Doņana
is located in a unique region, serving as a bridge between the Mediterranean
Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, and between Europe and Africa. Such
a bio-geographical location determines its natural and cultural traits,
forming a varied ecological mosaic, created by the beach, live dunes,
stabilized sands, the wetlands (marismas) and the transitional area
between sands and clays, known locally as the "Vera". With
unquestionable natural values, the first thing that surprises visitors
is the enormous variety and strong contrasts of its landscape, characterized
by diverse ecosystems: the "desert" of mobile dunes contrast
with the fringing forest and the immense "lake" of marshes
or the extensive Mediterranean heathland vegetation. The
Atlantic draws the sands towards the beach; from there they are carried
by the "foreño" wind towards the inlands, forming shifting
dunes. The "cotos", which represent the park's most stable
landscape, are formed by a thick heathland, through which isolated trunks
of cork oak, arbutus, savin and wild olive-trees emerge. Refuge
to numerous species of birds due to its geographical location, the park
is a valuable hibernation site, migration route and breeding ground.
It is, in fact, the main hibernation site in Europe for various species,
such as the Ansar común. Throughout the year, some 300 species
of birds can be found in Doņana The
presence of such animals as the easily observed Spanish Imperial Eagle
and Gallinule or the duck-like animal, elusive Spanish lynx, turn Doņana
into an essential natural reserve for these species that are on the
verge of extinction. During
the 13th Century, Alfonso X, the Wise, turned Doñana into the
royal hunting reserve. Its different owners sustained it as hunting
ground until 1969, when the Doñana National Park was created. Lastly,
the mythical image of the village of El Rocío and its romería
(pilgrimage) is an added attraction to the Doņana
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