| COUNTRY Peru
NAME Huascaran National Park
IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORY
II (National Park)
Biosphere Reserve
Natural World Heritage Site - Criteria ii, iii
BIOGEOGRAPHICAL PROVINCE 8.37.12 (Southern Andean)
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION Located in the Cordillera
Blanca, Sierra Central of Peru in the Andean Department of Ancash. The
park spans parts of the provinces of Recuay, Huaraz, Carhuaz, Yungay,
Huaylas, Pomabamba, Mariscal Luzuriaga, Huari Corongo, Sihuas and Bolognesi.
08°50'-10°40'S, 77°07'-77°49'W
DATE AND HISTORY OF ESTABLISHMENT The national
park was established on 1 July 1975 by Supreme Decree no. 0622-75-AG (under
the law on Forests and Wildlife, Decree-law No. 21147). Internationally
recognised as a Biosphere Reserve under UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere
program in 1977 and inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1985.
AREA
National Park and World Heritage Site 340,000ha
Biosphere Reserve 399,239ha
LAND TENURE The majority of the park belongs
to the State, although chronic confusion regarding land tenure rights
and the protected area status persists. It contains five properties conceded
to the SAIS Atusparia, and seven farming communities. In the 'influence
zone' there is local community ownership with the northern modified zone
entirely occupied by farmers, while the southern modified zone is occupied
by small grazers.
ALTITUDE 2,500m to 6,768m at the summit of El
Huascaran (the highest peak in Peru).
PHYSICAL FEATURES The park encloses a diversity
of geomorphological features. It is situated in the Cordillera Blanca,
the highest tropical mountain range in the world, with 27 snow-capped
peaks above 6,000m. Some 663 glaciers, 296 lakes and 41 rivers discharge
into the Santa, Pativilca and Maranon watersheds. The lowest point in
the reserve is Grand Cataract, near the northern boundary. The base rock
consists principally of sediments from the Upper Jurassic seas and of
Cretaceous and Tertiary volcanic deposits which make up the Andean batholiths.
There is still some seismic activity in the area; the last earthquake
occurred in 1970, and there are three thermal springs (Castro et al.,
1990).
CLIMATE The mean annual temperature is about
3°C, the minimum being -30°C. Mean annual precipitation is approximately
884mm (recorded at 3,980m), falling mainly between October and May.
VEGETATION The wide topographic range supports
an equally wide range of vegetation types with humid montane forest in
the valleys and alpine fluvial tundra, and very wet sub-alpine paramo
formations at higher levels. Studies have identified 104 families, 340
genera and 799 plant species. Puya raimondii (I), a distinctive
alpine bromeliad, is abundant together with other Bromeliaceae species,
mountain orchids (Orchis spp., Masdevallia spp.) and relict
forests of Polylepis spp. and Gynoxys spp. (Castro et
al., 1990).
FAUNA Ten mammal species have been recorded,
including spectacled bear Tremarctos ornatus (V), puma Felis
concolor incarum, mountain cat F. pajeros, white-tailed deer
Odocoileus virginianus and the vicuna Vicugna vicugna (V)
are important indigenous species, but all have been heavily hunted in
the past. The North Andean huemul Hippocamelus antisensis (V),
is also noteworthy. Some of the most notable bird species of the 112 that
have been recorded include Gurney's buzzard Buteo poecilochrous,
Andean condor Vultur gryphus, giant hummingbird Patagona gigas
peruviana, giant coot Fulica gigantea, and ornate tinamou Nothoprocta
ornata.
CULTURAL HERITAGE For centuries, the Cordillera
region has been the site where ethnic groups have settled, as witnessed
by ruins at Gekosh and Chuchumpunta and at Willcahuain-Huyllap-Pumacayan,
and Hechkap-Jonkapampa. These represent the largest known collection of
such remains in the world. The most ancient cultures seem to have developed
in the northern part of the park; the remains at the Cueva del Guitanero
in Yungay date back 2,000 years before the Chavin culture, spreading from
Carhuaz to Pomabamba. Thirty-three potentially important sites are known
(L. Hamilton, pers. comm., 1994).
LOCAL HUMAN POPULATION The Callejon de Huaylas,
just outside the national park is mostly agricultural land and urban development.
Grazing, plantation forestry and mining also occur. There are 74 families
living within the national park, with a total population of about 349,
and an additional 250,000 inhabitants within the buffer zone. The valleys
are grazed by both domestic and native livestock (llama and alpaca) under
an agreement with the local people (INRENA, pers. comm., 1995).
VISITORS AND VISITOR FACILITIES The park is
popular among mountaineers and there is a well developed system of trekking
and mountaineering routes, probably the largest in Peru. There is a small
visitor centre, hostel and campsite in the park. In 1994, the total number
of paying visitors at two entrances sites was 83,240, most of whom were
day visitors and 5% were foreigners (INRENA, pers. comm., 1995).
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND FACILITIES There is
currently no formal research or monitoring programme although research
has been conducted on the geography, glaciology, flora and fauna of the
area. Accommodation in the form of refuges is available along certain
lagoons and ravines. These are either managed by Electro Peru or the Ministry
of Agriculture. A hostel currently used by mountaineers, will eventually
be used by scientists. There is a modest two-room environmental education
centre at one of the park entrances, and another is being developed. At
the Querochoa entrance, a park building is being offered as a school for
the children who live in the valleys. The headquarters at Huaraz is reasonablywell
equipped with a computer, radio, fax and telephone and there is a herbarium
with 700 species (INRENA, pers. comm., 1995).
CONSERVATION VALUE Huascaran is the second highest
park in the South American Andes and is at the centre of the highest tropical
mountain range in the world. The high puna plateaux, glaciers and cluster
of peaks over 6,000m make it one of the most scenic of all mountain regions.
CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT A four-volume management
plan was completed in 1989 for the core zone. The national park has been
divided into five zones: restricted, primitive, recuperation, recreation,
and service. The biosphere reserve comprises the national park, together
with 39,590ha in a northern modified zone, 19,460ha in a southern modified
zone, and 189ha in a Predio Luna modified zone.
Many of the inhabitants in the buffer zone have had
traditional land use rights, in what is now the Huascaran National Park
core zone. In an attempt to allow continued use of forest resources in
a sustainable fashion, a program establishing "user groups" has been set
up by park staff. Approximately 41 such groups have been formed. Each
family has a recognized right to remove two loads of dead or fallen wood
per month (on Saturdays, by "ticket"), Medicinal plants can also be harvested
for family use. In return for this usage, the groups are required to plant
trees (mainly quenual and quishuar species) and medicinal plants in "restoration
zones". Sixteen native plant nurseries have been effectively set up at
several of the guard stations, which supply planting material. A larger-scale
planting program for local use in the buffer zone might help to alleviate
the pressure within the core zone. It is hoped that more people will join
this scheme, since only about 3,500 of the 5,000 campesinos with livestock
are in organised park-related user groups. A small program to replace
cattle with less damaging alpaca is being attempted with the most traditional
of the groups. Reduction in cattle numbers is also being attempted, but
is a slow and difficult process (L. Hamilton, pers. comm., 1994).
MANAGEMENT CONTRAINTS Being a long narrow area
with several penetrating glacial valleys, the park is particularly vulnerable
to entry from surrounding communities. Increased pasture burning, hunting
and severe overgrazing in many valleys has been coupled with increased
soil erosion, watercourse siltation and reduction of key flora and fauna
habitats (INRENA, pers. comm., 1995). Other threats arise from a major
highway along the western side of the buffer zone, a predicted (and very
likely) major increase in tourism in Peru, and the continued escalating
demands of economic development for mining, roads, water power and resorts
associated with hot springs in the buffer zone or with the mountain environment.
Currently, there are four roads that cross the park from east to west.
Even so, there is a continual threat of new road construction, which is
being pushed by mining interests and by municipal governments (L. Hamilton,
pers. comm., 1994).
Effective implementation of the management plan is hindered
by the inadequate budget which is entirely derived from entrance fees
at only two of the many possible park entrances. In additon, the budget
only constitutes 10% of the total collected; the total is sent to head
office and then returned to the park for all purposes, including professional
salaries. Furthermore, governmental reorganisation has resulted in the
transfer of parks' responsibilities from forestry to a new agency with
agriculture (Instituto Nacional de Recursos Naturales - INRENA). This
in turn has resulted in less funding, a reduction in local and lower leveldecision-making
authority and has increased paper work. There is a need for education
amongst local groups, for whom proposed restrictions within the park are
a relatively new concept (L. Hamilton, pers. comm., 1994).
STAFF One director, six technical staff, 14
rangers, one driver, one secretary, several labourers (INRENA, pers. comm.,
1995).
BUDGET 1994: 140,000 soles (US$65,000) (INRENA,
pers. comm., 1995).
LOCAL ADDRESSES
Parque Nacional Huascaran, INRENA, Avenida Centenario
905, Apartado 343, Huaraz, Ancash, Peru (Tel/Fax: 51-44-72-20-86).
REFERENCES
Bartle, J. (1993). Parque Nacional Huascaran, Ancash,
Peru. Asociacion de Ecologia y
Conservacion, Lima, Peru.
Castro, J.M., Silva, V. and Valencia, F.R. (1990). Parque
nacional Huascaran. Plan maestro - resumen ejecutivo. Prepared with
the support of the Programa de Desarrollo Forestal Canada-Peru. 28 pp.
Egeler, C. and De Booy, T. (1956). Geology and Petrology
of the Southern Cordillera Blanc, Peru. Netherlands.
Goombridge, B. (ed.) (1993). 1994 IUCN Red List of
Threatened Animals. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK. lvi
+ 286pp.
Honacki, J.H., Kinman, K.E., and Koeppl, J.W. (1982).
Mammal species of the world: a taxonomic and geographic reference.
Allen Press and the Association of Systematic Collections. Lawrence, Kansas,
USA. 694 pp.
Kinzl, H. and Schneider, E. (1950). Cordillera Blanca.
Innsbruck, Austria. 168pp.
Llosa, F. (1972). Ruella lO-Chavin-Huaylas. Asociacion
de Artes y Estudios Experimentales, Lima, Peru. 96pp.
Mabberley, D.J. (1987). The plant-book. Cambridge
University Press. Cambridge, UK. 706 pp.
Ministerio de Agricultura (1974). Informe tecnico para
establecer los limites provisionales del Parque Nacional Huascaran. Zona
Agraria III. Mimeo. Huaraz.
Ordenorcentro (1980). Parque Nacional Huascaran. Sistema
Nacional de Unidades de Conservacion. Leaflet prepared for Ministerio
de Agricultura y Alimentacion, Direccion General Forestal y de Fauna.
Ancash-Peru.
Ponce del Prado, C. (1971). Resumen de los Parques
Nacionales y Reservas Equivalentes del Peru. DGFC. 51pp.
Slaymaker, Rivera C. and Rourke, M. Informe Técnico
para establecer los limites provicionales del Parque Nacional Huascaran.
Udvardy, M.D.F. (1975). A classification of the biogeographical
provinces of the world. IUCN Occasional Paper No.18, Morges, Switzerland.
48 pp.
Weberbauer (1945). El Mundo Vegetal de los Andes Peruanos.
Ministry of Agriculture, Lima. 766pp.
Yauri, M. (1972). Ancash o la biografia de la immortalidad.
Lima, 189pp..
World Heritage Nomination (1985).
DATE October 1985, revised August 1986,
updated July 1995
|