Carska Bara

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carska Bara (Serbian Cyrillic: Царска бара) is the largest individual bog and one of the major nature reserves in Serbia. It is located in the Banat region of the province of Vojvodina.

Contents

[edit] Location

Carska Bara is located 17 kilometers southwest of the town of Zrenjanin, in the west-central part of the Serbian section of Banat, near the mouth of the river Begej into the Tisa. The southern border is bounded by the final, navigable section of the Begej before it empties into the Tisa (followed by the Belgrade-Zrenjanin road), while to the north are the vast Ečka fishponds, the largest in Serbia. Entire bog belongs to the municipality of Zrenjanin.

[edit] Settlements and human history

Even though it is located in the triangle of large cities Belgrade-Novi Sad-Zrenjanin (largest cities in Serbia, Vojvodina and Serbian Banat, respectivelly), all settlements in the vicinity of Carska bara are smaller ones, ranging from 1,500 to 6,000 inhabitants. The closest settlements are Perlez, in southern corner, on the Begej, and Belo Blato, east of the bog, on the southern shore of Ečka fishpond. In the north are the villages of Lukino Selo, Ečka and Stajićevo, while Knićanin is southwest of it. Town of Titel is right across the bridge on the Tisa. Gallery of the painting colony of "Ečka" is located on the northern tip of the bog.

Human history in the area surrounding Carska bara goes back to 4,000 years B.C., with uncovered mounds near Mužlja (Batka) and Titel (Kalvarija). According to legend, the bog (carska bara, Serbian for "imperial bog"), was named after Atilla the Hun, king of the Huns. [1].

[edit] Geography

The entire, physically connected wetland of Carska Bara covers an area of 11 square kilometers and the entire system consists of three smaller, connected ponds (Carska, Perleska and Tiganjica) [2]. It extends for 8 to 9 kilometers along the Begej (approximately from Begej's 4th to 15th kilometer) [3]. Wetland consists of many smaller bodies of water: rivers, canals, lakes and ponds, covered with reed beds, willow thickets and rushes and it is known for its color diversity. The central, lake section is known for its blue, clear water, while the surrounding salt marshes have white and yellow waters, all within green woods. Previously, Carska Bara consisted of smaller and larger swamps, but in time it basically turned into a complex of Begej's meanders which are naturally getting shortened and narrowed and the bog gets more and more inclined compared to the river bed.

[edit] Wildlife

[edit] Plants

Many rare and autochtone plants live in the wetland, but also many imported ones. Some representatives of the water plants include water fern, white water lilly and water farina. Meadow plants are represented by plumbago, Achillea, Absinthe wormwood, mallow and meadow sage and marsh plants by flowering rush, yellow flag iris, water mannagrass common sweet flag, etc.

[edit] Animals

In Carska Bara and nearby Begej river there are 24 different species of fish. Amphibians (fire salamander, edible frog) and reptiles (sand lizard, European pond terrapin) are also abundant.

Carska Bara is the best known for its abundant bird life, as 240 bird species live in it [4]. There are colonies of herons and cormorants (including pygmy cormorant), and other species include white-tailed eagle, buzzards, Eurasian sparrowhawks, common spoonbills, western marsh harrier, Montagu's Harrier, red-breasted goose, ferruginous duck, osprey, Wild Goose, stork, heron, woodcock etc.

Variety of mammals include wild hog, roe deer, red fox, European Brown Hare, muskrat, bats, hedgehog, mole, weasel, hamster, European ground squirrel, European polecat, etc.

[edit] Protection

Special nature reserve of Stari Begej-Carska Bara was proclaimed in 1955 , with status being revised in 1995. It covers an area of 16.76 square kilometers, wider than Carska Bara itself. [5]. It also has been declared a Ramsar site on March 25, 1996. [6].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Carska Bara (Serbian only)
  2. ^ Jovan Đ. Marković (1990): Enciklopedijski geografski leksikon Jugoslavije; Svjetlost-Sarajevo; ISBN 86-01-02651-6
  3. ^ Turističko područje Beograda, "Geokarta", 2007, ISBN 86-459-0099-8
  4. ^ Blic daily, Staništa retkih ptica, April 25, 2007
  5. ^ (2002-04-26) "Serbia heading for sustainable tourism". Serbia: Approaching the summit on sustainable development: 24, Johannesburg: Ministry of Environmental Protection of Republic of Serbia. Retrieved on 2007-07-25. 
  6. ^ List of Ramsar sites

[edit] External links

Languages