San Rafael National Park | |
Alt Name: | Parque Nacional San Rafael |
Iucn Category: | II |
Map: | Paraguay |
Relief: | yes |
Nearest City: | Itapúa Department, Paraguay |
Coordinates: | -26.4584°N -55.6974°W |
Designation: | National park |
Created: | 1992 |
Administrator: | none |
San Rafael National Park (Spanish; Castilian: Parque Nacional San Rafael) is a proposed national park in Paraguay covering an area of Atlantic Forest, grasslands, and wetlands. Though it was declared in 1992 that the area was to be reserved as a national park, no further steps have been taken to formalize its status. The area is under threat both from large-scale farming and from small slash-and-burn farmers.
The San Rafael National Park is divided between the Itapúa and Caazapá departments. It has an area of . The park is in the upper Tebicuary River basin, in the San Rafael Hills. Elevations are from 100to. The park would be part of the proposed Trinational Biodiversity Corridor, which aims to provide forest connections between conservation units in Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina in the Upper Paraná ecoregion.
The park was declared an "Area Reserved for a National Park" in 1992, with an area of . All of the land is privately owned, leading to disputes over the designation, and in 2002 the area was declared a "managed resources reserve". This is equivalent to the IUCN protected area category VI. The 2002 change was reversed in 2005. A decision regarding whether the park will formally be declared either a national park or a managed resources reserve is still pending. The NGO Guyra Paraguay has purchased of land in the park, which it manages as a protected area.
Temperatures range from 17to, with the hottest period in October–April and the coolest period in May–September. Average annual rainfall is . Rain falls throughout the year, but the wettest months are October–February.
The park covers an area of Alto Paraná Lowland Atlantic Forest, a particularly threatened type of forest in the Atlantic Forest biome. San Rafael is in a region of transition from tall, humid forests in the Paraná River basin to lower, drier forests in the Paraguay River basin. About 80% of the area is forest-covered. It also has broad stretches of natural grasslands and wetlands in the northern part of Paraguay's mesopotamian grasslands.
Mammals include the jaguar (Panthera onca) and the South American tapir (Tapirus terrestris). The park is home to four globally threatened large mammals. Over 400 species of birds have been identified in the park, the greatest number of any site in Paraguay. Twelve of the species are globally threatened, including the vinaceous-breasted amazon (Amazona vinacea) and black-fronted piping guan (Pipile jacutinga). The park holds important populations of helmeted woodpecker (Celeus galeatus), russet-winged spadebill (Platyrinchus leucoryphus), cock-tailed tyrant (Alectrurus tricolor) and saffron-cowled blackbird (Xanthopsar flavus).
As of 2016, there was no effective forest management. The soil is fertile, and there is pressure to allow the park area to be turned over to soya farming. From 1989 onward, the forest has been steadily cleared, and grassland has been converted for use as pasture or farmland. As of 2007, more than 22% of the original area had been drastically modified. The region is threatened by large-scale intensive agriculture, unsustainable slash-and-burn agriculture, and fires. Only a tenuous link now connects San Rafael to the Caazapá National Park.