Ciénagas del Catatumbo National Park

The Ciénagas del Catatumbo National Park[1] (Spanish: Parque nacional Ciénagas del Catatumbo)[2] Also Catatumbo Marshes National Park or Ciénagas de Juan Manuel National Park Is a protected area.[3] of Venezuela.[4]

Ciénagas del Catatumbo National Park
Parque nacional Ciénagas de Juan Manuel
IUCN category II (national park)
Location
Location Venezuela
Coordinates9°31′N 72°19′W
Area2,261 km2 (873 sq mi)
EstablishedJune 5, 1991 (1991-06-05)

The park is the second natural park of the Zulia state.[5] It includes a segment of the Catatumbo moist forests ecoregion.[6] It is located in the wide plain between the Serranía del Perija and Maracaibo Lake. The temperature ranges from 22 degrees to 32 degrees, with a very high humidity. The area is known throughout the country by a strange magnetic phenomenon, it is an unusually frequent electric discharge that falls on the plain and does not give thunder.

The area comprises a wide swamp between the plains of western Zulia and the lake of Maracaibo, which also covers a small stretch of coast in the south-western area. It is predominantly a large boggy territory, with no prominent peaks or large unevenness or isometric variations, at the mouth of the Catatumbo River. It is also known in Venezuela as Aguas Blancas and Aguas Negras or Ciénagas de Juan Manuel. In the vicinity there is the fluvial port of Foundados, important logistic internodo of the lake of Maracaibo and of south-western Venezuela.

See also

View during a storm

References

  1. Parque nacional Ciénagas del Catatumbo
  2. Santibáñez, Hernán Torres (1998-01-01). La diversidad biológica y su conservación en América del Sur (in Spanish). Unión Mundial para la Naturaleza, Comisión de Supervivencia de Especies. ISBN 9789978404201.
  3. Memoria y cuenta (in Spanish). Ministerio del Ambiente y de los Recursos Naturales Renovables. 1994-01-01.
  4. Guía ecoturística de Venezuela (in Spanish). Miro Popić Editor C.A. 1998-01-01.
  5. Rojas, Miguel Aguilera (2001-01-01). Venezuela y sus parques nacionales (in Spanish). Litografía Tecnocolor.
  6. "Catatumbo moist forests", Global Species, Myers Enterprises II, retrieved 2017-04-21
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