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Pirin National Park

Pirin National Park (Bulgarian: Национален парк "Пирин"), originally named Vihren National Park, encompasses the larger part of the Pirin Mountains in southwestern Bulgaria, spanning an area of 403.56 square kilometers (155.82 sq mi).

Pirin National Park
A typical landscape featuring lakes and marble peaks
LocationBlagoevgrad Province, Bulgaria
Nearest cityBansko
Coordinates41°40′N 23°30′E / 41.667°N 23.500°E / 41.667; 23.500
Area403.56 km2 (155.82 sq mi)
Established1962
Governing bodyMinistry of Environment and Water
CriteriaNatural: (vii), (viii), (ix)
Reference225bis
Inscription1983 (7th Session)
Extensions2010
Area38,350.04 ha (94,765.0 acres)
Buffer zone1,078.28 ha (2,664.5 acres)
Websitewww.pirin.bg

It is one of the three national parks in the country, the others being Rila National Park and Central Balkan National Park. The park was established in 1962 and its territory was expanded several times since then. Pirin National Park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983. The elevation varies from 950 meters (3,120 ft) to 2,914 meters (9,560 ft) at Vihren, Bulgaria's second highest summit and the Balkans' third.

The park is situated in Blagoevgrad Province, the nation's southwesternmost region, on the territory of seven municipalities: Bansko, Gotse Delchev, Kresna, Razlog, Sandanski, Simitli, and Strumyani. There are no populated places within its territory. Two nature reserves are located within the boundaries of Pirin National Park: Bayuvi Dupki–Dzhindzhiritsa and Yulen. Bayuvi Dupki–Dzhindzhiritsa is among the oldest in Bulgaria, established in 1934 and is included in the World Network of Biosphere Reserves under the UNESCO Man and Biosphere Programme.[1] The whole territory is part of the network of nature protection areas of the European Union, Natura 2000.

Pirin is renowned for its 118 glacial lakes, the largest and the deepest of them being Popovo Lake. Many of them are situated in cirques. There are also a few small glaciers, such Snezhnika, located in the deep Golemiya Kazan cirque at the steep northern foot of Vihren, and Banski Suhodol. They are the southernmost glaciers in Europe.

Pirin National Park falls within the Rodope montane mixed forests terrestrial ecoregion of the Palearctic temperate broadleaf and mixed forest. Forests cover 57.3 percent of the parks area and almost 95 percent of them are coniferous forests. The average age of the forests is 85 years. Bulgaria's oldest tree, Baikushev's pine, is located in the park. With an approximate age of about 1,300 years, it is a contemporary of the foundation of the Bulgarian state in 681 CE. The fauna of the Pirin National Park is diverse and includes 45 species of mammals, 159 species of birds, 11 species of reptiles, 8 species of amphibia, and 6 species of fish.

History and park administration edit

Pirin National Park was established on 18 November 1962 in order to preserve the natural ecosystems and landscapes along with their plant and animal communities and habitats.[2][3] Originally named Vihren National Park, the protected area initially covered 67.36 km2. Its territory was expanded several times until it reached its current area of 403.56 km2 in 1999.[3][4] In 1983, Pirin National Park was added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites as an area of outstanding natural importance.[5] By the Constitution of Bulgaria, the park is exclusively state-owned.[6]

According to the classification of the International Union for Conservation of Nature the park falls within management category II (national park) with main objective protecting functioning ecosystems while allowing human visitation and its supporting infrastructure. The entire territory of the park is included in the European Union network of nature protection areas Natura 2000.[7] Pirin National Park is listed as an important bird and biodiversity area by BirdLife International.[8]

Pirin National Park is managed by a directorate subordinated to the Ministry of Environment and Water of Bulgaria based in the town of Bansko at the northern foothills of the mountain. As of 2004, the park administration had 92 employees.[9][10] There are two visitor and information centres located in Bansko and Sandanski.[11][12] The park is divided in six sectors: Bayuvi Dupki with office in Razlog,[13] Vihren with office in Bansko,[14] Bezbog with office in Dobrinishte,[15] Trite Reki and Kamenitsa, both with office in Sandanski,[16][17] and Sinanitsa with office in Kresna.[18]

Geography edit

Overview edit

 
Dautov Vrah in summer

Pirin National Park encompasses much of the homonymous mountain range in southwestern Bulgaria, which forms part of the RilaRhodope Massif.[19] To the north it is divided from the Rila mountain range by the Predel Saddle and mountain pass at 1140 m elevation, to the east reaches the valley of the river Mesta, including the Razlog Valley, to the south the Paril Saddle (1170 m) forms the border with the Slavyanka mountain range, and to the west reaches the valley of the river Struma.[19][20] The park is situated entirely in Blagoevgrad Province in the municipalities of Bansko (36.6% of the park's territory), Gotse Delchev (4.9%), Kresna (14.9%), Razlog (10.2%), Sandanski (30.7%), Simitli (2.3%) and Strumyani (0.4%).[21]

Relief and geology edit

The tectonics of the Pirin is primarily the result of Precambrian, Hercynian, alpine and tectonic movements and events. The modern relief of Pirin was shaped in the Pleistocene (2,588,000 to 11,700 years ago) when the mountain was subjected to alpine glaciation related to the global cooling. This glaciation passed in parallel with that of the Alps.[22] The limits of the glaciers reached 2200–2300 m. All glacial forms in the mountain range are within the borders of Pirin National Park.[22]

The Pirin mountain range is divided into three sections: northern, middle and southern, with the northern one being the highest and containing all glacial formations and lakes. The park covers the northern section, itself divided into two zones.[20] The northern zone consists of the steep marble Vihren ridge with the three highest summits in the mountain: Vihren (2914 m), Kutelo (2908 m) and Banski Suhodol (2884 m), as well as the ridge Koncheto (2810 m).[20][23] The southern zone consists of granite ridges and includes Pirin's fourth highest summit Polezhan, at 2851 m.[24] There are more around 60 summits above 2600 m.[22]

 
A winter view featuring the highest summit Vihren

The relief of Pirin National Park is alpine and highly fragmented and is characterized with steep slopes, high ridges and deep river valleys. The highest point is Vihren at an elevation of 2914 m, the second highest summit in Bulgaria and the third one in the Balkan Peninsula, while the lowest elevation in the park is at 950 m near Bansko.[25] Nearly 60% of the park's area is situated above 2000 m. The distribution of the territory of the park by elevation is as follows: up to 1000 m – 1.64 km2 (0.4%), 1000–1600 m – 51.09 km2 (12.7%); 1600–2000 m – 121.08 km2 (30.0%); 2000–2500 m – 198.31 km2 (49.1%); above 2500 m – 31.45 km2 (7.8%).[25] The inclination of the park's territory is steep — more than 90% the total area is classified as steep (21–30°) or very steep (above 31°).[26]

Geologically Pirin is a massive anticline formed by metamorphic rocks — gneiss, biotite and crystalline schists, amphibolite, quartzite and marble.[27][28] Paleozoic granitoid rocks are found in restricted areas in the outskirts of Pirin National Park. Granitoid rocks from the Upper Cretaceous form two distinct plutons: Northern Pirin and Bezbog. The Central Pirin pluton covers the southern reaches of the park and is dated to the Upper Oligocene. The granitoid rocks cover 55% of the park's territory.[27]

Climate edit

 
Sunset over the Tevno Vasilashko Lake, the largest and deepest of the Vasilashki Lakes

Pirin falls within the continental Mediterranean climate zone and due to its elevation the higher sectors have Alpine climate. The climate is influenced by Mediterranean cyclones mainly in late autumn and in winter, bringing frequent and high rainfall, and by the Azores anticyclone in summer, making the summer months hot and dry.[29] The relief has a crucial influence on the climate. Pirin has three elevation climate zones — low between 600 and 1000 m (16% of the total area), middle between 1000 and 1800 m (40%) and high above 1800 m (44%).[29] The temperature decreases with the elevation, which is more visible in summer. The mean annual temperature is around 9–10 °C in the lower, 5–7 °C in the middle and 2–3 °C in the higher elevation.[29] The coldest month is January with average temperature varying between −5 and −2 °C. The hottest month is July with temperature averaging 20 °C at 1600 m and 15 °C at 2000 m.[29] Temperature inversions, i.e. increase in temperature with height, are observed in 75% of the winter days.[29]

The annual precipitation is 600–700 mm in the lower elevation zones and 1000–1200 mm in the higher ones.[29] The rainfall occurs mostly in winter and spring, while summer is driest season. The air humidity is 60–75% in August and 80–85 % in December.[30] In winter the precipitation is mainly snow, varying from 70–90% at the lower elevations to 100% at higher.[31] The average number of days with snow cover varies from 20–30 to 120–160. The highest thickness of the snow cover reaches 40–60 cm at 1000–1800 m in February and 160–180 cm above 1800 m in March (190 cm on Vihren).[30] In some winters the snow thickness can reach 250–350 cm.[30] Avalanches occur frequently in winter.[32]

Hydrology edit

 
Muratovo Lake and Todorka Summit
 
Kamenitsa Summit from Tevnoto Lake

The territory of Pirin National Park is almost equally divided between the basins of the rivers Struma (206.06 km2 or 51.1%) and Mesta (197.50 km2 or 48.9%). The watershed follows the main ridge of the mountain in direction north-west to south-east.[33] Pirin is the source of 10 tributaries to the Struma, the largest one being Sandanska Bistritsa, and another 10 to the Mesta.[34] The rivers are short, steep and with high water volume. They form numerous waterfalls which are generally not as high as those in Rila or the Balkan Mountains. The highest one is Popinolashki waterfall, measuring some 12 m. The average annual discharge of the park's rivers is 355,6 million m3, of them 188,5 million m3 flow to the Struma and 167,1 million m3 to the Mesta.[34] The discharge from the park per square kilometre is 2.3 times larger than Pirin's average and 5.6 times larger than Bulgaria's average.[34]

The landscape is dotted with 118 permanent glacial lakes, conventionally divided into 17 groups, such as Popovo Lakes, Kremenski Lakes, Banderishki Lakes, Vasilashki Lakes, Valyavishki Lakes, Chairski Lakes, Vlahini Lakes or Tipitski Lakes.[34] The largest of them is Popovo Lake with 123,600 m2, which makes it Bulgaria's fourth largest glacial lake. With a depth of 29.5 m, it is also Pirin's deepest lake and Bulgaria's second.[34] Situated at an elevation of 2710 m the Upper Polezhan Lake is the highest one in the mountain and in the country.

Another remnant from the last Ice Age are two small glaciers. Snezhnika is located in the deep Golemiya Kazan cirque at the steep northern foot of Vihren and is the southernmost glacier in Europe.[35] Banski Suhodol Glacier is larger and situated a bit to the north below Koncheto Ridge.[36]

Biology edit

Ecosystems and forests edit

 
A Bulgarian fir in Pirin

Pirin National Park falls within the Rodope montane mixed forests terrestrial ecoregion of the Palearctic temperate broadleaf and mixed forest.[37] The plant communities in the park can be classified into several main groups: communities found around bodies of water; bush communities of the subalpine zone; grasslands, including meadows, subalpine and alpine pastures; forest communities; rock communities; and communities of secondary character, which are a result of human activity.[38]

Forests cover 231.10 km2 or 57.3% of the park's total area. Of them 95% are coniferous forests and 5% are deciduous forests.[39][40] The mean age of the forest is 85 year. Around 34.3% of the wooded territory is covered with trees above 140 years.[38] The oldest tree in Bulgaria, the 1300–year Baikushev's pine of the species Bosnian pine (Pinus heldreichii), is found in the park and is a contemporary of the foundation of the Bulgarian state in 681 AD.[40]

There are 16 tree species; of them three are Balkan endemic taxa with limited areal — the Bulgarian fir (Abies borisii-regis), Macedonian pine (Pinus peuce) and Bosnian pine (Pinus heldreichii). The largest area is occupied by dwarf mountain pine (Pinus mugo) – 59.62 km2, Macedonian pine (Pinus peuce) – 54.15 km2, Norway spruce (Picea abies) – 23.79 km2, European beech (Fagus sylvatica) – 10.98 km2 and Bosnian pine – 8.93 km2.[39] The Macedonian and the Bosnian pines in Pirin National Park constitute respectively 42% and 52% of their total area in Bulgaria.[39]

Flora edit

 
Pirin poppy (Papaver degenii) is one of the park's endemic species.

The flora of the park is diverse and is characterized with high endemism due to the combination of southern geographic latitude and high elevational variation.[41] The varied relief creates various ecological environments for plants, further diversified by the dominant rock types which form siliceous and calcareous terrain on the territory of the park. Lakes and streams also diversify the conditions creating wetland habitats for hygrophyte species.[42][43]

Non-vascular plants constitute the least researched part of Pirin's flora.[43] The least studied of them are the algae with 165 species, including two endemics.[42][43] The largest concentration of algae species is found in Popovo and Kremenski lake groups.[42] The Bryophytes, including mosses, are represented by 329 known species.[42][43] The number of lichen species is 367, or 52% of Bulgaria's total diversity. Of them 209 species are found in the coniferous forests and 156 — on calcareous terrain.[44]

The vascular plants in Pirin National Park include 1315 species of 94 families and 484 genera, or approximately 1/3 of Bulgaria's flora.[43][45] The flora has largely preserved its indigenous character.[43] The number of vascular plant species is expected to grow in case of future detailed research, especially at lower elevations.[46] The species are divided almost equally to representatives of the sub-Mediterranean and Circumboreal floristic regions.[45] The number of species included in the Red Book of Bulgaria is 114.[45] There are 18 species endemic to the park and another 17 are restricted only to Bulgaria, which makes a total of 35 Bulgarian endemic species.[43][45] The park is also home to 86 Balkan endemic species.[45]

The endemic species restricted to the park are: Pirin poppy (Papaver degenii), Pirin meadow-grass (Poa pirinica), Urumov oksitropis (Oxytropis urumovii), Kozhuharov oksitropis (Oxytropis kozhuharovii), Banderishka lady's mantle (Alchemilla bandericensis), Pirin lady's mantle (Alchemilla pirinica), Kelererova asineuma (Asyneuma kellerianum), Pirin sandwort (Arenaria pirinica), Pirin sedge (Carex pirinensis), Pirin fleabane (Erigeron vichrensis), David mullein (Verbascum davidoffii), lesser Pirin fescue (Festuca pirinica), Pirin hogweed (Heracleum angustisectum), Yavorkova rattle (Rhinanthus javorkae), Pirin thyme (Thymus perinicus), Daphne domini, Daphne velenovskyi.[43]

Fauna edit

 
Boreal owl

The vertebrate fauna of Pirin National Park consists of 229 species. The number of mammal species is 45.[47][48] The distribution of the mammalian species by order is as follows: Insectivora – 5, Chiroptera – 16, Lagomorpha – 3, Rodentia – 7, Carnivora – 9 and Artiodactyla – 4.[47] The European snow vole is a relict species.[49] Among the species of highest conservation value are brown bear, gray wolf, wildcat, European pine marten, wild boar, red deer, roe deer and Balkan chamois.[50] The small mammals, especially rodents and bats, are not fully studied in the whole territory of the park.

The total number of bird species is 159.[48][51] Of them 91, or 57%, are passerine.[52] Three species are relict — boreal owl, white-backed woodpecker and Eurasian three-toed woodpecker.[52] The park's rarest residents are lesser spotted eagle with a single nesting pair,[53] booted eagle, golden eagle with 2 to 5 pairs,[53] short-toed snake eagle with two pairs,[54] saker falcon, peregrine falcon with three pairs,[54] western capercaillie, hazel grouse, rock partridge, corn crake, Eurasian woodcock and stock dove.[55]

There are 11 reptile and 8 amphibian species.[51][56] There are Central European species (fire salamander, yellow-bellied toad, smooth snake), Palearctic (common toad, European green toad, common frog), Euro-Siberian (European tree frog, common European viper, grass snake, viviparous lizard), Irano-Turanian (marsh frog), Southern European (agile frog), Euro-Mediterranean (European green lizard), Mediterranean (common wall lizard) and Balkan (Erhard's wall lizard).[57]

 
A typical habitat in Pirin

The ichthyofauna includes 6 fish species: common minnow, European eel (considered extinct), western vairone, brown trout, rainbow trout and brook trout. The limited number of species is determined by the high elevation of the park. The glacial lakes, streams and upper river courses are inhabited by few fish species.[58] The western vairone is known only from the Kremenski lakes and might in fact represent a new undescribed species.[59]

The number of identified invertebrate species in Pirin National Park is 2091, which is 40% of the estimated 4500 species to inhabit the park.[60] They are poorly researched and there is not enough data to assess the qualitative and quantitative parameters even of the main populations of endemic and relict species.[60] There are 218 endemic, 176 relict and rare 294 species.[48]

The Araneae are represented by 321 species, or 35% of Bulgaria's total. The spiders prefer the north-eastern slopes and are most diverse in the coniferous forests.[61] There are 36 species of Myriapoda, or 20% of Bulgaria's total. They are distributed mainly in the forests and are less frequent in the sub-Alpine and the Alpine zones.[61] The Mollusca are 89 species and represent 27% of the nation's total (excluding the marine molluscs).[62] Only 2% of Bulgaria's Ephemeroptera are found in the park — two species.[61] The number of Orthopterida species is 63, or around 30% of the nation's total. The highest diversity is found in the valleys of the rivers Banderitsa and Damyanitsa.[61] The Plecoptera are represented by 40 species, forming 40% of Bulgaria's diversity.[61] There are 323 Heteroptera species, or 32% of the ones known in Bulgaria. They are most diverse in the northern parts of the park, in the Bayuvi Dupki–Dzhindzhiritsa Reserve.[61] The Coleoptera are 639 species and this number it is estimated to raise to 1800–1900.[61] The Neuropterida are 25 species, or 20% of Bulgaria's total diversity.[61] There are 36 Hymenoptera species, found mainly at lower elevations.[62] The Trichoptera are 59 species, or 24% of Bulgaria's total.[62] The Lepidoptera are 449, including 116 butterflies and 333 moths.[62] Some of the most spectacular butterflies are the mountain Apollo (Parnassius apollo), clouded Apollo (Parnassius mnemosyne), false Eros blue (Polyommatus eroides), mountain Alcon blue (Phengaris rebeli), large blue (Phengaris arion), scarce tortoiseshell (Nymphalis xanthomelas), Titania's fritillary (Boloria titania), eastern large heath (Coenonympha rhodopensis), Cynthia's fritillary (Euphydryas cynthia), etc.[56]

Recreation edit

 
The park's most challenging hiking trail runs along the top of Koncheto ridge.

Pirin National Park is a popular tourist destination. The park's main information center is in Bansko and houses an interactive exhibit on the park's forests, allowing visitors to acquaint themselves with facts about the park's vegetation and wildlife. There is also a 30-seat projection room with multimedia equipment.[63] As of 2002 on the territory of the park there were 1837 beds, including 885 in mountain refuges, 214 in hotels, 124 in bungalows and 615 in premises belonging to different departments of the state administration.[64] Some of the refuges include Bezbog, the largest and most modern one; Banderitsa, constructed in 1915 by order of Tsar Ferdinand I of Bulgaria, and Vihren.[65][66]

There are 20 marked hiking trails in the park.[65] Trail No. 1 is part of the E4 European long distance path and crosses the park following the itinerary Predel Refuge–Yavorov Refuge–Vihren Refuge–Tevno Lake–Pirin Refuge–Popov Grasslands.[63][65] The most challenging hiking trail follows the top of the Koncheto ridge at an elevations of approximately 2,810 m, between the peaks Banski Suhodol (2,884 m) and Kutelo (2,908 m). The north-western side of Koncheto is almost vertical and 300–400 m deep, while the south-western side is less steep (approximately 30 degrees) but reaches 800 m in depth.

Development and Environmental Risks edit

There are many factors which threaten the ecosystems in the park. Rock quarries, wildland arson, industrial and illegal logging, poaching, excessive trail use, vehicle access, and most notably the ski resorts have put the park under significant threat.

There has been a steady development of skiing infrastructure since the early nineties along the northeast of the range, most notably in the town of Bansko, which has become an international winter resort. In 2003, a large forested portion of the Todorka peak and the nearby ridges were cleared to begin the construction of the resort which today has 13 ski lifts and 75 km of slopes. The expansion of the resort took place even though the park legislature strictly forbids such activity in the park's limits. Since the building started, Bansko has experienced severe flooding of the Glazne river, due to the intervention.

In December 2017, the Bulgarian government, without warning changed the legislature of the park so that commercial logging and construction of roads and buildings within 50% the park is made legal. This sparked a wave of protests against the continuous tampering with the world heritage site, which have continued throughout February and March 2018.[67] The protests were supported by Ska Keller who is vice-president of the Greens/EFA group in the European Parliament.[68] In November 2017, the World Wide Fund for Nature and other local NGOs filed a lawsuit against the Bulgarian Ministry of the Environment and Water as they deemed that plans for development of the area violated environmental regulations.[69]

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Doupki-Djindjiritza Biosphere Reserve". Official Site of UNESCO. from the original on 19 August 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  2. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 32
  3. ^ a b "Register of the Protected Territories and Zones in Bulgaria". Official Site of the Executive Environment Agency of Bulgaria. from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  4. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 14 September 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  5. ^ "Pirin National Park". Official Site of UNESCO. from the original on 22 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  6. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 36
  7. ^ "Pirin" (PDF). Natura 2000 Standard Data Form. (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  8. ^ "Pirin". BirdLife International. from the original on 4 April 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  9. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 38
  10. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  11. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 12 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  12. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  13. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  14. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  15. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  16. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  17. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  18. ^ . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  19. ^ a b Donchev & Karakashev 2004, p. 127
  20. ^ a b c Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 52
  21. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 30–32
  22. ^ a b c Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 55
  23. ^ Donchev & Karakashev 2004, pp. 127–128
  24. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 52–53
  25. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 54
  26. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 54–55
  27. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 53
  28. ^ Donchev & Karakashev 2004, pp. 128–129
  29. ^ a b c d e f Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 50
  30. ^ a b c Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 51
  31. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 50–51
  32. ^ Donchev & Karakashev 2004, p. 130
  33. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 57–58
  34. ^ a b c d e Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 58
  35. ^ Grunewald & Scheithauer 2010, p. 129
  36. ^ Gachev 2011, pp. 49, 63
  37. ^ "Rodope montane mixed forests". Official site of WWF. from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  38. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 64
  39. ^ a b c Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 68
  40. ^ a b . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 14 September 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  41. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 73–74
  42. ^ a b c d Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 74
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 14 September 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  44. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 75
  45. ^ a b c d e Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 76
  46. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 77
  47. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 91
  48. ^ a b c . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 19 October 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  49. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 92
  50. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 92–94
  51. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 85
  52. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 86
  53. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 87
  54. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 88
  55. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, pp. 87–90
  56. ^ a b Perry 2010, p. 189
  57. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 147
  58. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 84
  59. ^ Freyhof, J.; Kottelat, M. (2008). "Telestes souffia". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008: e.T61397A12461824. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T61397A12461824.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  60. ^ a b Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 81
  61. ^ a b c d e f g h Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 82
  62. ^ a b c d Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 83
  63. ^ a b "Pirin National Park". Official Tourism Portal of Bulgaria. from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  64. ^ Dimitrova & al 2004, p. 100
  65. ^ a b c . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 15 October 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  66. ^ . Bulgarian Tourism Union. Archived from the original on 1 May 2017. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  67. ^ "Thousands in Bulgaria Protest Against Mountain Construction Plans". Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  68. ^ "Green leader Ska Keller to join Sofia protests". bulgarianpresidency.eu. 6 February 2018. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
  69. ^ "WWF turns to Bulgarian court to save Pirin National Park". WWF. 16 November 2017. Retrieved 28 March 2018.

Sources edit

References edit

  • Димитрова (Dimitrova), Людмила (Lyudmila) (2004). Pirin National Park. Management Plan (Национален парк "Пирин". План за управление) (in Bulgarian). и колектив. София (Sofia): Ministry of Environment and Water, Bulgarian Foundation "Biodiversity".
  • Дончев (Donchev), Дончо (Doncho); Каракашев (Karakashev), Христо (Hristo) (2004). Теми по физическа и социално-икономическа география на България (Topics on Physical and Social-Economic Geography of Bulgaria) (in Bulgarian). София (Sofia): Ciela. ISBN 954-649-717-7.
  • Perry, Julian (2010). Walking in Bulgaria's National Parks. Cicerone. ISBN 978-1-85284-574-2.
  • Gachev, Emil (2011). "Inter-annual size variations of Snezhnika Glacieret (the Pirin Mountains, Bulgaria) in the last ten years" (PDF). Studia Geomorphologica Carpatho-Balcanica. XLV. Polish Academy of Sciences: 47–68. ISSN 0081-6434. Retrieved 9 July 2016.
  • Grunewald, Karsten; Scheithauer, Jörg (2010). (PDF). Journal of Glaciology. 56 (195). International Glaciological Society: 129–142. doi:10.3189/002214310791190947. ISSN 0022-1430. S2CID 130305078. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2016.

External links edit

  • . Official Site of Pirin National Park. Archived from the original on 10 January 2016. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  • "Pirin National Park". Official Site of UNESCO. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  • "Pirin National Park". Official Tourism Portal of Bulgaria. Retrieved 15 February 2021.

pirin, national, park, bulgarian, Национален, парк, Пирин, originally, named, vihren, national, park, encompasses, larger, part, pirin, mountains, southwestern, bulgaria, spanning, area, square, kilometers, iucn, category, national, park, typical, landscape, f. Pirin National Park Bulgarian Nacionalen park Pirin originally named Vihren National Park encompasses the larger part of the Pirin Mountains in southwestern Bulgaria spanning an area of 403 56 square kilometers 155 82 sq mi Pirin National ParkIUCN category II national park A typical landscape featuring lakes and marble peaksLocationBlagoevgrad Province BulgariaNearest cityBanskoCoordinates41 40 N 23 30 E 41 667 N 23 500 E 41 667 23 500Area403 56 km2 155 82 sq mi Established1962Governing bodyMinistry of Environment and WaterUNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaNatural vii viii ix Reference225bisInscription1983 7th Session Extensions2010Area38 350 04 ha 94 765 0 acres Buffer zone1 078 28 ha 2 664 5 acres Websitewww wbr pirin wbr bgIt is one of the three national parks in the country the others being Rila National Park and Central Balkan National Park The park was established in 1962 and its territory was expanded several times since then Pirin National Park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983 The elevation varies from 950 meters 3 120 ft to 2 914 meters 9 560 ft at Vihren Bulgaria s second highest summit and the Balkans third The park is situated in Blagoevgrad Province the nation s southwesternmost region on the territory of seven municipalities Bansko Gotse Delchev Kresna Razlog Sandanski Simitli and Strumyani There are no populated places within its territory Two nature reserves are located within the boundaries of Pirin National Park Bayuvi Dupki Dzhindzhiritsa and Yulen Bayuvi Dupki Dzhindzhiritsa is among the oldest in Bulgaria established in 1934 and is included in the World Network of Biosphere Reserves under the UNESCO Man and Biosphere Programme 1 The whole territory is part of the network of nature protection areas of the European Union Natura 2000 Pirin is renowned for its 118 glacial lakes the largest and the deepest of them being Popovo Lake Many of them are situated in cirques There are also a few small glaciers such Snezhnika located in the deep Golemiya Kazan cirque at the steep northern foot of Vihren and Banski Suhodol They are the southernmost glaciers in Europe Pirin National Park falls within the Rodope montane mixed forests terrestrial ecoregion of the Palearctic temperate broadleaf and mixed forest Forests cover 57 3 percent of the parks area and almost 95 percent of them are coniferous forests The average age of the forests is 85 years Bulgaria s oldest tree Baikushev s pine is located in the park With an approximate age of about 1 300 years it is a contemporary of the foundation of the Bulgarian state in 681 CE The fauna of the Pirin National Park is diverse and includes 45 species of mammals 159 species of birds 11 species of reptiles 8 species of amphibia and 6 species of fish Contents 1 History and park administration 2 Geography 2 1 Overview 2 2 Relief and geology 2 3 Climate 2 4 Hydrology 3 Biology 3 1 Ecosystems and forests 3 2 Flora 3 3 Fauna 4 Recreation 5 Development and Environmental Risks 6 See also 7 Citations 8 Sources 8 1 References 8 2 External linksHistory and park administration editPirin National Park was established on 18 November 1962 in order to preserve the natural ecosystems and landscapes along with their plant and animal communities and habitats 2 3 Originally named Vihren National Park the protected area initially covered 67 36 km2 Its territory was expanded several times until it reached its current area of 403 56 km2 in 1999 3 4 In 1983 Pirin National Park was added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites as an area of outstanding natural importance 5 By the Constitution of Bulgaria the park is exclusively state owned 6 According to the classification of the International Union for Conservation of Nature the park falls within management category II national park with main objective protecting functioning ecosystems while allowing human visitation and its supporting infrastructure The entire territory of the park is included in the European Union network of nature protection areas Natura 2000 7 Pirin National Park is listed as an important bird and biodiversity area by BirdLife International 8 Pirin National Park is managed by a directorate subordinated to the Ministry of Environment and Water of Bulgaria based in the town of Bansko at the northern foothills of the mountain As of 2004 the park administration had 92 employees 9 10 There are two visitor and information centres located in Bansko and Sandanski 11 12 The park is divided in six sectors Bayuvi Dupki with office in Razlog 13 Vihren with office in Bansko 14 Bezbog with office in Dobrinishte 15 Trite Reki and Kamenitsa both with office in Sandanski 16 17 and Sinanitsa with office in Kresna 18 Geography editOverview edit nbsp Dautov Vrah in summerPirin National Park encompasses much of the homonymous mountain range in southwestern Bulgaria which forms part of the Rila Rhodope Massif 19 To the north it is divided from the Rila mountain range by the Predel Saddle and mountain pass at 1140 m elevation to the east reaches the valley of the river Mesta including the Razlog Valley to the south the Paril Saddle 1170 m forms the border with the Slavyanka mountain range and to the west reaches the valley of the river Struma 19 20 The park is situated entirely in Blagoevgrad Province in the municipalities of Bansko 36 6 of the park s territory Gotse Delchev 4 9 Kresna 14 9 Razlog 10 2 Sandanski 30 7 Simitli 2 3 and Strumyani 0 4 21 Relief and geology edit The tectonics of the Pirin is primarily the result of Precambrian Hercynian alpine and tectonic movements and events The modern relief of Pirin was shaped in the Pleistocene 2 588 000 to 11 700 years ago when the mountain was subjected to alpine glaciation related to the global cooling This glaciation passed in parallel with that of the Alps 22 The limits of the glaciers reached 2200 2300 m All glacial forms in the mountain range are within the borders of Pirin National Park 22 The Pirin mountain range is divided into three sections northern middle and southern with the northern one being the highest and containing all glacial formations and lakes The park covers the northern section itself divided into two zones 20 The northern zone consists of the steep marble Vihren ridge with the three highest summits in the mountain Vihren 2914 m Kutelo 2908 m and Banski Suhodol 2884 m as well as the ridge Koncheto 2810 m 20 23 The southern zone consists of granite ridges and includes Pirin s fourth highest summit Polezhan at 2851 m 24 There are more around 60 summits above 2600 m 22 nbsp A winter view featuring the highest summit VihrenThe relief of Pirin National Park is alpine and highly fragmented and is characterized with steep slopes high ridges and deep river valleys The highest point is Vihren at an elevation of 2914 m the second highest summit in Bulgaria and the third one in the Balkan Peninsula while the lowest elevation in the park is at 950 m near Bansko 25 Nearly 60 of the park s area is situated above 2000 m The distribution of the territory of the park by elevation is as follows up to 1000 m 1 64 km2 0 4 1000 1600 m 51 09 km2 12 7 1600 2000 m 121 08 km2 30 0 2000 2500 m 198 31 km2 49 1 above 2500 m 31 45 km2 7 8 25 The inclination of the park s territory is steep more than 90 the total area is classified as steep 21 30 or very steep above 31 26 Geologically Pirin is a massive anticline formed by metamorphic rocks gneiss biotite and crystalline schists amphibolite quartzite and marble 27 28 Paleozoic granitoid rocks are found in restricted areas in the outskirts of Pirin National Park Granitoid rocks from the Upper Cretaceous form two distinct plutons Northern Pirin and Bezbog The Central Pirin pluton covers the southern reaches of the park and is dated to the Upper Oligocene The granitoid rocks cover 55 of the park s territory 27 Climate edit nbsp Sunset over the Tevno Vasilashko Lake the largest and deepest of the Vasilashki LakesPirin falls within the continental Mediterranean climate zone and due to its elevation the higher sectors have Alpine climate The climate is influenced by Mediterranean cyclones mainly in late autumn and in winter bringing frequent and high rainfall and by the Azores anticyclone in summer making the summer months hot and dry 29 The relief has a crucial influence on the climate Pirin has three elevation climate zones low between 600 and 1000 m 16 of the total area middle between 1000 and 1800 m 40 and high above 1800 m 44 29 The temperature decreases with the elevation which is more visible in summer The mean annual temperature is around 9 10 C in the lower 5 7 C in the middle and 2 3 C in the higher elevation 29 The coldest month is January with average temperature varying between 5 and 2 C The hottest month is July with temperature averaging 20 C at 1600 m and 15 C at 2000 m 29 Temperature inversions i e increase in temperature with height are observed in 75 of the winter days 29 The annual precipitation is 600 700 mm in the lower elevation zones and 1000 1200 mm in the higher ones 29 The rainfall occurs mostly in winter and spring while summer is driest season The air humidity is 60 75 in August and 80 85 in December 30 In winter the precipitation is mainly snow varying from 70 90 at the lower elevations to 100 at higher 31 The average number of days with snow cover varies from 20 30 to 120 160 The highest thickness of the snow cover reaches 40 60 cm at 1000 1800 m in February and 160 180 cm above 1800 m in March 190 cm on Vihren 30 In some winters the snow thickness can reach 250 350 cm 30 Avalanches occur frequently in winter 32 Hydrology edit nbsp Muratovo Lake and Todorka Summit nbsp Kamenitsa Summit from Tevnoto LakeThe territory of Pirin National Park is almost equally divided between the basins of the rivers Struma 206 06 km2 or 51 1 and Mesta 197 50 km2 or 48 9 The watershed follows the main ridge of the mountain in direction north west to south east 33 Pirin is the source of 10 tributaries to the Struma the largest one being Sandanska Bistritsa and another 10 to the Mesta 34 The rivers are short steep and with high water volume They form numerous waterfalls which are generally not as high as those in Rila or the Balkan Mountains The highest one is Popinolashki waterfall measuring some 12 m The average annual discharge of the park s rivers is 355 6 million m3 of them 188 5 million m3 flow to the Struma and 167 1 million m3 to the Mesta 34 The discharge from the park per square kilometre is 2 3 times larger than Pirin s average and 5 6 times larger than Bulgaria s average 34 The landscape is dotted with 118 permanent glacial lakes conventionally divided into 17 groups such as Popovo Lakes Kremenski Lakes Banderishki Lakes Vasilashki Lakes Valyavishki Lakes Chairski Lakes Vlahini Lakes or Tipitski Lakes 34 The largest of them is Popovo Lake with 123 600 m2 which makes it Bulgaria s fourth largest glacial lake With a depth of 29 5 m it is also Pirin s deepest lake and Bulgaria s second 34 Situated at an elevation of 2710 m the Upper Polezhan Lake is the highest one in the mountain and in the country Another remnant from the last Ice Age are two small glaciers Snezhnika is located in the deep Golemiya Kazan cirque at the steep northern foot of Vihren and is the southernmost glacier in Europe 35 Banski Suhodol Glacier is larger and situated a bit to the north below Koncheto Ridge 36 Biology editEcosystems and forests edit nbsp A Bulgarian fir in PirinPirin National Park falls within the Rodope montane mixed forests terrestrial ecoregion of the Palearctic temperate broadleaf and mixed forest 37 The plant communities in the park can be classified into several main groups communities found around bodies of water bush communities of the subalpine zone grasslands including meadows subalpine and alpine pastures forest communities rock communities and communities of secondary character which are a result of human activity 38 Forests cover 231 10 km2 or 57 3 of the park s total area Of them 95 are coniferous forests and 5 are deciduous forests 39 40 The mean age of the forest is 85 year Around 34 3 of the wooded territory is covered with trees above 140 years 38 The oldest tree in Bulgaria the 1300 year Baikushev s pine of the species Bosnian pine Pinus heldreichii is found in the park and is a contemporary of the foundation of the Bulgarian state in 681 AD 40 There are 16 tree species of them three are Balkan endemic taxa with limited areal the Bulgarian fir Abies borisii regis Macedonian pine Pinus peuce and Bosnian pine Pinus heldreichii The largest area is occupied by dwarf mountain pine Pinus mugo 59 62 km2 Macedonian pine Pinus peuce 54 15 km2 Norway spruce Picea abies 23 79 km2 European beech Fagus sylvatica 10 98 km2 and Bosnian pine 8 93 km2 39 The Macedonian and the Bosnian pines in Pirin National Park constitute respectively 42 and 52 of their total area in Bulgaria 39 Flora edit nbsp Pirin poppy Papaver degenii is one of the park s endemic species The flora of the park is diverse and is characterized with high endemism due to the combination of southern geographic latitude and high elevational variation 41 The varied relief creates various ecological environments for plants further diversified by the dominant rock types which form siliceous and calcareous terrain on the territory of the park Lakes and streams also diversify the conditions creating wetland habitats for hygrophyte species 42 43 Non vascular plants constitute the least researched part of Pirin s flora 43 The least studied of them are the algae with 165 species including two endemics 42 43 The largest concentration of algae species is found in Popovo and Kremenski lake groups 42 The Bryophytes including mosses are represented by 329 known species 42 43 The number of lichen species is 367 or 52 of Bulgaria s total diversity Of them 209 species are found in the coniferous forests and 156 on calcareous terrain 44 The vascular plants in Pirin National Park include 1315 species of 94 families and 484 genera or approximately 1 3 of Bulgaria s flora 43 45 The flora has largely preserved its indigenous character 43 The number of vascular plant species is expected to grow in case of future detailed research especially at lower elevations 46 The species are divided almost equally to representatives of the sub Mediterranean and Circumboreal floristic regions 45 The number of species included in the Red Book of Bulgaria is 114 45 There are 18 species endemic to the park and another 17 are restricted only to Bulgaria which makes a total of 35 Bulgarian endemic species 43 45 The park is also home to 86 Balkan endemic species 45 The endemic species restricted to the park are Pirin poppy Papaver degenii Pirin meadow grass Poa pirinica Urumov oksitropis Oxytropis urumovii Kozhuharov oksitropis Oxytropis kozhuharovii Banderishka lady s mantle Alchemilla bandericensis Pirin lady s mantle Alchemilla pirinica Kelererova asineuma Asyneuma kellerianum Pirin sandwort Arenaria pirinica Pirin sedge Carex pirinensis Pirin fleabane Erigeron vichrensis David mullein Verbascum davidoffii lesser Pirin fescue Festuca pirinica Pirin hogweed Heracleum angustisectum Yavorkova rattle Rhinanthus javorkae Pirin thyme Thymus perinicus Daphne domini Daphne velenovskyi 43 Fauna edit nbsp Boreal owlThe vertebrate fauna of Pirin National Park consists of 229 species The number of mammal species is 45 47 48 The distribution of the mammalian species by order is as follows Insectivora 5 Chiroptera 16 Lagomorpha 3 Rodentia 7 Carnivora 9 and Artiodactyla 4 47 The European snow vole is a relict species 49 Among the species of highest conservation value are brown bear gray wolf wildcat European pine marten wild boar red deer roe deer and Balkan chamois 50 The small mammals especially rodents and bats are not fully studied in the whole territory of the park The total number of bird species is 159 48 51 Of them 91 or 57 are passerine 52 Three species are relict boreal owl white backed woodpecker and Eurasian three toed woodpecker 52 The park s rarest residents are lesser spotted eagle with a single nesting pair 53 booted eagle golden eagle with 2 to 5 pairs 53 short toed snake eagle with two pairs 54 saker falcon peregrine falcon with three pairs 54 western capercaillie hazel grouse rock partridge corn crake Eurasian woodcock and stock dove 55 There are 11 reptile and 8 amphibian species 51 56 There are Central European species fire salamander yellow bellied toad smooth snake Palearctic common toad European green toad common frog Euro Siberian European tree frog common European viper grass snake viviparous lizard Irano Turanian marsh frog Southern European agile frog Euro Mediterranean European green lizard Mediterranean common wall lizard and Balkan Erhard s wall lizard 57 nbsp A typical habitat in PirinThe ichthyofauna includes 6 fish species common minnow European eel considered extinct western vairone brown trout rainbow trout and brook trout The limited number of species is determined by the high elevation of the park The glacial lakes streams and upper river courses are inhabited by few fish species 58 The western vairone is known only from the Kremenski lakes and might in fact represent a new undescribed species 59 The number of identified invertebrate species in Pirin National Park is 2091 which is 40 of the estimated 4500 species to inhabit the park 60 They are poorly researched and there is not enough data to assess the qualitative and quantitative parameters even of the main populations of endemic and relict species 60 There are 218 endemic 176 relict and rare 294 species 48 The Araneae are represented by 321 species or 35 of Bulgaria s total The spiders prefer the north eastern slopes and are most diverse in the coniferous forests 61 There are 36 species of Myriapoda or 20 of Bulgaria s total They are distributed mainly in the forests and are less frequent in the sub Alpine and the Alpine zones 61 The Mollusca are 89 species and represent 27 of the nation s total excluding the marine molluscs 62 Only 2 of Bulgaria s Ephemeroptera are found in the park two species 61 The number of Orthopterida species is 63 or around 30 of the nation s total The highest diversity is found in the valleys of the rivers Banderitsa and Damyanitsa 61 The Plecoptera are represented by 40 species forming 40 of Bulgaria s diversity 61 There are 323 Heteroptera species or 32 of the ones known in Bulgaria They are most diverse in the northern parts of the park in the Bayuvi Dupki Dzhindzhiritsa Reserve 61 The Coleoptera are 639 species and this number it is estimated to raise to 1800 1900 61 The Neuropterida are 25 species or 20 of Bulgaria s total diversity 61 There are 36 Hymenoptera species found mainly at lower elevations 62 The Trichoptera are 59 species or 24 of Bulgaria s total 62 The Lepidoptera are 449 including 116 butterflies and 333 moths 62 Some of the most spectacular butterflies are the mountain Apollo Parnassius apollo clouded Apollo Parnassius mnemosyne false Eros blue Polyommatus eroides mountain Alcon blue Phengaris rebeli large blue Phengaris arion scarce tortoiseshell Nymphalis xanthomelas Titania s fritillary Boloria titania eastern large heath Coenonympha rhodopensis Cynthia s fritillary Euphydryas cynthia etc 56 Recreation edit nbsp The park s most challenging hiking trail runs along the top of Koncheto ridge Pirin National Park is a popular tourist destination The park s main information center is in Bansko and houses an interactive exhibit on the park s forests allowing visitors to acquaint themselves with facts about the park s vegetation and wildlife There is also a 30 seat projection room with multimedia equipment 63 As of 2002 on the territory of the park there were 1837 beds including 885 in mountain refuges 214 in hotels 124 in bungalows and 615 in premises belonging to different departments of the state administration 64 Some of the refuges include Bezbog the largest and most modern one Banderitsa constructed in 1915 by order of Tsar Ferdinand I of Bulgaria and Vihren 65 66 There are 20 marked hiking trails in the park 65 Trail No 1 is part of the E4 European long distance path and crosses the park following the itinerary Predel Refuge Yavorov Refuge Vihren Refuge Tevno Lake Pirin Refuge Popov Grasslands 63 65 The most challenging hiking trail follows the top of the Koncheto ridge at an elevations of approximately 2 810 m between the peaks Banski Suhodol 2 884 m and Kutelo 2 908 m The north western side of Koncheto is almost vertical and 300 400 m deep while the south western side is less steep approximately 30 degrees but reaches 800 m in depth Development and Environmental Risks editThere are many factors which threaten the ecosystems in the park Rock quarries wildland arson industrial and illegal logging poaching excessive trail use vehicle access and most notably the ski resorts have put the park under significant threat There has been a steady development of skiing infrastructure since the early nineties along the northeast of the range most notably in the town of Bansko which has become an international winter resort In 2003 a large forested portion of the Todorka peak and the nearby ridges were cleared to begin the construction of the resort which today has 13 ski lifts and 75 km of slopes The expansion of the resort took place even though the park legislature strictly forbids such activity in the park s limits Since the building started Bansko has experienced severe flooding of the Glazne river due to the intervention In December 2017 the Bulgarian government without warning changed the legislature of the park so that commercial logging and construction of roads and buildings within 50 the park is made legal This sparked a wave of protests against the continuous tampering with the world heritage site which have continued throughout February and March 2018 67 The protests were supported by Ska Keller who is vice president of the Greens EFA group in the European Parliament 68 In November 2017 the World Wide Fund for Nature and other local NGOs filed a lawsuit against the Bulgarian Ministry of the Environment and Water as they deemed that plans for development of the area violated environmental regulations 69 See also edit nbsp Bulgaria portal nbsp Europe portal nbsp Ecology portal nbsp Environment portalGeography of Bulgaria Pirin List of protected areas of Bulgaria List of mountains in Bulgaria List of World Heritage Sites in BulgariaCitations edit Doupki Djindjiritza Biosphere Reserve Official Site of UNESCO Archived from the original on 19 August 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2016 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 32 a b Register of the Protected Territories and Zones in Bulgaria Official Site of the Executive Environment Agency of Bulgaria Archived from the original on 10 October 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Pirin National Park History Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Pirin National Park Official Site of UNESCO Archived from the original on 22 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 36 Pirin PDF Natura 2000 Standard Data Form Archived PDF from the original on 10 October 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Pirin BirdLife International Archived from the original on 4 April 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 38 Pirin National Park Home Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 11 September 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Pirin National Park Visitor and Information Centre Bansko Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 12 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Pirin National Park Visitor and Information Centre Sandanski Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Bayuvi Dupki Sector Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Vihren Sector Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Bezbog Sector Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Trite Reki Sector Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Kamenitsa Sector Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Sinanitsa Sector Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 a b Donchev amp Karakashev 2004 p 127 a b c Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 52 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 30 32 a b c Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 55 Donchev amp Karakashev 2004 pp 127 128 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 52 53 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 54 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 54 55 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 53 Donchev amp Karakashev 2004 pp 128 129 a b c d e f Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 50 a b c Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 51 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 50 51 Donchev amp Karakashev 2004 p 130 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 57 58 a b c d e Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 58 Grunewald amp Scheithauer 2010 p 129 Gachev 2011 pp 49 63 Rodope montane mixed forests Official site of WWF Archived from the original on 10 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 64 a b c Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 68 a b Pirin National Park Forests Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 73 74 a b c d Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 74 a b c d e f g h Pirin National Park Flora Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 75 a b c d e Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 76 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 77 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 91 a b c Pirin National Park Fauna Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 19 October 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 92 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 92 94 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 85 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 86 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 87 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 88 Dimitrova amp al 2004 pp 87 90 a b Perry 2010 p 189 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 147 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 84 Freyhof J Kottelat M 2008 Telestes souffia IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008 e T61397A12461824 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2008 RLTS T61397A12461824 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 81 a b c d e f g h Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 82 a b c d Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 83 a b Pirin National Park Official Tourism Portal of Bulgaria Archived from the original on 10 October 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Dimitrova amp al 2004 p 100 a b c Pirin National Park Hiking Trails Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 15 October 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Vihren Refuge Bulgarian Tourism Union Archived from the original on 1 May 2017 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Thousands in Bulgaria Protest Against Mountain Construction Plans Retrieved 12 February 2018 Green leader Ska Keller to join Sofia protests bulgarianpresidency eu 6 February 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2018 WWF turns to Bulgarian court to save Pirin National Park WWF 16 November 2017 Retrieved 28 March 2018 Sources editReferences edit Dimitrova Dimitrova Lyudmila Lyudmila 2004 Pirin National Park Management Plan Nacionalen park Pirin Plan za upravlenie in Bulgarian i kolektiv Sofiya Sofia Ministry of Environment and Water Bulgarian Foundation Biodiversity Donchev Donchev Doncho Doncho Karakashev Karakashev Hristo Hristo 2004 Temi po fizicheska i socialno ikonomicheska geografiya na Blgariya Topics on Physical and Social Economic Geography of Bulgaria in Bulgarian Sofiya Sofia Ciela ISBN 954 649 717 7 Perry Julian 2010 Walking in Bulgaria s National Parks Cicerone ISBN 978 1 85284 574 2 Gachev Emil 2011 Inter annual size variations of Snezhnika Glacieret the Pirin Mountains Bulgaria in the last ten years PDF Studia Geomorphologica Carpatho Balcanica XLV Polish Academy of Sciences 47 68 ISSN 0081 6434 Retrieved 9 July 2016 Grunewald Karsten Scheithauer Jorg 2010 Europe s southernmost glaciers response and adaptation to climate change PDF Journal of Glaciology 56 195 International Glaciological Society 129 142 doi 10 3189 002214310791190947 ISSN 0022 1430 S2CID 130305078 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pirin National Park Pirin National Park Official Site of Pirin National Park Archived from the original on 10 January 2016 Retrieved 25 June 2016 Pirin National Park Official Site of UNESCO Retrieved 25 June 2016 Pirin National Park Official Tourism Portal of Bulgaria Retrieved 15 February 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pirin National Park amp oldid 1186836069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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