Respected naturalists and wildlife photographers Angelo Gandolfi and Elisabeth van Lersel, embarked on a journey through southern France, Spain and Portugal discovering large predators, such as wolves, and look at their impact on the environment and the human communities sharing the same ecosystems. Here's what they write in part four of their diary extract.
The dehesa – above the original Mediterranean scrub
A small “industrialised" region
The
Iberian Wolf, which we talked about in
part 3 of our travel diary extract, has arrived in Estremadura along the ridge of the
Sierra de Gredos mountain range west of Madrid but
appears to have stopped there. To progress further, it will certainly have to face the particular land management and farming regime in the region.
Blooms in a field at Extremadura
This land management method is called
dehesa, which means that the indigenous
Mediterranean trees and scrub have been thinned and the undergrowth cleared. The remaining trees, mostly holly oaks and cork oaks, are pruned to encourage foliage spread (the resulting shade an extra bonus for the animals and grasses below).This practice results in an environment
similar to the African savannah, with fenced prairies where free-range cattle and sheep graze freely. Here, the pigs eat acorns and their meat is used to produce the renowned
jamón ibérico, priced at
150 euros per kilogram!Sometimes an area of
dehesa is used as a
hunting reserve, usually for deer, fallow deer, wild boar etc. At other times, it is partially cultivated to produce
honey and aromatic hydrotherapic herbs.For the nature lover, it is a magnificent sight: Estremadura is covered with woodland. This environment favours
sustainable farming that is far removed from an industrial scale.
The Salto del Gitano – the home of great birds of prey
The Salto del Gitano - a refuge for birds of prey
In this environment birds of every kind fly freely. While in winter you can spot tens of thousands of cranes, in summer the area is primarily occupied by storks and birds of prey of which Spain can boast the world's largest colonies of griffon vultures, cinereous vultures, Spanish imperial eagles, Bonelli's eagles and more.In Italy (especially in Sardinia), many farmers will see birds of prey, including vultures, as potential "lamb predators". However, this kind of mentality seems to have be largely overcome in Spain.
Tough times in the dehesa for the wolf and other animals…
However despite the positive climate in Spain, the dehesa isn't wolf-friendly; there is wide use of fences, traditional low stone walls, wire mesh and barbed wire, so pets, cattle or sheep can't get out, but the wolf could get in, and in that environment, it wouldn't have any means of defence.There are also many natural protected areas, but they aren't very extensive. For instance, the Monfragüe national park, where deer graze, covers only 18.000 hectares.
La cascata della Cimbarra, presso Despenaperros , in un territorio di espansione delle linci
Until a few years ago, Estremadura had a small population of the Iberian Lynx
(Lynx pardinus), a subspecies, smaller than the European lynx, weighing between 8 and 14 kilos so not big enough to hunt domestic or wild ungulates (hooved mammals). Indeed,
its prey of choice is rabbit, with occasional alternatives such as partridge and small mammals.For this reason, the Lynx was generally tolerated better than the wolf but thanks to
poaching,
car accidents and
myxomatosis in rabbits (which thinned out prey availability) the last lynx in the region has disappeared.
Thus, to find this particular species we must move south, to Andalucia, where we can find the surviving indigenous colonies in two national parks,
Coto Doñana and Andujar. Also here, on the Sierra Morena, there is
a small, thriving pack of wolves.
Looking at the size of guard dogs here, there still must be some wolves left in the Sierra Morena.
The type of farming in the region is similar to that in Estremadura but has slightly more hunting reserves. What's really different though are the wide-open spaces bordered by the Sierra Morena, a series of rolling hills covered in forests undulating north of Cordoba and running along an east-west axis for 450 kilometres.
Deer in a hunting reserve, where the Lynx is a tolerated guest
In Andujar I am told that in addition to the large natural reserves like
Coto Lugar Nuevo/Contadero, the fenced hunting reserves may well have kept the Lynx from extinction. But when I object that
the fences didn't look natural
at all and are an obstacle to the animals' freedom of movement, they just say that they are no big deal for the Lynx.I reservedly accept these people's argument because to me the fences, often bent inwards and circled with barb wires, are not exactly easy to pass through.
La dehesa di Andujar
In the next episode we will learn more about the wolf and the lynx's situation in Andalucia.
This travel journal is part of a wider project by Almo Nature, Farmers&Predators, whose aim is to favour and harmonise the cohabitation between farmers and wildlife.
Learn more by clicking hereTo read from the first episode of this series,
click here