Penyal d'Ifac | |
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IUCN Category V (Protected Landscape/Seascape)
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Location | Alicante (province) |
Nearest city | Calp (2 mi) and Alicante (41 mi) |
Area | 47 ha |
Established | 1987 |
Governing body | Generalitat Valenciana |
Natural Park of Penyal d'Ifac (Valencian: Parc Natural del Penyal d'Ifac, Spanish: Parque Natural del Peñón de Ifach) is a natural park situated in Calp, in the autonomous community of Valencia, Spain.
The Penyal d'Ifac is a massive limestone outcrop emerging from the sea and linked to the shore by rock debris. It is home to numerous rare plants, including a number of endemic species, and over 300 species of animals, and a nesting site for colonies of sea birds and other birds.
Rising to 332 metres high, the rock is a striking visual feature of the Mediterranean coastline. Historically it was known to the Phoenicians as the Northern Rock, to distinguish it from its southern counterpart, the Rock of Gibraltar.[1]
Behind the rock is a large lagoon cut off from the sea by strips of sandy beach and extending inland to the coastal mountains. The wetland area around the lagoon is all that remains of the formerly much more extensive wetlands of the Marina Alta.[1]
A protracted campaign to protect the site's unique natural diversity led to the area being granted natural park status in January 1987. With an area of 45 hectares, it is the smallest natural park in Spain, possibly in Europe. The park ranges from sea level to an altitude of 332 metres at the summit of the Penyal.[1]
From the top of the Penyal there are views over the surrounding villages and countryside and on a clear day as far across the sea as Ibiza in the Balearic Islands.[1]
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The rock's sheer cliffs and rocky escarpments, exposed to the sea winds on three sides, have created a variety of microhabitats that have fostered a diversity of specialised plant species. At the lowest levels, relatively deep soils with higher moisture content in areas protected from the sea have allowed the development of a typical Mediterranean scrub vegetation community including dwarf palms, juniper, lavender and white pine. Higher up as soils become thinner and more exposed to the sun and wind alpine plant species have colonised cracks and gullies in the rock. The Ifac silene, Silene hifacensis, a highly endangered species first discovered on the Penyal, has now disappeared from the locality; no more than 20 adult plants are thought to be left in the wild.[1]
The rock face provides nesting sites for birds of prey including peregrine falcons and Eleonor's falcon, seabirds including gulls and cormorants, and other birds typical of rocky habitats.[1]
The seabed around the Penyal is varied, with rocky, stony and sandy areas sheltering a very diverse marine community.[1]