Amazing Patricia ;) And you know that I also live in Kruszwica
22.08.2016I live in Kruszwica
15.04.2014Nadgoplański Park Tysiąclecia was established in 1967. It occupies an area of 12,638.76 hectares, of which 2,313.76 hectares are under reserve protection and the landscape protection of pozopermanent part. The NPT was established to preserve numerous breeding sites for waterfowl, as well as to safeguard the historical values of the Nadgopla River related to the beginnings of the Polish state and to protect the natural features of the environment and the peculiarities of the landscape. Nadgoplański Park Tysiąclecia is an area of arable fields, meadows and pastures, forests, swamps, reed beds and other wastelands, as well as Lake Gopło and Lake Skulskie. The vegetation found here is rich and varied. To date, about 770 plant species have been inventoried, and among them are halophytes - or saltmarsh plants, or xerothermic or thermophilous plants. Yellow patches of sharp-pointed buttercup, orchid - marsh crushed orchid, willow-leaved oman, Thurnian hemlock, woolly woolly plant, ragged phirlox, umbellifer's joint, European creeper, marsh gentian or white water lily are just a few of the interesting species found in the NPT. The area of the park is one of the most valuable breeding grounds for water and marsh birds in Poland. The coot, grebe, mallard and goose are most numerous on the Gople River. In the reed communities of the Gopło, seven species are among the dominant ones. These are the reed warbler, great crested grebe, coot, pothos, mallard, reed warbler and buckthorn. Several highly endangered species, which are included in the Polish Red Book of Animals, nest on the Gople and in its immediate vicinity. These include the bittern, goldeneye, dotterel, green warbler, marsh harrier, white-tailed eagle, whiskered warbler, and white stork. From the category of endangered species, we should mention first of all the red-breasted grebe, little bittern, crake, platypus, hawk, marsh harrier, aquatic warbler, river plover, black tern streamer, common pochard and others. From the list of globally endangered species, two species listed in the world Red Book have been recorded in Nadgopel: the white stork and the white-tailed eagle, as well as 21 species endangered in Europe. Birds of prey can also be found in the NPT. The most numerous are the marsh harrier and buzzard. Kestrel, hobuz, white-tailed eagle, pigeon harrier, and sparrowhawk nest regularly but in small numbers.
Marta - 11.02.2009