Guaricana National Park

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NearestcityGuaratuba, Paraná
Coordinates25°42′05″S 48°52′32″W / 25.701335°S 48.875599°W / -25.701335; -48.875599
DesignationNational park
Guaricana National Park
Parque Nacional Guaricana
Guaratuba Bay with the mountains of Guaricana National Park in the background
Map showing the location of Guaricana National Park
Map showing the location of Guaricana National Park
Nearest cityGuaratuba, Paraná
Coordinates25°42′05″S 48°52′32″W / 25.701335°S 48.875599°W / -25.701335; -48.875599
DesignationNational park
AdministratorChico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation

The Guaricana National Park (Portuguese: Parque Nacional Guaricana) is a national park in the state of Paraná, Brazil. It protects a mountainous area holding a remnant of Atlantic Forest.

The Guaricana National Park covers parts of the municipalities of Guaratuba (67.49% of the park), Morretes (19.47%) and São José dos Pinhais (13.04%) in the state of Paraná. It is west of the Saint-Hilaire/Lange National Park, south of highway BR-277, and east of highway BR-376. Guaratuba Bay is to the south east.[1] It has an area of 49,286.87 hectares (121,790.5 acres).[2]

The park lies in the mountains that rise to the east of the interior plateau of Curitiba. The range rises up to 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) above the level of the plateau, with altitudes from 100 to 1,680 metres (330 to 5,510 ft) above sea level. The terrain is mountainous, cut by deep valleys. The whole of the park is in the littoral basin of Paraná, mainly the catchments of the Cubatão and Cubatãozinho rivers. A small part of the northeast holds the basins of the Pinto and Sagrado rivers, which flow north into Paranaguá Bay.[3]

Average annual rainfall is 3,000 millimetres (120 in). Temperatures range from 15 to 28 °C (59 to 82 °F) with an average of 22 °C (72 °F).[3] The park is in the Atlantic Forest biome.[2] The park is in the contact zone between mixed rainforest with Araucaria and dense Atlantic rainforest at the lower levels. There is sparser vegetation and alpine meadows on the higher parts of the Canavieiras and Igreja ranges.[3]

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