Laje de Santos Marine State Park

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Coordinates24°19′11″S 46°10′54″W / 24.319713°S 46.181619°W / -24.319713; -46.181619
Area5,000 ha (19 sq mi)
DesignationState park
Laje de Santos Marine State Park
Parque Estadual Marinho da Laje de Santos
Laje de Santos
Map showing the location of Laje de Santos Marine State Park
Map showing the location of Laje de Santos Marine State Park
Nearest citySantos, São Paulo
Coordinates24°19′11″S 46°10′54″W / 24.319713°S 46.181619°W / -24.319713; -46.181619
Area5,000 ha (19 sq mi)
DesignationState park
Created27 September 1993
AdministratorInstituto Estadual Florestal

The Laje de Santos Marine State Park (Portuguese: Parque Estadual Marinho da Laje de Santos) is a state park in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. It protects a marine area off the coast of the state, and was the first such park to be created by São Paulo. It includes a rocky islet, tidal reefs and surrounding waters, with various areas suitable for diving, including a boat that was deliberately wrecked to form an artificial reef. The combination of warm surface waters and cold deeper waters supports a high level of biodiversity.

The Laje de Santos Marine State Park is in the municipality of Santos, São Paulo. The park covers a 5,000-hectare (12,000-acre) marine rectangle that contains the Laje de Santos island and the Bandolim, Brilhante and Sul e Novo rocks and reefs.[1] It is 16.8 nautical miles from the Moela Island Lighthouse on the mainland. The Laje de Santos is an island formed by the top of a mostly submerged granite mountain 22 nautical miles from the coast. The island is 550 by 185 metres (1,804 by 607 ft), and is 33 metres (108 ft) high. The greatest depth in the surrounding sea is 42 metres (138 ft).[2]

History

The Laje de Santos Marine State Park was created by state governor Luís Antônio Fleury Filho by decree 37.537 of 27 September 1993. It aims to fully protect the flora, fauna, scenic beauty and natural, marine and terrestrial ecosystems.[1] It is the first marine park created by the state.[2] At first nothing was done to impose the total ban on fishing within the park, which existed only on paper. After 2003 a change in government policy has improved protection, as has an active NGO that is dedicated to protection of the park. Volunteers and paid staff now have boats and equipment to patrol the boundaries.[3] The park administration is under the Forest Foundation, a unit of the Environment Secretariat of the State of São Paulo.[2]

Environment

The park contains the uninhabited Laje de Santos islet and several rocky reefs separated by extensive areas of sand, with a maximum depth of about 45 metres (148 ft). It is in the transition between tropical and sub-tropical environments, and is a high latitude "marginal" reef site. The granite rocks below the low tide level are mostly covered in patches of brown and red algae, Palythoa caribaeorum, hydrozoa, ascidiacea and octocorallia. The bedrock also holds sparse, isolated colonies of the Madracis decactis and Mussismilia hispida scleractinia.[3]

The prevailing Brazil Current brings warm surface waters from the north, supporting a local reef fish population that is closer to the fauna of the tropical Western Atlantic and Northeastern Brazilian coast than the fauna of southern temperate reefs. A seasonal upwelling brings colder waters of 14 to 18 °C (57 to 64 °F) up from the shelf slope to the deepest areas of the reef, where temperate species are found. The result is a fauna that ranges from that of tropical regions to subtropical endemics and species found as far south as Patagonia.[4]

196 reef fish species have been recorded, in 124 genera and 66 families.[5] The families with the most species were Carangidae (16), Grouper (12), Wrasse (10), Pomacentridae (8) and Parrotfish (8).[6] Abundant fish species include the tomtate grunt (Haemulon aurolineatum), sergeant major (Abudefduf saxatilis), brown chromis (Chromis multilineata), dusky damselfish (Stegastes fuscus), jubauna reeffish (Chromis jubauna), silver porgy (Diplodus argenteus), porkfish (Anisotremus virginicus) and ringneck blenny (Parablennius pilicornis).[5] The park is on the migratory route of the giant manta rays of the Brazilian coast, which visit in the autumn and winter.[2]

Visiting

Notes

Sources

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