian leopards, vulnerable Bezoar goats,
    brown bears, lynx and wild cats are among its residents, as well as
    more than 1,500 species of vascular plants.

    The 17,368-hectare Zangezur Sanctuary is on the border with
    Azerbaijan. Grantee Khustup Nature Protection NGO helped the government
    with management planning for the protected area. The park is important
    as not only as home to the Armenian mouflon, which number only about
    200-250 in the wild in Armenia, but also as host to four high mountain
    lakes that serve as fresh water reservoirs. A variety of other rare
    and endemic flora and fauna can be found there as well.

    With the declaration of these parks, the total of new protected areas
    achieved in the Caucasus Hotspot in part through the efforts of CEPF
    grantees grew to 70,000 hectares, with another 160,000 hectares in
    the pipeline.

    Another CEPF grantee, the Fund for Biodiversity Conservation of
    the Armenian Highland, provided financial support to the villages
    surrounding these areas to launch new, sustainable sources of income,
    such as bee-keeping, pomegranate processing and tourism development.

    The surrounding communities also stand to benefit from the
    establishment of the parks.

    "Establishment of the two protected areas in the most remote part
    of Armenia will contribute to stabilization of livelihoods for
    local people of the southernmost region through development of
    tourism/ecotourism, creation of new job opportunities and creation
    of transboundary collaboration," said Karen Manvelyan, the national
    coordinator for CEPF's investment in Armenia.

    The location of these new protected areas also provides new
    opportunities for cooperation and the easing of tensions between
    Armenia and its neighbors. Both Arevik and Zangezur border or are very
    close to Ordubad National Park in Azerbaijan, and Arevik borders the
    Kiamaky protected area in Iran.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X