Sierra de la Fausilla

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Situation of the Sierra de la Fausilla within the Region of Murcia.
View of the Sierra de la Fausilla from the Avenque watercourse.
Sierra de la Fausilla mountain range seen from the Cenizas mountain. In the centre, the bay of Portmán, clogged with mining waste.

The Sierra de la Fausilla (or "Faucilla") natural area is located in the south of the Region of Murcia, in the municipality of Cartagena, to the east of the city in the area surrounding the Bay of Escombreras. It has a surface area of 791 ha.

It is an area of great ecological importance and has been declared a Special Protection Area for Birds (SPA)[1] and a Site of Community Importance (SCI).[2]

This protected area is located in the western sector of the Sierra minera de Cartagena-La Unión, a mountain range that constitutes one of the last foothills of the Baetic System, formed in the Tertiary period, during the so-called Alpine orogeny, due to the collision of the European and African plate tectonics.[3]

This area of the Sierra Minera forms part of the so-called Alpujarra complex, made up mainly of metamorphic and sedimentary rocks, mainly limestone.[4]

Fauna and flora

It is characterised by a vegetation of cornicales and tomillares, in which the presence of a large number of protected endemic and Ibero-African plant species stands out, some of which are in danger of extinction, such as the Cartagena cypress, the cornical, the arto, the chumberillo de lobo (Caralluma europaea), the rabogato del Mar Menor (Sideritis marminorensis), the siempreviva de Cartagena (Limonium carthaginese), the zamarrilla de Cartagena (Teucrium carthaginense), the manzanilla de Escombreras (Anthemis chrysantha), and Teucrium freynii.[5]

Birds include peregrine falcon, eagle-owl, Bonelli's eagle and trumpeter finch.

Threats

References

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