Gibraltar Nature Reserve

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The Upper Rock

The Gibraltar Nature Reserve, formerly named the Upper Rock Nature Reserve, is a protected nature reserve in Gibraltar that covers over 40% of the territory's land area. It was established as the Upper Rock Nature Reserve in 1993 under the International Union for Conservation of Nature's category Ia strict nature reserve) and was last extended in 2013. It is known for its semi-wild population of Barbary macaques, and is an important resting point for migrating birds.

Location

Map of the reserve on the Upper Rock

The Upper Rock Nature Reserve as it was, was originally limited to the upper part of the Rock of Gibraltar, a long and narrow limestone peninsula that rises to a height of 1398 feet above the sea. From the crest of the rock are dramatic views over Spain to the north, Morrocco to the south across the Strait of Gibraltar, and over the Bay of Gibraltar and the Mediterranean. It is an area of considerable natural beauty and one of the main tourist attractions in Gibraltar.

The Upper Rock can be reached by road or by the Gibraltar Cable Car, next to the Gibraltar Botanic Gardens.[1]

Designation

The nature reserve coloured in the light shaded area

The reserve was established in 1993 to protect the area of land that the United Kingdom's Ministry of Defence had decommissioned from military use. Its purpose is to preserve the wildlife and natural and historical sites, while providing access to the public.[2] The flora and fauna of the nature reserve are protected by the law of Gibraltar.[3]

The nature reserve was last extended in 2013, at which point it was renamed the 'Gibraltar Nature Reserve' to reflect its wider scope outside the Upper Rock. The protected area now covers the Great Gibraltar Sand Dune, Windmill Hill and the Europa Foreshore.

Levant cloud forming against the eastern cliffs

Tourist attractions

The nature reserve contains many of Gibraltar's important natural history sites including caves such as St Michael's Cave, a vast limestone cave filled with impressive stalagmites and stalactites.[4] The cave was first mentioned by Pomponius Mela in 45 AD, and many sources have noted it since. It has become an important tourist attraction, and concerts are held in its main chamber.[5]

Forbes' Quarry is where the Neanderthal discovery was made in 1848. The Gibraltar 1 skull was one of the first to be found.[6] Neanderthal skulls have also been found at the Devil's Tower Cave on the North Front.[7]

The Gibraltar Heritage Trust manages conservation of the historical sites and their development as tourist attractions. These include the O'Hara's Battery, 100 Ton Gun at Napier of Magdala Battery, Heritage Centre at Princess Caroline's Battery and the Parson's Lodge Battery.[2]

Other military sites in the Reserve that are open to the public are the Moorish Castle, Devil's Gap Battery, Princess Anne's Battery, Second World War Tunnels, Great Siege Tunnels and Charles V Wall.

Other caves

The Mediterranean Steps path within the Nature Reserve leads to the Goat's Hair Twin Caves and then Spider Cave.[8] Spider Cave is a small solutional cave created from water running down the fissure below Lord Airey's Battery; this cave was widened for military use during the Second World War. Spider Cave is inhabited by the Gibraltar funnel-web spider, and formerly hosted a colony of about 100 Schreibers' bats in the 1960s, but there was no recent sign of the bats in 2005.

At the southern end of Gibraltar Nature Reserve lies a series of caves: Levant Cave, George's Bottom Cave and Gibbon's Cave. The first two caves are close together, accompanied by Tina's Fissure. Levant Cave was discovered during military tunnelling and has similar formations to New St. Michael's Cave. Gibbon's Cave was mostly destroyed due to tunnelling. George's Bottom Cave was discovered in 1965, named after George Palao, and had a boulder blocking the cave entrance which was shifted away using machinery. The passage of George's Bottom Cave is tight, requiring crawling at some points, including the entrance. Crawling is made no easier by the cave coral which together with the curtains, columns, straws, and helictites create a variety of formations. George's Bottom Cave has six descending levels and many chambers.

Flora

Gibraltar candytuft

In the past, the Upper Rock was tree-covered. Most of the trees were felled for fuel during the Great Siege of Gibraltar between 1779 and 1783.

Trees today mostly produce berries that are eaten by birds, who presumably dropped their seeds on the rock. The most common is the olive (Olea europea). Carob (Ceratonia siliqua) and nettle trees (Celtis) are also found. Trees have been planted along the paths, including the stone pine (Pinus pinea) and Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis). Both are native to the region, but the Aleppo pine is particularly common in dry, limestone regions.

A drought in the 1990s killed many of the introduced trees, but the Aleppo pine fared better than others.[9]

Gibraltar has more than six hundred species of flowering plants.[2] The maquis, or dense Mediterranean scrub, is mostly made up of tall bushes that include wild olive, Mediterranean buckthorn, lentisc, Osyris and terebinth, and smaller bushes that include shrubby scorpion vetch, spiny broom, teline, wild jasmine, shrubby germander and felty germander. The bay laurel and the dwarf fan palm are also found in parts of the maquis. Understory plants include the intermediate periwinkle, Butcher’s broom, Italian arum and Bear's breech. The firebreaks in the maquis are home to plants such as paper-white narcissus, common asphodel, giant Tangier fennel, wild gladiolus, Galactites and mallow bindweed.[10]

There are small areas of garrigue in the reserve, low scrub that includes wild rosemary, esparto grass, white asparagus, toothed lavender, cut-leaved lavender, teline, Prasium, shrubby scorpion vetch and germanders.[10]

The many cliffs around the reserve harbour joint pine, dwarf fan palm, sweet alison, Biscutella and wild parsley.[9] Distinctive plants include the Gibraltar candytuft, white Gibraltar chickweed, Gibraltar saxifrage and Gibraltar thyme. The Gibraltar campion is a very rare species found only on Gibraltar that was thought for a while to be extinct.[11]

Fauna

Barbary macaque feeding her young at the Mediterranean Steps

Mammals

Mammals include the red fox, European rabbit and mouse-eared bat. The best-known residents are the Barbary macaques that make the reserve their home.[4] Gibraltar has a reintroduced population of Barbary macaques, the only wild primate species in Europe, the famous Rock apes.[12] The macaques may be found at the Ape's Den near the middle cable-car station, at the top cable car station, and near the Great Siege Tunnels.[13] As of 2012 there were from 200 to 250 macaques, all of them living in the nature reserve.[14] It is forbidden to feed the monkeys, but these rules have not always been followed. As a result, some of them have become aggressive and dependent on food from humans. In 2008 the government ordered a group of macaques to be culled that had taken to scavenging in the town centre.[15]

Reptiles

Five species of lizard are found in the nature reserve, six snakes and an amphisbaenian. This last is a small, subterranean reptile that has no legs and no eyes. The most common lizard is the small green or brown Iberian wall lizard. The larger Algerian sand racer and the mainly nocturnal Moorish gecko are also common. Rarer lizards are the Turkish gecko and the ocellated lizard. Snakes include the horseshoe whip snake, Montpellier snake, southern smooth snake, false smooth snake, grass snake and ladder snake.[16]

Birds

Barbary partridge

The position of the Rock, a prominent headland, accumulates migrating birds during the passage periods. The vegetation on the Rock, unique in southern Iberia, provides a temporary home for many species of migratory birds that stop to rest and feed before continuing migration for their crossing over the sea and desert. In spring, they return to replenish before continuing their journeys to Western Europe, journeys which may take them as far as Greenland or Russia.

The Rock has been identified as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife International because it is a migratory bottleneck, or choke point, for an estimated 250,000 raptors that cross the Strait annually, and because it supports breeding populations of Barbary partridges and lesser kestrels.[17]

Invertebrates

There are many insects in the reserve. In the late summer, praying mantises are conspicuous, as are dragonflies crossing the strait. 33 species of butterfly have been observed, including the Cleopatra, two-tailed pasha, swallowtail, Spanish festoon and striped grayling. Moths that may be seen at times include the burnet moth, hummingbird hawkmoth, striped hawkmoth and cream-spot tiger. The most notable spider is the large, black and hairy Gibraltar funnel-web spider. The fast and aggressive Scolopendra cingulata centipede is also notable. Both the spider and the centipede have venomous but not fatal bites.[18]

Pictures

Outside links

References