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Nature park Ulcinj Salina-Ramasar site (Montenegro)
Resource ID
4f532eaa-24cd-11eb-a589-0a580a810257
Title
Nature park Ulcinj Salina-Ramasar site (Montenegro)
Date
Nov. 12, 2020, 9:56 a.m., Publication
Abstract
The Site on the Adriatic coast, close to the border with Albania, is the largest salina (saltpan) in the Adriatic. It was built in the 1930s, and salt production stopped in 2013. The Site is divided into several areas which had different purposes in the salt production process, such as crystallization and evaporation. They are now mostly covered by grassland, halophyte vegetation and reeds. Ulcinj Salina is the most important wintering, nesting and feeding site for birds on the eastern coast of the Adriatic and a key stopover site for birds migrating on the Adriatic Flyway. Overall, 252 bird species have been recorded in the Site, 20 of them globally threatened. In addition, one endangered amphibian (Albanian water frog), one reptile (European pond turtle) and one mammal (European otter) are present. Due to the stopping of salt production, the Site is at risk of losing the halophyte vegetation, which would be substituted with more common vegetation types, negatively affecting the biodiversity which it supports.
Edition
--
Owner
JPMDCG
Point of Contact
Purpose
--
Maintenance Frequency
None
Type
vector_polygon
Restrictions
None
License
License not specified
Language
eng
Temporal Extent
Start
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End
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Supplemental Information
Ramsar Information Sheet available as PDF, same as site boundaries. Public data. Zipped SHP for site boundaries also available. Ministry of Sustainable Development and Tourism of Montenegro (MORT)
Data Quality
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Extent
  • x0: 19.249069591988400
  • x1: 19.334651582683800
  • y0: 41.905333518820500
  • y1: 41.938726901722100
Spatial Reference System Identifier
EPSG:4326
Keywords
no keywords
Category
International Protected Areas (marine and coastal)
Regions
Europe , Montenegro