fbpx
Wikipedia

Doñana National Park

Doñana National Park or Parque Nacional y Natural de Doñana is a natural reserve in Andalucía, southern Spain, in the provinces of Huelva (most of its territory within the municipality of Almonte[2]), Cádiz and Seville. It covers 543 km2 (209.65 sq mi), of which 135 km2 (52.12 sq mi) are a protected area. It is named after Doña Ana de Silva y Mendoza, [es] wife of the 7th Duke of Medina Sidonia.

Doñana National Park
Parque Nacional y Natural de Doñana
Marshes of Doñana
Location of Doñana
LocationHuelva, Seville and Cádiz provinces - Andalucía, Spain
Coordinates37°00′N 6°30′W / 37.000°N 6.500°W / 37.000; -6.500
Area543 km2 (210 sq mi)
Established1969
Visitors392,958 (in 2007)
Governing bodyNational Parks Autonomous Agency and Regional Government of Andalusia
CriteriaNatural: (vii), (ix), (x)
Designated1994 (18th session)
Reference no.685
RegionEurope and North America
Extensions2005
Official nameDoñana
Designated5 April 1982
Reference no.234[1]

The park is an area of marshes, shallow streams, and sand dunes in Las Marismas, the delta where the Guadalquivir River flows into the Atlantic Ocean. It was established as a nature reserve in 1969 when the World Wildlife Fund joined with the Spanish government and purchased a section of marshes to protect it.[3] The eco-system has been under constant threat by the draining of the marshes, the use of river water to boost agricultural production by irrigating land along the coast, water pollution by upriver mining, and the expansion of tourist facilities.[4]

Doñana National Park has a biodiversity that is unique in Europe, although there are some similarities to the Parc Naturel Régional de Camargue of the Camargue river delta in France, with which Doñana Park is twinned.[5] The park features a great variety of ecosystems and shelters wildlife, including thousands of European and African migratory birds, fallow deer, Spanish red deer, wild boars, European badgers, Egyptian mongooses, and endangered species such as the Spanish imperial eagle and the Iberian lynx.

The Doñana nature reserve includes both the Doñana National Park, established in 1969, and the Natural Park, created in 1989 and expanded in 1997, creating a buffer zone of protection under the management of the regional government. The two parks, national and natural, have since been classified as a single natural landscape. Due to its strategic location between the continents of Europe and Africa and its proximity to the Strait of Gibraltar, Doñana's large expanse of salt marsh is a breeding ground as well as a transit point for thousands of European and African birds (aquatic and terrestrial), and hosts many species of migratory waterfowl during the winter, typically up to 200,000 individuals. Over 300 different species of birds may be sighted there annually. Considered the largest nature reserve in Europe, several different scientific institutions have monitoring stations within its boundaries to ensure appropriate development of adjacent lands and conservation of the threatened species that inhabit it. The area was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1994; in 2006, the park recorded 376,287 visitors.

Geology and geomorphology edit

 
Doñana - Aerial view of Doñana National Park and surrounding areas

The geological profile of Doñana National Park reflects the development over several hundred thousand years of a deep aquifer and geomorphological features that have enhanced the biodiversity of the wildlife habitats presently found there. After the end of the last glacial period, the area was covered by freshwater and brackish marshes, ponds and sand dunes,[6] with some marine intrusions caused by high-energy events such as tsunamis and large storms. A period of comparatively rapid rise in global sea level during the first part of the Flandrian interglacial was associated with the melting of the paleoglaciers, and reached its maximum level 6,500–7,000 years ago. At this time, Doñana National Park and the surrounding areas were flooded, and a lagoon, later called Lacus Ligustinus by the Romans, was formed. The pace of infilling of the lagoon has increased over the last 6,000 years, along with accelerated growth of sandspits and the creation of new inland marshes and wetlands. The extensive marshes of Doñana National Park now have a flat topography, with some inland depressions occupied by temporary or permanent wetlands, locally called 'lucios'.[7] The whole area is protected by the Doñana spit, a wide sandy littoral barrier with mobile dune systems growing toward the southeast.[8]

History edit

Antiquity edit

 
Banks of the River Guadalquivir in Doñana National Park (Almonte)

Although the topography of Doñana is a relatively new land feature as measured on the geological time scale, remains of Neolithic tools have been found in the area. Various ancient civilizations may have had a presence there as long as 2,800 years ago, including the Phoenicians, the Phocaean Greeks and the Tartessians, but archaeological remains attesting to such have not been found.[9][10][11] In 1923, the German archaeologist Adolf Schulten, accompanied by Adolf Lammerer and George Bonsor, searched for the location of the ancient Tartessian capital in Almonte, where the Doñana dunes are, but found nothing of interest. These excavations were carried out at Cerro del Trigo[12][13] and funded by the Duke of Tarifa and Denia, then owner of Doñana.[14] Nevertheless, in 1978 Schulten found the stele of Villamanrique[15] at the nearby town of Villamanrique de la Condesa. Surveys were made in 2007 in the Hinojos salt marsh, or "Marisma de Hinojos", of Huelva province, in an effort to discover traces of the mythical city. Noteworthy finds included the remains of Roman settlements, dating from the 2nd through the 5th centuries AD, which had been primarily engaged in fishing and fish salting or the preparation of garum. The Guadalquivir Marshes (Las Marismas del Guadalquivir), an area of marshy lowlands near the left bank of the mouth of the Guadalquivir, was then a large inland lake known as the Lacus Ligustinus in Latin.[16] The lake slowly infilled with deposited sediment, gradually giving way to the current marshes.[17]

Middle Ages edit

Alfonso X the Wise

In 1262, after conquering the vassal kingdom of Niebla, King Alfonso X established a Real Cazadero (royal hunting preserve) in the Las Rocinas forest,[18] between the Rio Tinto and the Guadalquivir, partly due to the abundance of deer there, as well as the small sanctuary of Santa Olalla, since disappeared, on the Arroyo de la Rocina.

In 1297, his son Sancho IV granted Guzmán el Bueno the Lordship of Sanlúcar, consisting of the territory located behind Arenas Gordas on the left bank of the Guadalquivir estuary, and which remained in the hands of the House of Medina-Sidonia for over six centuries. The noble house was established in 1369, when Henry II of Castile granted the fourth Lord of Sanlúcar the County of Niebla.[19] In 1493 the Catholic Monarchs donated part of the land of the present village of El Rocío to the royal secretary, whose son later sold it to the town of Almonte. Previously, new breeding stock had been introduced among the local populations of wild boar and deer, while wolf hunting was encouraged for the benefit of cattle and horse ranching.

In the region of Niebla, specifically at Las Rocinas, the land is flat, covered by thickets, and wild boars are always to be found there... ...one may not traverse this ground in the winter, which is generally very wet, except during a drought, nor in summer because it is then so dry and miserably uncomfortable. ~Alfonso XI in his Libro de la Montería (The Book of Hunting), written between 1342 and 1348

Early modern edit

Nearly a century later, Alonso Pérez de Guzmán y Sotomayor, 7th Duke of Medina Sidonia and commander of the Spanish Armada, bought back part of the land. His wife, Ana de Silva y Mendoza, daughter of the Princess of Eboli, moved to a country retreat there called "Coto de Doña Ana" (Doña Ana Game Preserve), which was the origin of the current name "Doñana";[20] the house was renovated years later as a palace. Reference to the use of Coto Donana as a hunting lodge is made in the first verses of the La Fábula de Polifemo y Galatea (Fable of Polyphemus and Galatea), which the lyric poet Luis de Góngora dedicated to the Count of Niebla, and in which he requests that the nobles suspend their hunting exploits to hear his verses. In 1624, King Philip IV stayed at the estate for several days as a guest of the 9th Duke of Medina Sidonia, and joined in some large hunts. He brought with him a great variety of comestibles, which included such luxuries as snow from the mountains for the frequent banquets he held in honor of the duke. In 1797 Francisco Goya stayed in the palace as a guest of his patrons, the 15th Duke of Medina-Sidonia and his wife, the 13th Duchess of Alba. Here Goya created his Álbum A, a collection of drawings, and apparently painted his famous portraits, La Maja Vestida ("The Clothed Maja") and La Maja Desnuda ("The Naked Maja"), rumored to portray the duchess.[20][21]

Late modern, creation of the National Park edit

After 1854, with the publishing of a discussion of the area in a treatise called "Avifauna de Doñana: Catálogo de las aves observadas en algunas provincias andaluzas" ("Avifauna of Doñana: Catalogue of the birds observed in some Andalusian provinces"), by Antonio Machado y Nunez, the public began to appreciate its ecological value for the many different species of wildlife found there. Consequently, it was visited by British naturalists and hunters including Abel Chapman and Walter J. Buck, both of whom wrote books that alerted a wider audience in Europe to the strategic importance of Doñana for migratory birds traveling to Africa. Later, when José Joaquín Álvarez de Toledo y Caro (1865-1915) became the 19th Duke of Medina Sidonia, he inherited large debts and to pay them was forced to sell off various assets, including the Coto de Doñana, which he sold for 750,000 pesetas, finally detaching it from the noble house.

When the sherry baron William Garvey bought Doñana from the Duke in 1901, the estate was abandoned and in a state of ruin. Garvey restored the palace to its former splendor, and upon his death it passed to his brother Joseph and his niece Maria Medina y Garvey, who was married to the Duke of Tarifa, a forest engineer. In 1934 it passed to the sister of the Duchess of Tarifa, Blanca Medina and Garvey, who was married to the Marquis of Borghetto. In 1942, the Marquis sold it to a company formed by Salvador Noguera, Manuel Gonzalez and the Marquis of Mérito. Fifty years later the park was consolidated as a natural area.

Conservation edit

 
View of Doñana National Park from visitors' centre at El Acebuche (Almonte)[22]

The Spanish businessman Mauricio González-Gordon y Díez, Marquis of Bonanza, whose family owned a large estate in Doñana, became interested in its ecosystems and their birdlife, and invited ornithologists from all over Europe to visit. In 1952, the Spanish ornithologists José Antonio Valverde and Francisco Bernis visited the property, with González-Gordon serving as their guide. Valverde and the González-Gordon family saw that the wetlands, with their richly diverse wildlife, were threatened by the Spanish government's proposals to drain them for farming and the planting of eucalyptus trees. Mauricio, together with his father, asked Bernis to try and influence Spanish dictator Francisco Franco into abandoning the plans.[23] The trio wrote a memorandum which was presented to Franco himself by Mauricio's father Manuel.[24] By November 1953 Bernis had finished a report on the status of the Doñana which showed that the area had exceptional ecological value. The group sought and obtained international support for their goals. The efforts of González-Gordon to dissuade Franco exposed him to some danger, but the Franco government conceded and the drainage plans were aborted.[23]

Valverde led the first organised scientific expedition to the Donana in 1957, joined by the British naturalists Guy Mountfort, Roger Peterson, and Sir Julian Huxley. A group of European conservation experts – including Guy Monfort, Max Nicholson and Luc Hoffmann –then demonstrated the crucial importance of the area as a stopover for birds migrating between the European and African continents. In 1959, the Gonzalez family sold part of their land in Doñana for development of the Matalascañas resort. This alarmed European conservationists, leading various institutions and anonymous donors to offer to buy part of the property. Valverde, Hoffman, and Nicholson, in partnership with the British Nature Conservancy, formed an association that organised an international drive for funds to expand the park. The campaign raised two million Swiss Francs to buy 7,000 hectares of land for annexation to that already donated by González-Gordon.[25] Finally, in 1963 the Spanish government and WWF bought part of the territory and created the first Doñana preserve, and in 1964 they established the Doñana Biological Station and the Spanish National Research Council (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas - CSIC) to study the biodiversity of Doñana and other Spanish ecosystems.

 
El Porrón observatory (Almonte)[26]

In 1969, the WWF again joined forces with the Spanish government to purchase another section of the Guadalquivir Delta marshes and establish the Doñana National Park. That same year the Doñana National Park was created by decree, part of whose territory was owned by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad) and part still in private hands. Ten years later the protected area was expanded and the so-called "Preparque Doñana" was created. In 1980, UNESCO recognised the Doñana National Park as a Biosphere Reserve of 77,260 hectares. The Core Zone consists of 50,720 hectares in the National Park of Doñana.[27] The buffer zone is 54,250 hectares in the Natural Park of Doñana. The altitude ranges from sea level to 40 meters above sea level. Unesco considers Doñana of world significance, based on the variety of its ecosystems and the wide number of species they harbor. In 1982 it was included in the list of wetlands of the Ramsar Convention, and in 1989 the Regional Government of Andalusia converted the Preparque into the Doñana Natural Park. In 1994 it was listed by Unesco as a World Heritage Site, enabling the establishment of programs to preserve and manage the area. Historically, these vital wetlands have been constantly threatened by schemes to increase local agricultural output and tourism. WWF still supports the Doñana, and is fighting proposals to drain the marshes and syphon off water for irrigation of agricultural land along the coast and expansion of tourist facilities.

In 1998, the Aznalcóllar Disaster occurred when a holding dam burst at the Los Frailes mine owned by Boliden-Apirsa (formerly Andaluza de Piritas, S.A.), the Spanish subsidiary of Boliden, releasing a flood of toxic sludge that entered the River Guadiamar, the main water source for the park. In 2000, after this major environmental catastrophe, the Spanish Ministry of Environment promoted the "Doñana 2005" program, aimed at regenerating the marshes. In 2006 the responsibilities of maintaining the park were transferred to the Government of Andalusia by the Royal Decree of 9 June; the functions and services of the Nature Conservation administration thus transferred to the Andalusian state were widened, and Doñana National Park and the Natural Park became the "Natural area of Doñana", a single territory divided into areas with different levels of environmental protection. In 2008 this park was twinned with the Regional Natural Park Camargue in France, with which it shares anthropological and ethnographic aspects.

During his tenure, the Spanish Prime Minister Felipe González began using Doñana as a vacation retreat, setting a precedent for his successors. In 2010, 9200 hectares of land on the coastline were expropriated by the former Ministry of the Environment for protection.[28] In July 2012, Unesco approved the extension of the Biosphere Reserve of Doñana from 77,260 hectares to over 255,000 hectares and enabled compliance with the guidelines of the Man and Biosphere Program. This created a transition zone where the socio-economic interests of the various municipalities in the Doñana region are represented. In 2019, the police closed tens of illegal wells operated largely by fruit farmers around the park which had for many years been draining water away from the park's water table. In the same year, the EU commission decided to take Spain to the European Court of Justice (EJC) for violating EU conservation rules.[29] The court ruled in favor of the EU commission, stating that Spain has not fulfilled its obligations concerning the prevention of illegal water extraction as well as failed to take necessary measures to stop significant modifications of the park's landscape.[30] In 2023 the Junta de Andalucia sought to regularise illegal stawberry cultivation near the park, but was blocked by the central government. Some agreement on a way forward appeared to have been reached, as a mitigation measure proposed by the Junta went through at the end of the year. This was the acquisition of 7,000 ha of an estate called Veta la Palma. This property includes lagoons which had been used for a failed fishing farming enterprise within the natural park and which at the time of purchase were seen as a potential extension to the national park.[31][32]

Climate edit

Doñana Park has a mild, typically Mediterranean climate, characterized by dry summers and relatively wet winters resulting from variations in the polar front and the subtropical ridge of high pressure. The rainy seasons are intermediate, occurring in spring and in autumn; autumn especially can produce torrential rains caused by the accumulation during the summer of heat in nearby large bodies of water, and the arrival of polar air masses. In winter, however, thermal anticyclones may occur locally. Temperatures are mild throughout the year, with maximum temperatures varying about 17 °C from winter to summer. The most significant feature of the climate is the three to five months of dry weather in the summer, when it is dominated by the subtropical anticyclone.

Flora edit

There are many species of flora in the park: trees, including pines, flowers such as roses, and shrubs. Of special interest are the species Vulpia fontquerana, Tursica linaria, Juniperus macrocarpa (maritime juniper), Micropyropsis tuberosa, Hydrocharis morsus-ranae or Thorella verticillatinundata, many of them endangered. Non-native species such as eucalyptus, Acacia longifolia, Gomphocarpus fruticosus, Nicotiana glauca or Carpobrotus edulis (cat's claw) are removed by the park service.

Other notable species in the park, of the more than 875 indigenous to the Doñana ecosystems are: oleander, oak, the sea wallflower, sweet saltwort, the prickly tumbleweed, marram grass, heather, camarina, lavender, sea holly, reed, carnation, bulrush, common fern, sage-leaved rock rose, rushes, labiérnago (Phillyrea angustifolia), sea spurge, mastic, sedge, palm, pine, Scotch broom, rosemary, juniper, gorse, thyme, spurge and blackberries.

Flora of the transdunes edit

 
Dunes in the park

The ecosystem of the mobile dunes, also known as transdunes, which are formed by the prevailing south-west wind, is almost nonexistent elsewhere in the Iberian Peninsula. The harshness of this ecosystem is evident in the adaptations made by some plant species to its special conditions: the dunes of sand and soil are inconsistent. The gradual burial of vegetation, especially of trees that emerge then die, killed by the slow movement of sand, is one of the most well-known phenomena in the beach area of the park.

Fauna edit

Animals recorded within the park include 20 species of freshwater fish, 10 species of amphibians, 13 species of reptiles, 37 species of mammals and 360 non-marine bird species, of which 127 have bred in the park.

Fish edit

Native fish such as eel inhabit Doñana as well as introduced species such as carp, and the gambusia, or pike, which is considered an invasive threat to local ecosystems. Also, you could find the sturgeon in the past because nowadays is extinct.[33]

Reptiles edit

Reptiles found in Doñana Park include the European pond turtle, Spanish pond turtle, spur-thighed tortoise, Iberian worm lizard, Bedriaga's skink, western three-toed skink, common wall gecko, spiny-footed lizard, ocellated lizard, Carbonell's wall lizard, Andalusian wall lizard, Psammodromus manuelae, Spanish psammodromus, horseshoe whip snake, ladder snake, southern smooth snake, Montpellier snake, false smooth snake, viperine snake, grass snake, Lataste's viper, loggerhead turtle and leatherback turtle.[34]

Birds edit

 
Purple heron

Over 300 species of bird have been recorded in the area, including range-restricted species such as Spanish imperial eagle, marbled teal, white-headed duck and red-knobbed coot. Wetland species include glossy ibis, western swamphen, ferruginous duck, Eurasian spoonbill, red-crested pochard, little and cattle egret, night and squacco heron and greater flamingo, whilst the surrounding areas can have hoopoe, stone-curlew, Spanish sparrow, Mediterranean short-toed lark and pin-tailed sandgrouse. The site also attracts many summer migrants, which can include purple heron, gull-billed tern, greater short-toed lark, short-toed eagle, European roller, western olivaceous warbler, Savi's warbler, little bittern, booted eagle, whiskered tern and rufous scrub robin.[35]

Mammals edit

38 mammal species have been recorded, including twelve species of bat, red deer, European rabbit, European hedgehog, common genet, wildcat, wild boar, Iberian lynx, garden dormouse, Egyptian mongoose, greater white-toothed shrew, Eurasian otter, wood mouse, European polecat, red fox, European badger, Mediterranean pine vole, southwestern water vole and black rat.[36]

 
Iberian lynx, an emblematic species of the park

Iberian lynx edit

The Iberian lynx, whose habitat is restricted to the Iberian Peninsula, is the most endangered of the big cats. Precipitous drops in population counts led to its being declared a protected species in 1966. The only extant colonies of the Iberian lynx are in the Natural Parks of Sierra de Andujar and Cardena, Montoro, and Doñana with its surroundings; the other mainland colonies of former times are considered extinct. In Portugal recovery efforts to preserve its remaining habitat have resulted in the creation of the Sierra Malcata Natural Reserve.

The Acebuche Breeding Centre in Doñana has developed a captive breeding program which has achieved the survival of eleven individuals born in the centre, and of over thirty captured in the park, whose survival was otherwise doubtful. These conservation efforts are threatened by a high mortality rate among the cats and recurring violations of laws prohibiting cars from entering the park or driving on its roads, although, as some agencies have reported, the causes of death are not always clear. The precarious survival situation of this animal has become an emblematic symbol of the park for the general public.

Horses edit

In Doñana there are two indigenous breeds of horse: the Marismeño and the Retuertas; the latter is one of the oldest European breeds,[37] dating to perhaps 1000 BC, and the only one living in the wild and isolated from other populations.[38][39]

Camels edit

During the 19th and 20th centuries, a herd of feral dromedaries roamed the area. They may have been introduced during the Moorish Conquest of Spain in the 8th century, or they may have escaped from a herd introduced from the Canary Islands in 1829 by the Marquis de Molina as beasts of burden.[40][41] By the 1950s, there were only eight individuals left, and these were threatened by poachers.[42] By the early 1960s, there were only three, but more were released into the wild after being used in the filming of Lawrence of Arabia in 1962.[43]

Natural Park of Doñana: Preparque edit

  • Abalario–Asperillo. The coastal area west of the national park from Matalascañas to Mazagon, forming a rectangle 25 km in length and reaching about 5 km inland, consists of a field of dunes, several ancient lagoons and wetlands, as well as a large forest of pine and eucalyptus trees. It shelters abundant wildlife, including the Iberian lynx. This zone includes the towns of Matalascañas and Mazagon, as well as the El Arenosillo test Centre, a rocket launch site for suborbital rockets, but its declaration as a national park blocked the construction of a large urban project west of Matalascañas.
  • Preparque Norte–Pinares de Hinojos (North Preparque Pinewoods of Hinojos) stretches north of the National Park from El Rocío to Hinojos, with areas of marsh and forest. The Pinar del Pinto of Coto del Rey,[44] between Aznalcázar and Villamanrique de la Condesa, is home to several species of raptors.
  • Preparque Este–Brazo de la Torre-Entremuros. An area east of the National Park, between Brazo de la Torre and the Guadalquivir, with marshes and caños (tidal channels that reach into the muddy marsh land). It attracts birds that inhabit Doñana during the summer and during those winters in which drought occurs. Part of the marshes have been converted to rice cultivation.
 
Pinar de la Algaida
  • Pinar de la Algaida–Marismas de Bonanza. An area southeast of the National Park and north of Sanlúcar de Barrameda on the left bank of the River Guadalquivir, that includes a large forest of pines and marshes in Salinas. These marshes are the only ones still flooded by the tides (all the others rely solely on freshwater streams and rain for replenishment), and consequently, flamingos and avocets are found in them. "Algaida" is a word of Arabic origin, meaning generally any place covered with trees and bushes.[45] El Pinar de la Algaida is located near the henarllo, a sanctuary dedicated to the female deity Astarte, and the site of the Roman well of Caveros.[46] Restocking has been practised at Algaida since the early 19th century, and it now contains a large colony of black kites.[47]

Environmental Problems edit

After the Aznalcóllar Dam disaster of 1998, public awareness of the environmental risks to which the countryside is exposed has increased. Various impact studies and environmental groups have warned repeatedly of problems that threaten the region's flora, fauna, water and soil. While the pressure of urbanization and its various demands on local ecosystems has been a concern throughout the years, this is not the only associated risk factor. UNESCO has reviewed the nomination of the park for inclusion in its "List of World Heritage in Danger" several times, but has yet to add it.

Impact of infrastructure edit

There have been a number of problems related to infrastructure near the park. A project to build an oil pipeline between Extremadura and the port of Huelva has been criticized by environmental groups, who allege it would significantly increase tanker traffic in the area with an associated risk of oil spills. Frequent dredging of the Guadalquivir to allow passage of ships to the port of Seville has been observed to cause serious disturbances in the biodynamics of the estuary. Adena, the Associación de defensa de la naturaleza (Association for the defence of nature), the Spanish branch of WWF, has linked the passage of these boats with the introduction of new animals to the local ecosystems, which occurs when they discharge ballast water containing exotic species.

 
The Port of Huelva

The Port of Huelva, a few kilometers from the Natural Park, is one of its major environmental threats. Francisco Bella, PSOE senator and former mayor of the town of Almonte Huelva, considers it absurd that the pipeline project has been approved while the national government and the regional government of Andalusia invest in renewable energy. As mayor of Almonte, he noted the difficulties of implementing policies that promote employment near the park: (translation) "...we know almost everything about the ant and the lynx, but need to know how employment evolves in Doñana." In line with Bella's position regarding the aqueduct, Ginés Morata, a biologist and former president of the Consejo de Participación de Doñana (Participation Council of Doñana), says that the project, which involves the passage of hundreds of oil tankers per year that would unload their cargoes near Doñana, would lead to an increased possibility of oil spills.

Overexploitation of water resources edit

Another environmental problem is water withdrawals for irrigation, many of them illegal, which have doubled since the late 1980s to maintain water-intensive crops such as cotton, rice and more recently strawberries. The latter are grown in greenhouses, with an estimated area under plastic of between 4,500 and 6,000 hectares in the Doñana area, producing over 90% of the Spanish strawberry crop. The boring of illegal wells to draw irrigation water from underground aquifers has apparently proliferated,[48] while the water demands of nearby residential complexes and inappropriate usage of the water resources of nearby rivers may also affect the hydrology of the park. Other potential risks include salinization resulting from climate change; the intrusion of salt water from the Atlantic would endanger several animal species. On the other hand, desertification could also occur; recently a transfer from the Chanza-Piedras water system was approved by the Diputación de Huelva (Provincial Council of Huelva) to alleviate this eventuality.[49]

Impact of agriculture edit

In 2007, the World Wildlife Fund warned that strawberry farms surrounding the park, where 95% of Spanish strawberries were produced, threatened to cause catastrophic damage to the park by depleting the surrounding groundwater, notably where illegal boreholes were involved, as well as creating considerable pesticide pollution and plastic waste which was accumulating in local creeks; AFP further reported that WWF was calling for a boycott of Spanish strawberries,[50] but this is contradicted by the remarks of a WWF Spain spokesperson,[51] and it is uncharacteristic of WWF to call for blanket boycotts.

Aznalcóllar disaster edit

On 25 April 1998, a holding dam burst at the Los Frailes mine operated by the mining company, Boliden-Apirsa, near Aznalcóllar, Seville Province, releasing 4–5 million cubic metres of mine tailings. The acidic tailings, which contained dangerous levels of several heavy metals, quickly reached the nearby River Agrio, and then its tributary the River Guadiamar, travelling about 40 kilometres along these waterways before they could be stopped[52] and advancing as far as the prepark. The cleanup operation took three years, at an estimated cost of €240 million.[53] Although the spill was slowed by levees and diverted by way of the Guadalquivir to the sea, the vulnerability of Doñana's ecosystems to such environmental catastrophes was evident.

To ensure sustainable development both in the countryside and in the surrounding provinces, as well as to counteract future environmental threats, an International Commission of Experts met in 1992 to propose solutions, and produced the Plan de Desarrollo Sostenible de Doñana y su Entorno (Plan for Sustainable Development of Doñana and its Surroundings), briefly described as:

A plan of action, implemented through the Doñana Operational Programme and funded by the regional government of Andalusia and the Spanish State, as well as the Feder Funds, ESF and EAGGF, to revitalise both the regional infrastructure and social fabric through a new economic model of development compatible with preserving the biodiversity of such an extraordinarily important natural heritage as Doñana.

 
Rice field in Las Marismas, near Isla Mayor

This effectively became the mission statement of the Doñana 21 Foundation, created in 1997 as a partnership between the Governing Council of the Andalusian Regional Government and the El Monte, San Fernando and Unicaja savings banks. The plan established among its objectives the promotion of actions beneficial to the natural environment, seeking the cooperation of national and European governmental bodies, and the various organizations with an interest in the park, economic or otherwise, for sustainable development of the area (e. g., by encouraging the organic farming of rice).[54] Since then, representatives from Council agencies, businesses, trade unions and conservation organizations such as WWF have joined the foundation and collaborated in meeting its goals.

Pipeline edit

In 2013 the construction of a pipeline in the vicinity of the park was authorized by the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Environment.[55]

Pilgrimage of El Rocío and ecological issues edit

 
Wagon bearing a Simpecado (banner with insignia that proceeds images of the Holy Virgin Mary)[56] crosses the Coto Doñana on its return from the pilgrimage of El Rocío, in May 2009.

The municipality of Almonte, and therefore the park, is situated in an area in which public manifestations of religious fervor have been frequent throughout the centuries. The deities of nature and water were worshiped by the ancient Iberians, as in the goddess cult of Cybele. The cult rituals, similar in many ways to current Rocieras celebrations, were quickly adapted by the early Christians of these lands to be assimilated in their liturgy. They built a small basilica here, now defunct, but it was mainly after the reconquest of the area in 1262 that the Marian devotions were institutionalized. About 1270–1284, Alfonso X reconstructed the Chapel of St. Mary of Rocinas, and in 1337 Alfonso XI made the first recorded mention of the Marian cult in the area:

...e señaladamente son los mejores sotos de correr cabo de una Iglesia que dicen de Santa María de las Rocinas.(... and in particular it is said that the best groves proceed from the church of St. Mary of Rocinas.) ~Alfonso XI, 1337[57][58]

The image of the Virgin at the Hermitage of El Rocío dates probably from the 13th century, although the current iconography representing the Virgin as a lady of the royal court was adopted in the late 16th century, according to the fashion of the time. The popularity of the cult of the Virgen del Rocío in modern times has raised concerns about the annual pilgrimage's effect on the natural environment of the park.

The park is used by pilgrims on their way to the Romería de El Rocío. As this event attracts a million pilgrims annually, it has a significant negative impact on the park's eco-system. The overcrowding of pilgrims around certain dates is evident not only in the village of El Rocío where the shrine is located, but also in places within and outside the park such as the Piara del Acebuchal, the Ajolí Bridge, Boca del Lobo and the Moguer road. This has been a publicity windfall for the park, but requires stepped-up park resources for fire prevention and general monitoring, and also has had a significant negative environmental impact (e.g., increased danger of wildfires, off-road SUVs damaging sensitive ground, etc.) denounced by environmentalists.

Doñana Biological Station edit

The Estación Biológica de Doñana (Doñana Biological Station) is a centre dedicated to the study of terrestrial ecology. It was created jointly in 1964 by the Spanish government and the World Wildlife Federation to support scientific research on local ecosystems; in the course of this research the status of other national and international ecosystems is also investigated. The EBD, as an administrative and scientific management agency under the aegis of the Spanish National Research Council (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas – CSIC), operates a research centre in Seville, the Doñana Biological Reserve in Almonte, and a Field Station in the Natural Park of Sierras de Cazorla, Segura and Las Villas in the province of Jaén. After the World Wildlife Fund was created in 1961, one of its first actions was to acquire 6,794 hectares of the Doñana estate 'Las Nuevas' in 1963, which it then turned over to the CSIC. The CSIC declared the area to be a Reserva Biológica (Biological Reserve) and in 1964 built the Estación Biológica de Doñana. WWF bought another section of Doñana in 1968 totaling 3,214 hectares and later called the Reserva Biológica de Guadiamar (Guadiamar Biological Reserve).[27]

Saca de las Yeguas edit

Another important activity of longstanding association with the park is La Saca de las Yeguas ("The Gathering of the Mares"), a livestock event pertaining to the indigenous wild horses of the salt marshes of Doñana. On 26 June, after the Feast of St. John the Baptist is celebrated, mares and new foals among the marismeños are gathered in a traditional roundup.[59]

Other points of interest edit

 
Acebrón Palace (Palacio del Acebrón)
  • Acebrón Palace. It was built in the 1960s by Luis Espinosa Fondevilla as a residence and hunting lodge, and currently serves as the park visitors centre.
  • Matalascañas Dune Park and Marine World Museum.
  • The Visitors Centre at Acebuche, located in an old farmhouse, is the point of departure for visits to the park. It has trails and bird observatories on the lake of the same name.
  • Ice House Visitors Centre. Located in Sanlucar de Barrameda in the mariners' barrio (neighborhood) of Bajo de Guía, this early 20th century former ice house has been repurposed for receiving visitors to Doñana National Park. Beside it is the dock for the Real Fernando, a boat that takes visitors up the River Guadalquivir to the town of La Plancha, where can be found marshland cabins and from which you access the Llanos de Velázquez (Velázquez Flats) and Llanos de la Plancha (La Plancha Flats), where there are natural observatories.
  • Bajo de Guía Visitors Centre. Located in Sanlucar de Barrameda, devised for visitors to Doñana Natural Park.
  • Historic Areas of the peoples of the Comarca (Region).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Ramsar Sites Information Service. Archived from the original on 26 May 2018. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Ministerio para la Transición Ecológica; Parque Nacional de Doñana".
  3. ^ WWF (April 2011). (PDF). Gland, Switzerland: WWF-World Wide Fund For Nature (formerly World Wildlife Fund). pp. 18–19. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 21, 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
  4. ^ A History of WWF
  5. ^ [s.n.] (2 May 2008). (in Spanish). Terra. Telefónica de España, S.A.U. Archived 3 August 2009.
  6. ^ Antti Roose (2006). Managing drought and water scarcity in vulnerable environments: proceedings of the 10th European seminar on the geography of water. University of Tartu, Institute of Geography. p. 32. ISBN 978-9985-4-0497-3.
  7. ^ Luis Blas Aritio (1988). Parques nacionales españoles. Anaya. p. 64. ISBN 9788420729534.
  8. ^ . Regional Committee on Atlantic Neogene Stratigraphy. Universidad de Huelva. 24–26 September 2013. Archived from the original on April 6, 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
  9. ^ Adolfo J. Domínguez (2004). "Greek Identity in the Phocaean Colonies". In Brian Benjamin Shefton; Kathryn Lomas (eds.). Greek Identity in the Western Mediterranean: Papers in Honour of Brian Shefton. Brill. pp. 430–431. ISBN 90-04-13300-3.
  10. ^ J. Oliver Thomson (28 March 2013). History of Ancient Geography. Cambridge University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-107-68992-3.
  11. ^ Michael Dietler (22 September 2015). Archaeologies of Colonialism: Consumption, Entanglement, and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France. Univ of California Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-520-28757-0.
  12. ^ Adolf Schulten (2006). Tartessos: contribución a la historia más antigua de Occidente. Editorial Renacimiento. p. 12. ISBN 978-84-8472-240-3.
  13. ^ Jorge Bonsor (2012). . Sonia Barja. Archived from the original on February 5, 2014.
  14. ^ Schulten 2006, p. 20
  15. ^ Madrider Mitteilungen. F. H. Kerle. 1997. p. 50.
  16. ^ Julio Mangas Manjarrés; Domingo Plácido (1994). Avieno. Editorial Complutense. p. 91. ISBN 978-84-89039-00-1.
  17. ^ F. Ruiz; A. Rodríguez-Ramírez; et al. (2002). (PDF). Geogaceta. 32. Sociedad Geológica de España: 167–170. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-13. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  18. ^ Francisco García Novo; Robert M. M. Crawford; Mari Cruz Díaz Barradas (1 January 1997). The Ecology and Conservation of European Dunes. Universidad de Sevilla. p. 109. ISBN 978-84-7405-992-2.
  19. ^ Peter Pierson (1 January 1989). Commander of the Armada: The Seventh Duke of Medina Sidonia. Yale University Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-300-04408-9.
  20. ^ a b Laura Riley; William Riley (1 January 2005). Nature's Strongholds: The World's Great Wildlife Reserves. Princeton University Press. pp. 417. ISBN 0-691-12219-9.
  21. ^ Alfonso Lowe (2000). The Companion Guide to the South of Spain. Companion Guides. p. 148. ISBN 978-1-900639-33-0.
  22. ^ "Centro de Visitantes El Acebuche".
  23. ^ a b . BirdLife. 2 October 2013. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
  24. ^ Luis Mariano González (2012). El águila imperial ibérica: el resurgir de una especie amenazada. Fundacion BBVA. pp. 133–. ISBN 978-84-92937-38-7.
  25. ^ Elizabeth Nash (16 September 2005). Seville, Cordoba, and Granada : A Cultural History: A Cultural History. Oxford University Press. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-19-972537-3.
  26. ^ "El Porrón Observatory".
  27. ^ a b Mariëlle van der Zouwen (2006). Nature Policy Between Trends and Traditions: Dynamics in Nature Policy Arrangements in the Yorkshire Dales, Doñana, and the Veluwe. Eburon Uitgeverij B.V. pp. 105–108. ISBN 978-90-5972-097-8.
  28. ^ Rafael Méndez (30 August 2010). . El País. Archived from the original on December 17, 2013. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
  29. ^ [waternewseurope.com/spain-taken-to-court-for-over-abstraction-aquifers-coto-donana/ "Water News Europe"]. Water News Europe. 20 December 2020. Retrieved 6 December 2022. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  30. ^ Jones, Sam (5 September 2022). "Over-consumption and drought reduce lake in vital Spanish wetland to puddle". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 May 2024.
  31. ^ Barbotta (2024). "Moreno presenta la adquisición de Veta la Palma como garantía de la supervivencia de Doñana". Diario Sur (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 May 2024.
  32. ^ "La Junta andaluza compra 7.500 hectáreas para que las aves permanezcan en Doñana". El País. 2023.
  33. ^ "Los peces de Doñana". Discovering Doñana. 14 February 2010. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
  34. ^ Iglesias, José Antonio Sánchez (8 January 2010). "Reptiles of Doñana". Discovering Doñana. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  35. ^ "Birds in Coto Donana". Easy Birder. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  36. ^ Iglesias, José Antonio Sánchez (21 March 2010). "Mammals of Doñana". Discovering Doñana. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  37. ^ Frayer, Lauren (9 January 2014). "Rare Horses Released In Spain As Part Of 'Rewilding' Effort". NPR. National Public Radio (USA) 9 Jan 2014.
  38. ^ Olalla Cernuda (1 January 2007). . www.elmundo.es (in Spanish). Unidad Editorial S.A. Archived from the original on June 25, 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2017.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on April 2, 2014. Retrieved April 6, 2014.
  40. ^ Chapman, Abel; Walter John Buck (1893). Wild Spain. London: Gurney and Jackson. pp. 94–101.
  41. ^ Chapman, Abel; Walter John Buck (1910). Unexplored Spain. New York: E. Arnold. pp. 275–282.
  42. ^ Meissner, Hans Otto (1963). Unknown Europe. trans. Florence and Isabel McHugh. London and Glasgow: Blackie & Sons. pp. 100–124.
  43. ^ Morris, Jan (1979). Spain. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-19-520169-7.
  44. ^ Francisco García Novo; Ángel Martín Vicente; Julia Toja Santillana (2007). La frontera de Doñana. Universidad de Sevilla. pp. 214–215. ISBN 978-84-472-0950-7.
  45. ^ Diccionario de voces españolas geográficas. Academia de la Historia. 1800. p. 7.
  46. ^ Noticiario arqueológico hispánico. La Comisaría. 1952. p. 127.
  47. ^ José Antonio Montero; Eduardo de Juana Aranzana; Fernando Barrio (2006). Where to Watch Birds in Spain: The 100 Best Sites. Lynx Edicions. ISBN 978-84-96553-04-0.
  48. ^ James Bryce (28 June 2013). . The Guardian. Seville. Archived from the original on 8 September 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2014. Some producers in the area are accused of using illegal boreholes to draw water from underground aquifers, which the fragile ecosystem is dependent on to support a wide range of species.
  49. ^ S.P. (10 July 2012). . Huelva Informacion. Huelva. Archived from the original on 23 March 2014. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  50. ^ "Call for Spain strawberry boycott". BBC News, 16/3/07
  51. ^ "How the thirst for strawberries is draining Spain's precious water". The Independent, 14/2/07: [1]
  52. ^ Aguilar, J.; Dorronsoro, C.; Fernández, E.; Fernández, J.; García, I.; Martín, F.; Ortiz, I.; Simón, M., , University of Granada, archived from the original on 17 March 2011, retrieved 10 October 2010.
  53. ^ "El desastre que amenazó Doñana", El País, 6 October 2010.
  54. ^ . ABC Sevilla. Sevilla. 25 March 2010. Archived from the original on 29 January 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  55. ^ Lucía Vallellano (20 January 2013). . El País. Archived from the original on 30 April 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  56. ^ Mario Brdar; Stefan Thomas Gries (2011). Cognitive Linguistics: Convergence and Expansion. John Benjamins Publishing. p. 168. ISBN 978-90-272-2386-9.
  57. ^ Francisco Rodríguez Iglesias (2003). Proyecto Andalucia. Publicaciones Comunitarias. pp. 125–126. ISBN 9788493155315.
  58. ^ David González Cruz (2000). Religiosidad y costumbres populares en Iberoamérica. Universidad de Huelva. p. 241. ISBN 978-84-95089-49-6.
  59. ^ J. Edward De Steiguer (2011). Wild Horses of the West: History and Politics of America's Mustangs. University of Arizona Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-8165-2826-4.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Doñana Biological Station CSIC
  • (in Spanish)
  • (in Spanish) Doñana: National Park and Natural Park (Regional Government)
  • CNN report on the 1998 spill 2008-05-31 at the Wayback Machine

doñana, national, park, parque, nacional, natural, doñana, natural, reserve, andalucía, southern, spain, provinces, huelva, most, territory, within, municipality, almonte, cádiz, seville, covers, which, protected, area, named, after, doña, silva, mendoza, wife. Donana National Park or Parque Nacional y Natural de Donana is a natural reserve in Andalucia southern Spain in the provinces of Huelva most of its territory within the municipality of Almonte 2 Cadiz and Seville It covers 543 km2 209 65 sq mi of which 135 km2 52 12 sq mi are a protected area It is named after Dona Ana de Silva y Mendoza es wife of the 7th Duke of Medina Sidonia Donana National ParkParque Nacional y Natural de DonanaIUCN category II national park Marshes of DonanaLocation of DonanaLocationHuelva Seville and Cadiz provinces Andalucia SpainCoordinates37 00 N 6 30 W 37 000 N 6 500 W 37 000 6 500Area543 km2 210 sq mi Established1969Visitors392 958 in 2007 Governing bodyNational Parks Autonomous Agency and Regional Government of AndalusiaUNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaNatural vii ix x Designated1994 18th session Reference no 685RegionEurope and North AmericaExtensions2005Ramsar WetlandOfficial nameDonanaDesignated5 April 1982Reference no 234 1 The park is an area of marshes shallow streams and sand dunes in Las Marismas the delta where the Guadalquivir River flows into the Atlantic Ocean It was established as a nature reserve in 1969 when the World Wildlife Fund joined with the Spanish government and purchased a section of marshes to protect it 3 The eco system has been under constant threat by the draining of the marshes the use of river water to boost agricultural production by irrigating land along the coast water pollution by upriver mining and the expansion of tourist facilities 4 Donana National Park has a biodiversity that is unique in Europe although there are some similarities to the Parc Naturel Regional de Camargue of the Camargue river delta in France with which Donana Park is twinned 5 The park features a great variety of ecosystems and shelters wildlife including thousands of European and African migratory birds fallow deer Spanish red deer wild boars European badgers Egyptian mongooses and endangered species such as the Spanish imperial eagle and the Iberian lynx The Donana nature reserve includes both the Donana National Park established in 1969 and the Natural Park created in 1989 and expanded in 1997 creating a buffer zone of protection under the management of the regional government The two parks national and natural have since been classified as a single natural landscape Due to its strategic location between the continents of Europe and Africa and its proximity to the Strait of Gibraltar Donana s large expanse of salt marsh is a breeding ground as well as a transit point for thousands of European and African birds aquatic and terrestrial and hosts many species of migratory waterfowl during the winter typically up to 200 000 individuals Over 300 different species of birds may be sighted there annually Considered the largest nature reserve in Europe several different scientific institutions have monitoring stations within its boundaries to ensure appropriate development of adjacent lands and conservation of the threatened species that inhabit it The area was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1994 in 2006 the park recorded 376 287 visitors Contents 1 Geology and geomorphology 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Middle Ages 2 3 Early modern 2 4 Late modern creation of the National Park 2 5 Conservation 3 Climate 4 Flora 4 1 Flora of the transdunes 5 Fauna 5 1 Fish 5 2 Reptiles 5 3 Birds 5 4 Mammals 5 4 1 Iberian lynx 5 4 2 Horses 5 4 3 Camels 6 Natural Park of Donana Preparque 7 Environmental Problems 7 1 Impact of infrastructure 7 2 Overexploitation of water resources 7 3 Impact of agriculture 7 4 Aznalcollar disaster 7 5 Pipeline 7 6 Pilgrimage of El Rocio and ecological issues 8 Donana Biological Station 9 Saca de las Yeguas 10 Other points of interest 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksGeology and geomorphology edit nbsp Donana Aerial view of Donana National Park and surrounding areas The geological profile of Donana National Park reflects the development over several hundred thousand years of a deep aquifer and geomorphological features that have enhanced the biodiversity of the wildlife habitats presently found there After the end of the last glacial period the area was covered by freshwater and brackish marshes ponds and sand dunes 6 with some marine intrusions caused by high energy events such as tsunamis and large storms A period of comparatively rapid rise in global sea level during the first part of the Flandrian interglacial was associated with the melting of the paleoglaciers and reached its maximum level 6 500 7 000 years ago At this time Donana National Park and the surrounding areas were flooded and a lagoon later called Lacus Ligustinus by the Romans was formed The pace of infilling of the lagoon has increased over the last 6 000 years along with accelerated growth of sandspits and the creation of new inland marshes and wetlands The extensive marshes of Donana National Park now have a flat topography with some inland depressions occupied by temporary or permanent wetlands locally called lucios 7 The whole area is protected by the Donana spit a wide sandy littoral barrier with mobile dune systems growing toward the southeast 8 History editAntiquity edit nbsp Banks of the River Guadalquivir in Donana National Park Almonte Although the topography of Donana is a relatively new land feature as measured on the geological time scale remains of Neolithic tools have been found in the area Various ancient civilizations may have had a presence there as long as 2 800 years ago including the Phoenicians the Phocaean Greeks and the Tartessians but archaeological remains attesting to such have not been found 9 10 11 In 1923 the German archaeologist Adolf Schulten accompanied by Adolf Lammerer and George Bonsor searched for the location of the ancient Tartessian capital in Almonte where the Donana dunes are but found nothing of interest These excavations were carried out at Cerro del Trigo 12 13 and funded by the Duke of Tarifa and Denia then owner of Donana 14 Nevertheless in 1978 Schulten found the stele of Villamanrique 15 at the nearby town of Villamanrique de la Condesa Surveys were made in 2007 in the Hinojos salt marsh or Marisma de Hinojos of Huelva province in an effort to discover traces of the mythical city Noteworthy finds included the remains of Roman settlements dating from the 2nd through the 5th centuries AD which had been primarily engaged in fishing and fish salting or the preparation of garum The Guadalquivir Marshes Las Marismas del Guadalquivir an area of marshy lowlands near the left bank of the mouth of the Guadalquivir was then a large inland lake known as the Lacus Ligustinus in Latin 16 The lake slowly infilled with deposited sediment gradually giving way to the current marshes 17 Middle Ages edit Alfonso X the Wise In 1262 after conquering the vassal kingdom of Niebla King Alfonso X established a Real Cazadero royal hunting preserve in the Las Rocinas forest 18 between the Rio Tinto and the Guadalquivir partly due to the abundance of deer there as well as the small sanctuary of Santa Olalla since disappeared on the Arroyo de la Rocina In 1297 his son Sancho IV granted Guzman el Bueno the Lordship of Sanlucar consisting of the territory located behind Arenas Gordas on the left bank of the Guadalquivir estuary and which remained in the hands of the House of Medina Sidonia for over six centuries The noble house was established in 1369 when Henry II of Castile granted the fourth Lord of Sanlucar the County of Niebla 19 In 1493 the Catholic Monarchs donated part of the land of the present village of El Rocio to the royal secretary whose son later sold it to the town of Almonte Previously new breeding stock had been introduced among the local populations of wild boar and deer while wolf hunting was encouraged for the benefit of cattle and horse ranching In the region of Niebla specifically at Las Rocinas the land is flat covered by thickets and wild boars are always to be found there one may not traverse this ground in the winter which is generally very wet except during a drought nor in summer because it is then so dry and miserably uncomfortable Alfonso XI in his Libro de la Monteria The Book of Hunting written between 1342 and 1348 Early modern edit Nearly a century later Alonso Perez de Guzman y Sotomayor 7th Duke of Medina Sidonia and commander of the Spanish Armada bought back part of the land His wife Ana de Silva y Mendoza daughter of the Princess of Eboli moved to a country retreat there called Coto de Dona Ana Dona Ana Game Preserve which was the origin of the current name Donana 20 the house was renovated years later as a palace Reference to the use of Coto Donana as a hunting lodge is made in the first verses of the La Fabula de Polifemo y Galatea Fable of Polyphemus and Galatea which the lyric poet Luis de Gongora dedicated to the Count of Niebla and in which he requests that the nobles suspend their hunting exploits to hear his verses In 1624 King Philip IV stayed at the estate for several days as a guest of the 9th Duke of Medina Sidonia and joined in some large hunts He brought with him a great variety of comestibles which included such luxuries as snow from the mountains for the frequent banquets he held in honor of the duke In 1797 Francisco Goya stayed in the palace as a guest of his patrons the 15th Duke of Medina Sidonia and his wife the 13th Duchess of Alba Here Goya created his Album A a collection of drawings and apparently painted his famous portraits La Maja Vestida The Clothed Maja and La Maja Desnuda The Naked Maja rumored to portray the duchess 20 21 Late modern creation of the National Park edit After 1854 with the publishing of a discussion of the area in a treatise called Avifauna de Donana Catalogo de las aves observadas en algunas provincias andaluzas Avifauna of Donana Catalogue of the birds observed in some Andalusian provinces by Antonio Machado y Nunez the public began to appreciate its ecological value for the many different species of wildlife found there Consequently it was visited by British naturalists and hunters including Abel Chapman and Walter J Buck both of whom wrote books that alerted a wider audience in Europe to the strategic importance of Donana for migratory birds traveling to Africa Later when Jose Joaquin Alvarez de Toledo y Caro 1865 1915 became the 19th Duke of Medina Sidonia he inherited large debts and to pay them was forced to sell off various assets including the Coto de Donana which he sold for 750 000 pesetas finally detaching it from the noble house When the sherry baron William Garvey bought Donana from the Duke in 1901 the estate was abandoned and in a state of ruin Garvey restored the palace to its former splendor and upon his death it passed to his brother Joseph and his niece Maria Medina y Garvey who was married to the Duke of Tarifa a forest engineer In 1934 it passed to the sister of the Duchess of Tarifa Blanca Medina and Garvey who was married to the Marquis of Borghetto In 1942 the Marquis sold it to a company formed by Salvador Noguera Manuel Gonzalez and the Marquis of Merito Fifty years later the park was consolidated as a natural area Conservation edit nbsp View of Donana National Park from visitors centre at El Acebuche Almonte 22 The Spanish businessman Mauricio Gonzalez Gordon y Diez Marquis of Bonanza whose family owned a large estate in Donana became interested in its ecosystems and their birdlife and invited ornithologists from all over Europe to visit In 1952 the Spanish ornithologists Jose Antonio Valverde and Francisco Bernis visited the property with Gonzalez Gordon serving as their guide Valverde and the Gonzalez Gordon family saw that the wetlands with their richly diverse wildlife were threatened by the Spanish government s proposals to drain them for farming and the planting of eucalyptus trees Mauricio together with his father asked Bernis to try and influence Spanish dictator Francisco Franco into abandoning the plans 23 The trio wrote a memorandum which was presented to Franco himself by Mauricio s father Manuel 24 By November 1953 Bernis had finished a report on the status of the Donana which showed that the area had exceptional ecological value The group sought and obtained international support for their goals The efforts of Gonzalez Gordon to dissuade Franco exposed him to some danger but the Franco government conceded and the drainage plans were aborted 23 Valverde led the first organised scientific expedition to the Donana in 1957 joined by the British naturalists Guy Mountfort Roger Peterson and Sir Julian Huxley A group of European conservation experts including Guy Monfort Max Nicholson and Luc Hoffmann then demonstrated the crucial importance of the area as a stopover for birds migrating between the European and African continents In 1959 the Gonzalez family sold part of their land in Donana for development of the Matalascanas resort This alarmed European conservationists leading various institutions and anonymous donors to offer to buy part of the property Valverde Hoffman and Nicholson in partnership with the British Nature Conservancy formed an association that organised an international drive for funds to expand the park The campaign raised two million Swiss Francs to buy 7 000 hectares of land for annexation to that already donated by Gonzalez Gordon 25 Finally in 1963 the Spanish government and WWF bought part of the territory and created the first Donana preserve and in 1964 they established the Donana Biological Station and the Spanish National Research Council Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas CSIC to study the biodiversity of Donana and other Spanish ecosystems nbsp El Porron observatory Almonte 26 In 1969 the WWF again joined forces with the Spanish government to purchase another section of the Guadalquivir Delta marshes and establish the Donana National Park That same year the Donana National Park was created by decree part of whose territory was owned by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad and part still in private hands Ten years later the protected area was expanded and the so called Preparque Donana was created In 1980 UNESCO recognised the Donana National Park as a Biosphere Reserve of 77 260 hectares The Core Zone consists of 50 720 hectares in the National Park of Donana 27 The buffer zone is 54 250 hectares in the Natural Park of Donana The altitude ranges from sea level to 40 meters above sea level Unesco considers Donana of world significance based on the variety of its ecosystems and the wide number of species they harbor In 1982 it was included in the list of wetlands of the Ramsar Convention and in 1989 the Regional Government of Andalusia converted the Preparque into the Donana Natural Park In 1994 it was listed by Unesco as a World Heritage Site enabling the establishment of programs to preserve and manage the area Historically these vital wetlands have been constantly threatened by schemes to increase local agricultural output and tourism WWF still supports the Donana and is fighting proposals to drain the marshes and syphon off water for irrigation of agricultural land along the coast and expansion of tourist facilities In 1998 the Aznalcollar Disaster occurred when a holding dam burst at the Los Frailes mine owned by Boliden Apirsa formerly Andaluza de Piritas S A the Spanish subsidiary of Boliden releasing a flood of toxic sludge that entered the River Guadiamar the main water source for the park In 2000 after this major environmental catastrophe the Spanish Ministry of Environment promoted the Donana 2005 program aimed at regenerating the marshes In 2006 the responsibilities of maintaining the park were transferred to the Government of Andalusia by the Royal Decree of 9 June the functions and services of the Nature Conservation administration thus transferred to the Andalusian state were widened and Donana National Park and the Natural Park became the Natural area of Donana a single territory divided into areas with different levels of environmental protection In 2008 this park was twinned with the Regional Natural Park Camargue in France with which it shares anthropological and ethnographic aspects During his tenure the Spanish Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez began using Donana as a vacation retreat setting a precedent for his successors In 2010 9200 hectares of land on the coastline were expropriated by the former Ministry of the Environment for protection 28 In July 2012 Unesco approved the extension of the Biosphere Reserve of Donana from 77 260 hectares to over 255 000 hectares and enabled compliance with the guidelines of the Man and Biosphere Program This created a transition zone where the socio economic interests of the various municipalities in the Donana region are represented In 2019 the police closed tens of illegal wells operated largely by fruit farmers around the park which had for many years been draining water away from the park s water table In the same year the EU commission decided to take Spain to the European Court of Justice EJC for violating EU conservation rules 29 The court ruled in favor of the EU commission stating that Spain has not fulfilled its obligations concerning the prevention of illegal water extraction as well as failed to take necessary measures to stop significant modifications of the park s landscape 30 In 2023 the Junta de Andalucia sought to regularise illegal stawberry cultivation near the park but was blocked by the central government Some agreement on a way forward appeared to have been reached as a mitigation measure proposed by the Junta went through at the end of the year This was the acquisition of 7 000 ha of an estate called Veta la Palma This property includes lagoons which had been used for a failed fishing farming enterprise within the natural park and which at the time of purchase were seen as a potential extension to the national park 31 32 Climate editDonana Park has a mild typically Mediterranean climate characterized by dry summers and relatively wet winters resulting from variations in the polar front and the subtropical ridge of high pressure The rainy seasons are intermediate occurring in spring and in autumn autumn especially can produce torrential rains caused by the accumulation during the summer of heat in nearby large bodies of water and the arrival of polar air masses In winter however thermal anticyclones may occur locally Temperatures are mild throughout the year with maximum temperatures varying about 17 C from winter to summer The most significant feature of the climate is the three to five months of dry weather in the summer when it is dominated by the subtropical anticyclone Flora editThere are many species of flora in the park trees including pines flowers such as roses and shrubs Of special interest are the species Vulpia fontquerana Tursica linaria Juniperus macrocarpa maritime juniper Micropyropsis tuberosa Hydrocharis morsus ranae or Thorella verticillatinundata many of them endangered Non native species such as eucalyptus Acacia longifolia Gomphocarpus fruticosus Nicotiana glauca or Carpobrotus edulis cat s claw are removed by the park service Other notable species in the park of the more than 875 indigenous to the Donana ecosystems are oleander oak the sea wallflower sweet saltwort the prickly tumbleweed marram grass heather camarina lavender sea holly reed carnation bulrush common fern sage leaved rock rose rushes labiernago Phillyrea angustifolia sea spurge mastic sedge palm pine Scotch broom rosemary juniper gorse thyme spurge and blackberries Flora of the transdunes edit nbsp Dunes in the park The ecosystem of the mobile dunes also known as transdunes which are formed by the prevailing south west wind is almost nonexistent elsewhere in the Iberian Peninsula The harshness of this ecosystem is evident in the adaptations made by some plant species to its special conditions the dunes of sand and soil are inconsistent The gradual burial of vegetation especially of trees that emerge then die killed by the slow movement of sand is one of the most well known phenomena in the beach area of the park Fauna editAnimals recorded within the park include 20 species of freshwater fish 10 species of amphibians 13 species of reptiles 37 species of mammals and 360 non marine bird species of which 127 have bred in the park Fish edit Native fish such as eel inhabit Donana as well as introduced species such as carp and the gambusia or pike which is considered an invasive threat to local ecosystems Also you could find the sturgeon in the past because nowadays is extinct 33 Reptiles edit Reptiles found in Donana Park include the European pond turtle Spanish pond turtle spur thighed tortoise Iberian worm lizard Bedriaga s skink western three toed skink common wall gecko spiny footed lizard ocellated lizard Carbonell s wall lizard Andalusian wall lizard Psammodromus manuelae Spanish psammodromus horseshoe whip snake ladder snake southern smooth snake Montpellier snake false smooth snake viperine snake grass snake Lataste s viper loggerhead turtle and leatherback turtle 34 Birds edit nbsp Purple heron Over 300 species of bird have been recorded in the area including range restricted species such as Spanish imperial eagle marbled teal white headed duck and red knobbed coot Wetland species include glossy ibis western swamphen ferruginous duck Eurasian spoonbill red crested pochard little and cattle egret night and squacco heron and greater flamingo whilst the surrounding areas can have hoopoe stone curlew Spanish sparrow Mediterranean short toed lark and pin tailed sandgrouse The site also attracts many summer migrants which can include purple heron gull billed tern greater short toed lark short toed eagle European roller western olivaceous warbler Savi s warbler little bittern booted eagle whiskered tern and rufous scrub robin 35 Mammals edit 38 mammal species have been recorded including twelve species of bat red deer European rabbit European hedgehog common genet wildcat wild boar Iberian lynx garden dormouse Egyptian mongoose greater white toothed shrew Eurasian otter wood mouse European polecat red fox European badger Mediterranean pine vole southwestern water vole and black rat 36 nbsp Iberian lynx an emblematic species of the park Iberian lynx edit Main article Iberian lynx The Iberian lynx whose habitat is restricted to the Iberian Peninsula is the most endangered of the big cats Precipitous drops in population counts led to its being declared a protected species in 1966 The only extant colonies of the Iberian lynx are in the Natural Parks of Sierra de Andujar and Cardena Montoro and Donana with its surroundings the other mainland colonies of former times are considered extinct In Portugal recovery efforts to preserve its remaining habitat have resulted in the creation of the Sierra Malcata Natural Reserve The Acebuche Breeding Centre in Donana has developed a captive breeding program which has achieved the survival of eleven individuals born in the centre and of over thirty captured in the park whose survival was otherwise doubtful These conservation efforts are threatened by a high mortality rate among the cats and recurring violations of laws prohibiting cars from entering the park or driving on its roads although as some agencies have reported the causes of death are not always clear The precarious survival situation of this animal has become an emblematic symbol of the park for the general public Horses edit In Donana there are two indigenous breeds of horse the Marismeno and the Retuertas the latter is one of the oldest European breeds 37 dating to perhaps 1000 BC and the only one living in the wild and isolated from other populations 38 39 Camels edit During the 19th and 20th centuries a herd of feral dromedaries roamed the area They may have been introduced during the Moorish Conquest of Spain in the 8th century or they may have escaped from a herd introduced from the Canary Islands in 1829 by the Marquis de Molina as beasts of burden 40 41 By the 1950s there were only eight individuals left and these were threatened by poachers 42 By the early 1960s there were only three but more were released into the wild after being used in the filming of Lawrence of Arabia in 1962 43 Natural Park of Donana Preparque editAbalario Asperillo The coastal area west of the national park from Matalascanas to Mazagon forming a rectangle 25 km in length and reaching about 5 km inland consists of a field of dunes several ancient lagoons and wetlands as well as a large forest of pine and eucalyptus trees It shelters abundant wildlife including the Iberian lynx This zone includes the towns of Matalascanas and Mazagon as well as the El Arenosillo test Centre a rocket launch site for suborbital rockets but its declaration as a national park blocked the construction of a large urban project west of Matalascanas Preparque Norte Pinares de Hinojos North Preparque Pinewoods of Hinojos stretches north of the National Park from El Rocio to Hinojos with areas of marsh and forest The Pinar del Pinto of Coto del Rey 44 between Aznalcazar and Villamanrique de la Condesa is home to several species of raptors Preparque Este Brazo de la Torre Entremuros An area east of the National Park between Brazo de la Torre and the Guadalquivir with marshes and canos tidal channels that reach into the muddy marsh land It attracts birds that inhabit Donana during the summer and during those winters in which drought occurs Part of the marshes have been converted to rice cultivation nbsp Pinar de la Algaida Pinar de la Algaida Marismas de Bonanza An area southeast of the National Park and north of Sanlucar de Barrameda on the left bank of the River Guadalquivir that includes a large forest of pines and marshes in Salinas These marshes are the only ones still flooded by the tides all the others rely solely on freshwater streams and rain for replenishment and consequently flamingos and avocets are found in them Algaida is a word of Arabic origin meaning generally any place covered with trees and bushes 45 El Pinar de la Algaida is located near the henarllo a sanctuary dedicated to the female deity Astarte and the site of the Roman well of Caveros 46 Restocking has been practised at Algaida since the early 19th century and it now contains a large colony of black kites 47 Environmental Problems editAfter the Aznalcollar Dam disaster of 1998 public awareness of the environmental risks to which the countryside is exposed has increased Various impact studies and environmental groups have warned repeatedly of problems that threaten the region s flora fauna water and soil While the pressure of urbanization and its various demands on local ecosystems has been a concern throughout the years this is not the only associated risk factor UNESCO has reviewed the nomination of the park for inclusion in its List of World Heritage in Danger several times but has yet to add it Impact of infrastructure edit There have been a number of problems related to infrastructure near the park A project to build an oil pipeline between Extremadura and the port of Huelva has been criticized by environmental groups who allege it would significantly increase tanker traffic in the area with an associated risk of oil spills Frequent dredging of the Guadalquivir to allow passage of ships to the port of Seville has been observed to cause serious disturbances in the biodynamics of the estuary Adena the Associacion de defensa de la naturaleza Association for the defence of nature the Spanish branch of WWF has linked the passage of these boats with the introduction of new animals to the local ecosystems which occurs when they discharge ballast water containing exotic species nbsp The Port of Huelva The Port of Huelva a few kilometers from the Natural Park is one of its major environmental threats Francisco Bella PSOE senator and former mayor of the town of Almonte Huelva considers it absurd that the pipeline project has been approved while the national government and the regional government of Andalusia invest in renewable energy As mayor of Almonte he noted the difficulties of implementing policies that promote employment near the park translation we know almost everything about the ant and the lynx but need to know how employment evolves in Donana In line with Bella s position regarding the aqueduct Gines Morata a biologist and former president of the Consejo de Participacion de Donana Participation Council of Donana says that the project which involves the passage of hundreds of oil tankers per year that would unload their cargoes near Donana would lead to an increased possibility of oil spills Overexploitation of water resources edit Another environmental problem is water withdrawals for irrigation many of them illegal which have doubled since the late 1980s to maintain water intensive crops such as cotton rice and more recently strawberries The latter are grown in greenhouses with an estimated area under plastic of between 4 500 and 6 000 hectares in the Donana area producing over 90 of the Spanish strawberry crop The boring of illegal wells to draw irrigation water from underground aquifers has apparently proliferated 48 while the water demands of nearby residential complexes and inappropriate usage of the water resources of nearby rivers may also affect the hydrology of the park Other potential risks include salinization resulting from climate change the intrusion of salt water from the Atlantic would endanger several animal species On the other hand desertification could also occur recently a transfer from the Chanza Piedras water system was approved by the Diputacion de Huelva Provincial Council of Huelva to alleviate this eventuality 49 Impact of agriculture edit In 2007 the World Wildlife Fund warned that strawberry farms surrounding the park where 95 of Spanish strawberries were produced threatened to cause catastrophic damage to the park by depleting the surrounding groundwater notably where illegal boreholes were involved as well as creating considerable pesticide pollution and plastic waste which was accumulating in local creeks AFP further reported that WWF was calling for a boycott of Spanish strawberries 50 but this is contradicted by the remarks of a WWF Spain spokesperson 51 and it is uncharacteristic of WWF to call for blanket boycotts Aznalcollar disaster edit Main article Donana disaster On 25 April 1998 a holding dam burst at the Los Frailes mine operated by the mining company Boliden Apirsa near Aznalcollar Seville Province releasing 4 5 million cubic metres of mine tailings The acidic tailings which contained dangerous levels of several heavy metals quickly reached the nearby River Agrio and then its tributary the River Guadiamar travelling about 40 kilometres along these waterways before they could be stopped 52 and advancing as far as the prepark The cleanup operation took three years at an estimated cost of 240 million 53 Although the spill was slowed by levees and diverted by way of the Guadalquivir to the sea the vulnerability of Donana s ecosystems to such environmental catastrophes was evident To ensure sustainable development both in the countryside and in the surrounding provinces as well as to counteract future environmental threats an International Commission of Experts met in 1992 to propose solutions and produced the Plan de Desarrollo Sostenible de Donana y su Entorno Plan for Sustainable Development of Donana and its Surroundings briefly described as A plan of action implemented through the Donana Operational Programme and funded by the regional government of Andalusia and the Spanish State as well as the Feder Funds ESF and EAGGF to revitalise both the regional infrastructure and social fabric through a new economic model of development compatible with preserving the biodiversity of such an extraordinarily important natural heritage as Donana nbsp Rice field in Las Marismas near Isla Mayor This effectively became the mission statement of the Donana 21 Foundation created in 1997 as a partnership between the Governing Council of the Andalusian Regional Government and the El Monte San Fernando and Unicaja savings banks The plan established among its objectives the promotion of actions beneficial to the natural environment seeking the cooperation of national and European governmental bodies and the various organizations with an interest in the park economic or otherwise for sustainable development of the area e g by encouraging the organic farming of rice 54 Since then representatives from Council agencies businesses trade unions and conservation organizations such as WWF have joined the foundation and collaborated in meeting its goals Pipeline edit In 2013 the construction of a pipeline in the vicinity of the park was authorized by the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture Food and Environment 55 Pilgrimage of El Rocio and ecological issues edit Main article Romeria de El Rocio nbsp Wagon bearing a Simpecado banner with insignia that proceeds images of the Holy Virgin Mary 56 crosses the Coto Donana on its return from the pilgrimage of El Rocio in May 2009 The municipality of Almonte and therefore the park is situated in an area in which public manifestations of religious fervor have been frequent throughout the centuries The deities of nature and water were worshiped by the ancient Iberians as in the goddess cult of Cybele The cult rituals similar in many ways to current Rocieras celebrations were quickly adapted by the early Christians of these lands to be assimilated in their liturgy They built a small basilica here now defunct but it was mainly after the reconquest of the area in 1262 that the Marian devotions were institutionalized About 1270 1284 Alfonso X reconstructed the Chapel of St Mary of Rocinas and in 1337 Alfonso XI made the first recorded mention of the Marian cult in the area e senaladamente son los mejores sotos de correr cabo de una Iglesia que dicen de Santa Maria de las Rocinas and in particular it is said that the best groves proceed from the church of St Mary of Rocinas Alfonso XI 1337 57 58 The image of the Virgin at the Hermitage of El Rocio dates probably from the 13th century although the current iconography representing the Virgin as a lady of the royal court was adopted in the late 16th century according to the fashion of the time The popularity of the cult of the Virgen del Rocio in modern times has raised concerns about the annual pilgrimage s effect on the natural environment of the park The park is used by pilgrims on their way to the Romeria de El Rocio As this event attracts a million pilgrims annually it has a significant negative impact on the park s eco system The overcrowding of pilgrims around certain dates is evident not only in the village of El Rocio where the shrine is located but also in places within and outside the park such as the Piara del Acebuchal the Ajoli Bridge Boca del Lobo and the Moguer road This has been a publicity windfall for the park but requires stepped up park resources for fire prevention and general monitoring and also has had a significant negative environmental impact e g increased danger of wildfires off road SUVs damaging sensitive ground etc denounced by environmentalists Donana Biological Station editThe Estacion Biologica de Donana Donana Biological Station is a centre dedicated to the study of terrestrial ecology It was created jointly in 1964 by the Spanish government and the World Wildlife Federation to support scientific research on local ecosystems in the course of this research the status of other national and international ecosystems is also investigated The EBD as an administrative and scientific management agency under the aegis of the Spanish National Research Council Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas CSIC operates a research centre in Seville the Donana Biological Reserve in Almonte and a Field Station in the Natural Park of Sierras de Cazorla Segura and Las Villas in the province of Jaen After the World Wildlife Fund was created in 1961 one of its first actions was to acquire 6 794 hectares of the Donana estate Las Nuevas in 1963 which it then turned over to the CSIC The CSIC declared the area to be a Reserva Biologica Biological Reserve and in 1964 built the Estacion Biologica de Donana WWF bought another section of Donana in 1968 totaling 3 214 hectares and later called the Reserva Biologica de Guadiamar Guadiamar Biological Reserve 27 Saca de las Yeguas editAnother important activity of longstanding association with the park is La Saca de las Yeguas The Gathering of the Mares a livestock event pertaining to the indigenous wild horses of the salt marshes of Donana On 26 June after the Feast of St John the Baptist is celebrated mares and new foals among the marismenos are gathered in a traditional roundup 59 Other points of interest edit nbsp Acebron Palace Palacio del Acebron Acebron Palace It was built in the 1960s by Luis Espinosa Fondevilla as a residence and hunting lodge and currently serves as the park visitors centre Matalascanas Dune Park and Marine World Museum The Visitors Centre at Acebuche located in an old farmhouse is the point of departure for visits to the park It has trails and bird observatories on the lake of the same name Ice House Visitors Centre Located in Sanlucar de Barrameda in the mariners barrio neighborhood of Bajo de Guia this early 20th century former ice house has been repurposed for receiving visitors to Donana National Park Beside it is the dock for the Real Fernando a boat that takes visitors up the River Guadalquivir to the town of La Plancha where can be found marshland cabins and from which you access the Llanos de Velazquez Velazquez Flats and Llanos de la Plancha La Plancha Flats where there are natural observatories Bajo de Guia Visitors Centre Located in Sanlucar de Barrameda devised for visitors to Donana Natural Park Historic Areas of the peoples of the Comarca Region See also editList of Sites of Community Importance in Andalusia Costa de la Luz List of Spanish national parks TartessosReferences edit Donana Ramsar Sites Information Service Archived from the original on 26 May 2018 Retrieved 25 April 2018 Ministerio para la Transicion Ecologica Parque Nacional de Donana WWF April 2011 For a living planet PDF Gland Switzerland WWF World Wide Fund For Nature formerly World Wildlife Fund pp 18 19 Archived from the original PDF on June 21 2012 Retrieved 6 April 2014 A History of WWF s n 2 May 2008 El hermanamiento del Espacio Natural de Donana y la Camarga francesa permitira compartir proyectos de gestion in Spanish Terra Telefonica de Espana S A U Archived 3 August 2009 Antti Roose 2006 Managing drought and water scarcity in vulnerable environments proceedings of the 10th European seminar on the geography of water University of Tartu Institute of Geography p 32 ISBN 978 9985 4 0497 3 Luis Blas Aritio 1988 Parques nacionales espanoles Anaya p 64 ISBN 9788420729534 Visit to Donana National Park Regional Committee on Atlantic Neogene Stratigraphy Universidad de Huelva 24 26 September 2013 Archived from the original on April 6 2014 Retrieved 6 April 2014 Adolfo J Dominguez 2004 Greek Identity in the Phocaean Colonies In Brian Benjamin Shefton Kathryn Lomas eds Greek Identity in the Western Mediterranean Papers in Honour of Brian Shefton Brill pp 430 431 ISBN 90 04 13300 3 J Oliver Thomson 28 March 2013 History of Ancient Geography Cambridge University Press p 53 ISBN 978 1 107 68992 3 Michael Dietler 22 September 2015 Archaeologies of Colonialism Consumption Entanglement and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France Univ of California Press p 107 ISBN 978 0 520 28757 0 Adolf Schulten 2006 Tartessos contribucion a la historia mas antigua de Occidente Editorial Renacimiento p 12 ISBN 978 84 8472 240 3 Jorge Bonsor 2012 Tartessos El Cerro del Trigo Sonia Barja Archived from the original on February 5 2014 Schulten 2006 p 20 Madrider Mitteilungen F H Kerle 1997 p 50 Julio Mangas Manjarres Domingo Placido 1994 Avieno Editorial Complutense p 91 ISBN 978 84 89039 00 1 F Ruiz A Rodriguez Ramirez et al 2002 Cambios Paleoambientales en la desembocadura del rio Guadalquivir durante el Holoceno reciente PDF Geogaceta 32 Sociedad Geologica de Espana 167 170 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 13 Retrieved 2014 04 06 Francisco Garcia Novo Robert M M Crawford Mari Cruz Diaz Barradas 1 January 1997 The Ecology and Conservation of European Dunes Universidad de Sevilla p 109 ISBN 978 84 7405 992 2 Peter Pierson 1 January 1989 Commander of the Armada The Seventh Duke of Medina Sidonia Yale University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 300 04408 9 a b Laura Riley William Riley 1 January 2005 Nature s Strongholds The World s Great Wildlife Reserves Princeton University Press pp 417 ISBN 0 691 12219 9 Alfonso Lowe 2000 The Companion Guide to the South of Spain Companion Guides p 148 ISBN 978 1 900639 33 0 Centro de Visitantes El Acebuche a b Co founder of SEO BirdLife and saviour of Donana dies aged 89 BirdLife 2 October 2013 Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Luis Mariano Gonzalez 2012 El aguila imperial iberica el resurgir de una especie amenazada Fundacion BBVA pp 133 ISBN 978 84 92937 38 7 Elizabeth Nash 16 September 2005 Seville Cordoba and Granada A Cultural History A Cultural History Oxford University Press p 167 ISBN 978 0 19 972537 3 El Porron Observatory a b Marielle van der Zouwen 2006 Nature Policy Between Trends and Traditions Dynamics in Nature Policy Arrangements in the Yorkshire Dales Donana and the Veluwe Eburon Uitgeverij B V pp 105 108 ISBN 978 90 5972 097 8 Rafael Mendez 30 August 2010 Medio Ambiente expropia y protege 9 200 hectareas de la costa de Donana El Pais Archived from the original on December 17 2013 Retrieved 6 April 2014 waternewseurope com spain taken to court for over abstraction aquifers coto donana Water News Europe Water News Europe 20 December 2020 Retrieved 6 December 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Jones Sam 5 September 2022 Over consumption and drought reduce lake in vital Spanish wetland to puddle The Guardian Retrieved 4 May 2024 Barbotta 2024 Moreno presenta la adquisicion de Veta la Palma como garantia de la supervivencia de Donana Diario Sur in Spanish Retrieved 4 May 2024 La Junta andaluza compra 7 500 hectareas para que las aves permanezcan en Donana El Pais 2023 Los peces de Donana Discovering Donana 14 February 2010 Retrieved 9 December 2020 Iglesias Jose Antonio Sanchez 8 January 2010 Reptiles of Donana Discovering Donana Retrieved 19 July 2020 Birds in Coto Donana Easy Birder Retrieved 20 July 2020 Iglesias Jose Antonio Sanchez 21 March 2010 Mammals of Donana Discovering Donana Retrieved 20 July 2020 Frayer Lauren 9 January 2014 Rare Horses Released In Spain As Part Of Rewilding Effort NPR National Public Radio USA 9 Jan 2014 Olalla Cernuda 1 January 2007 Identifican en Donana la raza de caballos mas antigua de Europa elmundo es www elmundo es in Spanish Unidad Editorial S A Archived from the original on June 25 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2017 Free as the wind old as the hills by Samantha Kett Tuesday August 7 2007 Archived from the original on April 2 2014 Retrieved April 6 2014 Chapman Abel Walter John Buck 1893 Wild Spain London Gurney and Jackson pp 94 101 Chapman Abel Walter John Buck 1910 Unexplored Spain New York E Arnold pp 275 282 Meissner Hans Otto 1963 Unknown Europe trans Florence and Isabel McHugh London and Glasgow Blackie amp Sons pp 100 124 Morris Jan 1979 Spain Oxford Oxford University Press p 90 ISBN 978 0 19 520169 7 Francisco Garcia Novo Angel Martin Vicente Julia Toja Santillana 2007 La frontera de Donana Universidad de Sevilla pp 214 215 ISBN 978 84 472 0950 7 Diccionario de voces espanolas geograficas Academia de la Historia 1800 p 7 Noticiario arqueologico hispanico La Comisaria 1952 p 127 Jose Antonio Montero Eduardo de Juana Aranzana Fernando Barrio 2006 Where to Watch Birds in Spain The 100 Best Sites Lynx Edicions ISBN 978 84 96553 04 0 James Bryce 28 June 2013 Spanish national park could lose Unesco status over illegal boreholes The Guardian Seville Archived from the original on 8 September 2013 Retrieved 23 March 2014 Some producers in the area are accused of using illegal boreholes to draw water from underground aquifers which the fragile ecosystem is dependent on to support a wide range of species S P 10 July 2012 La Diputacion respalda el trasvase de agua del sistema Chanza Piedras Huelva Informacion Huelva Archived from the original on 23 March 2014 Retrieved 23 March 2014 Call for Spain strawberry boycott BBC News 16 3 07 How the thirst for strawberries is draining Spain s precious water The Independent 14 2 07 1 Aguilar J Dorronsoro C Fernandez E Fernandez J Garcia I Martin F Ortiz I Simon M El desastre ecologico de Aznalcollar University of Granada archived from the original on 17 March 2011 retrieved 10 October 2010 El desastre que amenazo Donana El Pais 6 October 2010 Fundacion Donana 21 presenta manana su proyecto de arroz 100 ecologico ABC Sevilla Sevilla 25 March 2010 Archived from the original on 29 January 2012 Retrieved 23 March 2014 Lucia Vallellano 20 January 2013 Autorizada la extraccion de gas en el entorno de Donana El Pais Archived from the original on 30 April 2013 Retrieved 23 March 2014 Mario Brdar Stefan Thomas Gries 2011 Cognitive Linguistics Convergence and Expansion John Benjamins Publishing p 168 ISBN 978 90 272 2386 9 Francisco Rodriguez Iglesias 2003 Proyecto Andalucia Publicaciones Comunitarias pp 125 126 ISBN 9788493155315 David Gonzalez Cruz 2000 Religiosidad y costumbres populares en Iberoamerica Universidad de Huelva p 241 ISBN 978 84 95089 49 6 J Edward De Steiguer 2011 Wild Horses of the West History and Politics of America s Mustangs University of Arizona Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 8165 2826 4 Further reading editDonana Spain s Wildlife Wilderness Juan Antonio Fernandez Taplinger Publishing Company New York 1974 hardcover 253 pages ISBN 0 8008 8324 1 Where to watch birds in Donana permanent dead link by Jorge Garzon Francisco Chiclana 2006 Published by Lynx Edicions ISBN 978 84 96553 20 0 Where to watch birds in Spain The 100 best sites permanent dead link by Jose Antonio Montero amp SEO BirdLife 2006 Published by Lynx Edicions ISBN 978 84 96553 04 0External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Donana National Park Donana Biological Station CSIC in Spanish Parque Nacional de Donana Spanish Environment Ministry in Spanish Donana National Park and Natural Park Regional Government CNN report on the 1998 spill Archived 2008 05 31 at the Wayback Machine Official UNESCO website entry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Donana National Park amp oldid 1222260288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.