List of largest protected areas in the world

Contents

Largest Protected Areas of the World

Park Name Country Park Size (square kilometres)2 Date of Inscription
Northeast Greenland National Park Greenland 927,000[1] 1974
Chagos Marine Protected Area British Indian Ocean Territory/Chagos Archipelago (British Overseas Territory) 545,000[2] 2010
Phoenix Islands Protected Area Kiribati (Phoenix Islands) 408,250[3] 2008
Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument United States (Hawaii and the Midway Atoll) 360,000[4] 2006
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Australia 345,400[5] 1975
Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia, Zimbabwe 287,132[6] 2010***
Galapagos Marine Reserve Ecuador (Galapagos Islands) 133,000 1986
Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park Mozambique, South Africa, Zimbabwe 99,800[7] 2002
Air and Ténéré Natural Reserves Niger 77,360 1991
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park United States (Alaska) 53,321 1980
Central Kalahari Game Reserve Botswana 52,800 1961
Wood Buffalo National Park Canada (Alberta and Northwest Territories) 44,807 1922
Selous Game Reserve Tanzania 44,600 1922
Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve United States(Alaska) 39,460 1980
Tumucumaque National Park Brazil 38,874 2002
Quittinirpaaq National Park Canada (Nunavut) 37,775 2001
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park Botswana, South Africa 37,256[8] 2000
Bernardo O'Higgins National Park Chile 35,259 1969
Guiana Amazonian Park French Guiana 33,900 2007
Nahanni National Park Reserve Canada (Northwest Territories) 30,000 1976
Noatak National Preserve United States (Alaska) 26,587 1978
Boucle du Baoulé National Park Mali 25,330 1982
Denali National Park and Preserve United States (Alaska) 24,585 1917
Kafue National Park Zambia 22,400 1924
Sirmilik National Park Canada (Nunavut) 22,200 2001
Kluane National Park Canada (Yukon) 22,013 1972
Auyuittuq National Park Canada (Nunavut) 21,471 2001
Tsavo National Park Kenya 20,812 1948
Ukkusiksalik National Park Canada (Nunavut) 20,500 2003
Ruaha National Park Tanzania 20,200 1964
Katmai National Park and Preserve United States (Alaska) 19,122 1980
Laguna San Rafael National Park Chile 17,420 1959
Salonga National Park Democratic Republic of the Congo 17,046 1984
Maloti-Drakensberg Transfrontier Conservation Area Lesotho, South Africa 16,226[9] 2001
Tuktut Nogait National Park Canada (Northwest Territories) 16,340 1996
Lake Clark National Park and Preserve United States (Alaska) 16,309 1980
Manu National Park Peru 15,328 1987
Iona National Park Angola 15,150 1964
Serengeti National Park Tanzania 14,763 1981
Hwange National Park Zimbabwe 14,651 1930
Alberto de Agostini National Park Chile 14,600 Date needed
Okapi Wildlife Reserve Democratic Republic of the Congo 14,000 1996
Death Valley National Park United States (California) 13,630 1933
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve United States (Alaska) 13,287 1980
Fiordland National Park New Zealand 12,500 1952
Aulavik National Park Canada (Northwest Territories) 12,200 1992
Banc d'Arguin National Park Mauritania 12,000 1978
Vatnajökull National Park Iceland 12,000 2008
Upemba National Park Democratic Republic of the Congo 11,730 1939
Wapusk National Park Canada (Manitoba) 11,475 1996
Bering Land Bridge National Preserve United States (Alaska) 10,922 1978
Jasper National Park Canada (Alberta) 10,878 1907
Maiko National Park Democratic Republic of the Congo 10,830 1970
Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve United States (Alaska) 10,220 1978
Ivvavik National Park Canada (Yukon) 10,168 1984
W Transborder Park Benin, Burkina Faso, Niger 10,000 1954
Quiçama National Park Angola 9,960 1957
Torngat Mountains National Park Canada (Labrador and Newfoundland) 9,600 2005
Laponian Area - UNESCO World Heritage Site Sweden (Lapland) 9,400[10] 1996
Misty Fjords National Monument United States (Alaska) 9,246 1978
South Luangwa National Park Zambia 9,050 1972
Yellowstone National Park United States (Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming) 8,983 1872
Ngorongoro Conservation Area Tanzania 8,288 1959
Tadres Reserve Niger 7,889 Date needed
Virunga National Park Democratic Republic of the Congo 7,800 1925
Kakadu National Park Australia 7,646 1981
Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument United States (Utah) 7,571 1996
Pechora-Ilych Nature Reserve Russia 7,213 1930
Nahuel Huapi National Park Argentina 7,050 1934
Termit Massif Reserve Niger 7,000+ 1962
Kobuk Valley National Park United States (Alaska) 6,758 1980
Banff National Park Canada (Alberta) 6,641 1885
Mojave National Preserve United States (California) 6,211 1994
Everglades National Park United States (Florida) 6,105 1947
Lake Mead National Recreation Area United States (Arizona and Nevada) 6,053 1936
Ai-Ais/Richtersveld Transfrontier Park Namibia, South Africa 6,045[11] 2003
Kahuzi-Biega National Park Democratic Republic of the Congo 6,000 1980
Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park Canada (Alberta), United States (Montana) 5,606 1995
Vindelfjällen Nature Reserve Sweden (Lapland) 5,600[12] Date needed
Glen Canyon National Recreation Area United States (Arizona and Utah) 5,076 1972
Conkouati-Douli National Park Republic of Congo 5,050 1993
Bafing National Park Mali 5,000 2000
Sioma Ngwezi National Park Zambia 5,000 Date needed
Garamba National Park Democratic Republic of the Congo 4,920 1938
Kahurangi National Park New Zealand 4,520 1996
Katavi National Park Tanzania 4,471 1974
Los Glaciares National Park Argentina 4,459 1981
Vuntut National Park Canada (Yukon) 4,345 1995
Taman Negara National Park Malaysia 4,343 1938
Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park Republic of Congo 4,000 1993

Transfrontier Conservation Areas (TFCAs) and International Peace Parks

As the need for larger expanses of protected land grows, governments of various countries have recently made efforts to inscribe protected areas that are multiple times larger than ever before. These parks have been established under a couple different definitions: Transfrontier Conservation Areas (southern Africa) and International Peace Parks (North America and Europe). The focus of these parks is to remove international borders within protected areas that would impede the migration of large mammal herds. Another primary reason for the creation of these parks is to help boost eco-tourism by allowing tourists to cross international borders to experience larger, more primeval wilderness without political borders and legal concerns. The inception of these parks has increased the land areas of many of Africa's most prolific parks (such as Kruger and Chobe), and will allow greater herds of large land mammals to migrate in more natural settings. In southern Africa these parks have been jump-started by the Peace Parks Foundation. These Transfrontier Conservation Areas (TFCAs, also known as Transfrontier Parks) are either in the finishing stages of political evaluation or beginning their delineation processes. TFCAs with preliminary geographic itineraries have been included here under the new name and area size of the designated TFCA. TFCAs still in early planning stages have not been listed here as a conglomerate. The Peace Parks Foundation include a list of all initiated and planned TFCAs as orchestrated by them, with goals for similar parks to be started in other regions of Africa in the future.

The Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area is still undergoing a delineation process between the governments of the five countries, hopefully coming to completion by the end of 2010. The parks listed are provisional geographic boundaries initially set forth by representatives from the countries. For more information visit Peace Parks Foundation.

International Peace Park is a designation used in similar fashion for a couple parks in North America and Europe that have turned their geographic focus in the same direction. The two most prominent of these parks are the Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park on the border of the United States and Canada and the Balkans Peace Park connecting pristine tracts of wilderness in Albania, Kosovo, and Serbia and Montenegro.[13]

Park Definitions to be Included

This list is not restricted to National Parks, and includes all protected areas inscribed at the national level. This includes Game Reserves, Game Preserves, Wilderness Areas, National Monuments, National Preserves, Special Reserves, Safari Areas, Strict Forest Reserves, and also cultural lands under the protection of the national government that do not possess a protected area name (example: the Senge Communial Land Area in Kenya that will join the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park). Protected areas not inscribed at the national level (such as State Parks and Provincial Parks) are not included except for those being inscribed into a larger protected area. Parks are not listed individually if they make up a portion of a confirmed mega-park's inception.

References

  1. ^ Statistics Greenland, Greenland in Figures, 2009
  2. ^ BBC, UK sets up Chagos Islands marine reserve
  3. ^ UNESCO's World Heritage listing for PIPA
  4. ^ UNESCO's World Heritage listing for Papahānaumokuākea
  5. ^ Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
  6. ^ South African Peace Parks, Kavango – Zambezi
  7. ^ South African Peace Parks, Great Limpopo
  8. ^ South African Peace Parks, Kgalagadi
  9. ^ South African Peace Parks, Maloti-Drakensberg
  10. ^ UNESCO's World Heritage listing for the Laponian Area
  11. ^ South African Peace Parks, |Ai-|Ais-Richtersveld
  12. ^ Vindelfjällen Nature Reserve
  13. ^ Balkans Peace Park Project, PProgress So Far