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Connemara National Park: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 53°33′04″N 9°56′41″W / 53.55111°N 9.94472°W / 53.55111; -9.94472
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* [http://www.npws.ie/en/NationalParks/ National Parks & Wildlife Service of Ireland]
* [http://www.npws.ie/en/NationalParks/ National Parks & Wildlife Service of Ireland]
* [http://www.connemaranationalpark.ie/ Connemara National Park ]
* [http://www.connemaranationalpark.ie/ Connemara National Park ]
* [http://www.360eire.com/360eire/Connacht/Gaillimh/BinnGhuaire/BinnGhuaire.html 360 Views from the Park]


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 20:01, 16 September 2010

Connemara National Park (Irish: Páirc Naisiúnta Chonamara) is one of six National Parks in the Republic of Ireland that are managed by the National Parks and Wildlife Service of the Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government. It is located in the west of Ireland within County Galway.

Connemara National Park
Diamond Hill in Connemara National Park
Map
LocationKillarney, Ireland
Established1980
Governing bodyNational Parks and Wildlife Service (Ireland)


History

Connemara National Park was founded and opened to the public in 1980. It features 2,957 hectares of mountains, bogs, heaths, grasslands and forests. The entrance is situated on the Clifden side of Letterfrack. There are many remnants of human civilization within the park. There is a 19th century graveyard as well as 4,000 year old megalithic court tombs. Much of the land was once part of the Kylemore Abbey estate.

Environment

Flora

Western blanket bog and heathland are the most common vegetation of Connemara National Park. The boglands are situated in the wet low lying environments whereas the blanket bog exists within the drier mountain atmosphere. Purple moorgrass is the most bountiful plant, creating colorful landscapes throughout the country side. Carnivorous plants play an important role in the park's ecosystem, the most common being sundew and butterworts trap. Bogs hold very little nutrients so many plants obtain their energy from the digestion of insects. Other common plants include lousewort, bog cotton, milkwort, bog asphodel, orchids and bog myrtle, with a variety of lichens and mosses.

Fauna

Connemara National Park is noted for its diversity of bird life. Common song birds include meadow pipits, skylarks, stonechats, chaffinches, robins and wrens. Native birds of prey include the kestrel and Eurasian Sparrowhawk with the merlin and peregrine falcon being seen less frequently. Woodcock, snipe, starling, song thrush, mistle thrush, redwing and fieldfare migrate to Connemara during the winter.

Mammals are often difficult to find, but are present nonetheless. Fieldmice are common in the woodlands, whereas rabbits, foxes, stoats, shrews, and bats at night, are often sighted in the boglands. Red deer once roamed Connemara but were extirpated from the area approximately 150 years ago. An attempt was made to reintroduce red deer to Connemara and a herd was established within the Park.[1] Nowadays, the largest mammal in the Park is the Connemara pony.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Connemara National Park. Retrieved December 31, 2006.
  2. ^ Connemara National Park. Retrieved July 16, 2010.

53°33′04″N 9°56′41″W / 53.55111°N 9.94472°W / 53.55111; -9.94472