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Kavkazskiy Biosphere Reserve, Russian Federation

This biosphere reserve is located in the southernmost European part of the Russian Federation and covers mountain ranges of the western part of the Greater Caucasus. The designated area comprises a variety of natural ecosystems, about 80% of ecosystem types of the Great Caucasus.

Designation date: 1978

Networks

Regional network:  EuroMAB

Ecosystem-based network: 

  

    Description

    Map

    Surface : 295,700 ha 

    • Core area(s): 247,000 ha
    • Buffer zone(s): 16,200 ha
    • Transition zone(s): 32,500

    Location: 43°30' to 44°05'N; 39°40' to 40°50'E

    Administrative Authorities

    Valeriy Aleksandrovich Brinikh
    Kavkazskiy Zapovednik
    Adlerskiy district, Sochi city, 8, Karl Marx Street
    354340 Krasnodarskiy Krai
    Russian Federation

    Tel.: +7 (862-2) 44 52 65
    Email: adlerzap@sochi.ru

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    Ecological Characteristics

    The Biosphere Reserve represents distinctive ecological belts that change with altitude from subtropics up to glacial and nival zones and offers a high species endemism. Within the biosphere reserve two biogeographical provinces meet which increases species diversity: the northern slopes belong to the Kuban biogeographical province and the southern slopes to the Colchic province. The faunistic diversity is rich, including for example the leopard (Panthera pardus ciscaucasica), brown bear (Ursus arctos), lynx (Felis lynx) and Caucasian deer (Cervus elaphus moral).

     

     

    Socio-Economic Characteristics

    The history of the human occupation of this region can be traced back about 500 thousand years since archaeologists have found more than 150 sites of the ancient people (e.g. Neanderthal man) in the area. For many centuries the territory has been largely uninfluenced by human activities. Only more recently there has only been little impact of logging, grazing, hunting, tourism and recreation around the core area. The majority of the biosphere reserve (247,000 of 295,700 hectares) is strictly protected. Some 200 farmers live in the buffer zone and transition area (1997). However, about 40,000-50,000 tourists (1997) come annually in the biosphere reserve.

     

     

    Back to Biosphere Reserves in Russian Federation
    Back to Biosphere Reserves in Europe & North America
    Back to World Network of Biosphere Reserves

    Last updated: May 2019