Overview
Divjakë-Karavasta National Park is a major Adriatic wetland landscape with lagoon, pine forest, beaches, marshes and salt flats.
Why Protected
It is protected for wetland biodiversity, bird habitat, coastal pine forest and Ramsar-recognized international importance.
Biodiversity
Official tourism sources describe the park as over 22,000 hectares and part of the Ramsar Convention list, with lagoons, coastal pine forest, sandy beaches, marshes and salt flats.
History and Community
The park is connected to fishing, local food traditions, coastal community life, research, nature tourism and bird watching.
Current Threats
Tourism pressure, illegal activities, water quality, waste, development pressure and habitat disturbance should be tracked carefully.
Tourism pressure, water quality, waste and habitat disturbance
Documents Needed
Ramsar documentation, bird-monitoring reports, water-quality data, tourism-pressure studies and management plans.
- Ramsar documentation
- bird-monitoring reports
- water-quality data
- tourism-pressure studies and management plans.
If you have any of these documents, submit them for review. All official records help verify and strengthen this area file.
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