Serra do Mar State Park
The Serra do Mar State Park (Portuguese: Parque Estadual da Serra do Mar) is a state park in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. It covers 315,000 hectares (780,000 acres) of the Serra do Mar mountain range, and is one of the largest remaining areas of continuous Atlantic Forest. The State Park stretches from the border of Rio de Janeiro to Itariri in the southern part of São Paulo.
Serra do Mar State Park | |
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Parque Estadual da Serra do Mar | |
Nearest city | Praia Grande, São Paulo |
Coordinates | 23°58′05″S 46°39′00″W |
Area | 332,000 hectares (820,000 acres) |
Designation | State park |
Created | 1977 |
Administrator | Fundação Florestal |
Location
The Serra do Mar State Park was created in 1977 when the BR-101 coastal highway was built, and expanded in 2010. With an area of 332,000 hectares (820,000 acres) in 25 municipalities it is the largest Atlantic Forest protected area in Brazil. The park contains some traditional communities of quilombolas, Amerindians, caipiras and caiçaras. It connects the Serra do Mar forests of Rio de Janeiro to the Vale do Ribeira and Paraná. The escarpments of the park dominate the coast of São Paulo.[1] It is part of the 221,754 hectares (547,970 acres) Bocaina Mosaic, created in 2006.[2]
Conservation
The Serra do Mar State Park is managed by the Forestry Foundation of São Paulo, which is linked to the São Paulo Secretariat of State for the Environment. The forest provides refuge to hundreds of species of birds and other animals. The park protects water sources that supply part of the São Paulo metropolitan region, Baixada Santista, Litoral Norte, and the Paraíba Valley. It also helps moderate the climate and maintain the stability of the slopes.[1]
References
Sources
- Mosaico de Unidades de Conservação da Bocaina - SP e RJ (PDF) (in Portuguese), RBMA, retrieved 2016-09-22
- Sobre o Parque Estadual Serra do Mar (in Portuguese), Fundação Florestal, retrieved 2016-06-12