... one-third of all European vascular plant species can be found in the Carpathians? That means almost 4,000 plant species, and 481 of them are found only in the Carpathians!
… Gerlachovsky Peak (2,655 m altitude) in the High Tatras in Slovak Republic is the highest peak of the Carpathians?
… the European Union’s largest populations of brown bears, wolves, lynx, European bisons and imperial eagles (globally threatened species) are found in the Carpathians?
… 36 national parks, 51 nature parks and protected landscape areas, 19 biosphere reserves and 200 other protected areas are member of the Carpathian Network of Protected areas
… there are 36 registered UNESCO World Heritage sites and 49 important pilgrimage destinations in the Carpathian area?
… the number of hotels in the Carpathians has increased by nearly 60% in the last ten years?
… the Carpathians contain the continent's largest remaining natural mountain beech and beech/coniferous forest ecosystems and the largest area of pristine forest in Europe (outside Russia)?
... the Carpathians are the largest, most twisted and fragmented mountain chain in Europe? They are Europe’s largest mountains by area.
… in the 1970’s, about 1,000,000 people worked in the mining sector in the Carpathians? Today, the number of employees in this sector is about 340,000.
… the Carpathians were put on the WWF ‘Global 200’ list of major ecoregions in need of biodiversity and habitat conservation?
… more than half of the Carpathians are covered by forests? The Carpathian forests are a vital link between the forests of the north and those of the west and south-west of Europe.
The Conference on large carnivores’s monitoring and conservation in the Carpathians, which was organized together with the 10th Meeting of the Carpathian Convention Working Group on Biodiversity is scheduked on 25 – 28 November 2019 in Coltesti, near Cluj, Romania.
This conference took place thanks to great support of WWF Romania and the EuroLargeCarnivores and ConnectGreen projects.
The 10th Meeting of the Carpathian Convention Working Group on Biodiversity wad organized during the conference. The main objective of the WG Biodiversity meeting was further discussion on the International action plan for the conservation and sustainable management for the Carpathian populations of large carnivores. Furthermore, the meeting initiated consultation on a Strategy on identification, preservation and management of ecological corridors in the Carpathian to be developed under the ConnectGreen project.
Meeting presentations: