Showing posts with label forest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forest. Show all posts

The wild horses of Danube Delta

The wild horses of Danube Delta are found in and around Letea Forest, located between the Sulina and Chilia branches of Danube. About 3600 feral horses live in the Danube Delta, 2000 in the Letea Nature Reserve, where they are among the last remaining wild (feral) horses living at large on the European continent.


The horses on Letea are black or bay, without white spots. They stand between 1.45 to 1.50 metres and are of a strong build. They are of a different breed than the close by Sfântu Gheorghe breed. They are not of a riding horse build, but are built like working horses of the Nonius type.


Although feral horses have existed for hundreds of years in the region, their number greatly increased after the collective farms were closed down in 1990 and the horses belonging to them being freed. Today, the Letea population is not regulated and there are concerns that overgrazing is a looming problem. They are deemed to be a threat to the flora of the forest, including to some plants on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.


Currently, there is an ongoing project, in collaboration with the World Wide Fund for Nature, seeking to find a way to remove these horses. While some organizations object to total removal and advocate for some animals to remain, others are attempting to find a different preserve for the horses to live. (after Wikipedia)

Letea Forest

The Letea Forest ecosystem is situated in the Danube Delta Biosphere Reservation, between the Chilia and Sulina branches. It has an overall surface of 5,396 ha, out of which the integral protected area is of about 2,800 ha.


Vizualizare hartă mărită


It has been under protection since 1930 (together with the Caraorman forest), and since 1938 it has been declared a natural reservation. The Letea Forest has been included in the international UNESCO biosphere reservations network at the 4th Session of the International Council for the Coordination of the Man and Biosphere Program (MAB), Paris, November 1979. Only research and documentation activities are allowed inside the integral protected area, while keeping in focus the uniqueness of the forest ecosystem, with century old oak, poplars and ash trees raised on fluvial-maritime sandy islands having phreatic water at the soil surface or near by, and with more than 100 mammal, bird, reptile, amphibian and invertebrate protected species.


In less than half an hour of a trip by carriage though meadows with tall vegetation one can reach one of the strangest and most original forests in Romania and even in the world. The Letea forest has a particular type of vegetation. It was formed in successive stages on the first strip of sand dunes, which separated the old shore of the Danube from the sea. The depressions between the dunes are covered in woody vegetation, which makes the forest look like a series of 10 to 250 meter wide strips, orientated to the north-south, known under the Turkish name of hasmac. In the background of the valleys that have been heavily flooded, among reeds, cattails and flowering rush, there are willows, poplars, the so-called fluffy ash, which in the less humid background is the only tree to be seen. The margins of the valleys and the dunes with smaller heights were covered in various species of ash, elm, and more seldom, the lime tree and the black alder tree. The hollow spaces between the trees are filled by a subspecies of bushes which cannot be penetrated, made of a great variety of shrubs: harvest mite, barberry, briar, privet, Cornelian cherry, dogwood, alder buckthorn, common buckthorn, sheepberry, seldom the walnut tree. A luxurious vegetation of creeping plants grows around the trunks and the tallest branches of the secular trees: wild vine, silk vine, hop, traveler’s joy or old man’s beard; they all make the forest resemble a rain forest. Hundreds of species of animals live in the thickets of the luxurious vegetation: insects, grasshoppers (many praying mantes), frogs, numerous snakes (most of them non-venomous except for the viper) and wild horses. The ornithofauna is dominated by warblers, flycatchers, rollers, blue tits, stock doves, which are all hunted, just like the small rodents, by many birds of prey: the rough-legged buzzard, falcon, red-footed falcon, hobby, merlin, kite, white-tailed eagle or spotted eagle.


Letea Forest is Europe’s most northern outpost of the Mediterranean-Balkan flora and fauna. Out of the 300 species identified in this forest, two are of special importance. First, Fraxinus pallisae. It was discovered here for the first time and then it was labeled as a new species by the English botanist Wilmott in 1913. The impression that Letea is a tropical forest is given in particular by Periploca graeca, the northernmost Mediterranean chord in Europe in this subtropical refuge. It has the shape of a thin, 20 to 25 m long tendril, with dark-red bark, simple, glossy leaves, and a round corolla. It is often cultivated in parks to form shadowy thickets.