ZAPATA SWAMP

Zapata Swamp as seen from space.

'Zapata Swamp' (spanish: ''Ciénaga de Zapata'') is located on the Zapata Peninsula in the southern Matanzas province of Cuba. It is located less than 100 miles southeast of Havana.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

Contents
Species and preservation
Geography
See also
References

Species and preservation


Within the Zapata Swamp are over 900 autochthonous plant species, 175 species of birds, 31 species of reptiles and over 1000 species of invertebrates. Some of the most notable are local endemics to Cuba, for birds it would include the Zapata Wren, Zapata Rail, and the Zapata Sparrow.4 The Zapata Swamp is also visited by 65 species of birds during their migration pattern from North America through the Caribbean to South America. Zapata is also known for the local endemic Cuban Crocodile ''(Crocodylus rhombifer)'' which are restricted to the Zapata Swamp and are being reintroduced to the nearby in Lanier Swamp on the Isle of Youth (Spanish: ''Isla de la Juventud'').153
Within the Zapata Swamp are numerous areas designated for preservation, such as Zapata Swamp Natural Reserve and Las Salinas wildlife sanctuary, which is part of the larger Zapata Biosphere Reserve (IUCN category VI) which in total is over 6,000 km² and the largest protected area, not only in Cuba, but also the Caribbean.987 The swamp is not only known for its size but also for being the best preserved wetlands in all of the Antilles, designated as a "Wetland of International Importance" by the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands in 1971.8 In mid-2001 an additional 4,520 km² were declared a Ramsar Site in mid-2001.10

Geography


The Zapata Swamp lies between 22°01’ and 22°40’ N latitude and between 80°33’ and 82°09’ W longitude. The swamp in total is over one million acres (4,000 km²).2 Topographically, the maximum height above sea level is only about 10 meters with the top depth in below-sea-level coastal zones as follows: 2 meters in the salt-marsh area and from 1-600 meters in the sea coastal zone. Between May and October, the warmest season of the year, average temperature is 86° Fahrenheit or 30° Celsius. Between November to April, the coldest season of the year, the temperature on average is 68 °Fahrenheit or 20 °C.5109

See also



Geography of Cuba

Protected area

Ramsar Convention

Swamp

World Conservation Monitoring Centre

References


1.
2. WTA Partners Pioneer Efforts In Cuban Wetland Conservation Jordan Levinson
3.
4. Cuba: Wild Island of the Caribbean
5. Cuba: Ciénaga de Zapata National Park
6. Cuban wetlands (NT0902) World Wildlife Fund
7. Cuba's Wild Side Steve Winter
8. Castro the Conservationist? By Default or Design, Cuba Largely Pristine
9. World Database on Protected Areas United Nations Environment Programme - World Conservation Monitoring Centre
10. World Database on Protected Areas: Ramsar United Nations Environment Programme - World Conservation Monitoring Centre


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