Campinhos State Park


The Campinhos State Park is a state park in the state of Paraná, Brazil.
The environment has been much degraded by human activity and is in the process of regeneration, but there are areas of the original Araucaria Forest.
The main attraction is the long Jesuits Cave, with many speleothems such as stalagmites and stalactites.

Location

The Campinhos State Park is divided between the municipalities of Tunas do Paraná and Cerro Azul in the north of the metropolitan region of Curitiba, Paraná.
It has an area of and a perimeter of.
4.22% is in Tunas of Paraná and 95.78% in Cerro Azul.
The buffer zone covers about and includes parts of the municipalities of Tunas do Paraná, Cerro Azul, Bocaiúva do Sul and Rio Branco do Sul.
It includes the basins of the Pulador and Ermida streams.
The park is from the state capital of Curitiba and from Tunas do Paraná.
The main access to the Park is by Federal Highway BR-476.
The region is mountainous, with average elevation of about.
It has many limestone caves.
The Gruta dos Jesuítas is the fifth largest of the state.
The park is in the Ribeira de Iguape River basin, with an average elevation of, and is drained by part of the Pulador sub-basin.
Outside the park the Pulador joins the Tigre River to form the Ponta Grossa River, a right tributary of the Ribeira.

History

The Campinhos State Park was created by state decree 31.013 of 20 July 1960.
The main objective was to protect the caves of Conjunto Jesuítas/Fada, one of the most important caving sites of Paraná.
It was expanded by state decree 5.768 of 5 June 2002.
The consultative council was created by IAP decree 010 of 18 February 2003 with representatives of public and private bodies.
The Management Plan was developed by GEEP - Açungui, financed by the National Environment Fund.
Preparation included workshops with the community to gain consensus on activities and priorities.
It was published in April 2003.

Environment

The Köppen climate classification is Cfb: subtropical humid mesothermal without a defined dry season.
Annual average temperature is, with monthly averages ranging from.
Average annual precipitation is, with relative humidity of 80% to 85%.
The park was originally covered in mixed montane rainforest, but due to human exploitation little of the original coverage remains.
It is presently in the process of regeneration.
There are fragments of the original Araucaria Forest, which contain species such as Brazilian walnut, Paraná pine, yerba mate, cedar and Brazilian oak.
Fauna include crab-eating fox, brocket deer, Brazilian squirrel, azure jay, jacu and endangered species such as lowland paca and oncilla.
Conflicting activities include hunting, uncontrolled visiting, invasion by exotic species, a road inside the conservation unit and maintenance of a high voltage power transmission line.

Visiting

Visits are mainly by organized groups accompanied by guides for educational purposes.
As of 2017 the park was open from 9:00 to 16:00 from Tuesday to Friday.
Groups of over 15 visitors require prior scheduling.
The responsible person must ensure that the members of the group are aware of the park rules, both for the safety of the visitors and to preserve the environment of the park.
Camping, making fires, hunting and fishing are not allowed.
Visitors must stay on the marked paths and do nothing to damage the environment.
The park has parking, accommodation for volunteers and researchers, garbage bins, a kiosk, benches and picnic tables, toilets and showers.
The visitor center has media projection equipment, a lecture room, restrooms and administration areas.
The visitor center provides environmental education.
The main attraction is the Gruta dos Jesuítas with a length of about of large halls that contain many beautiful speleothems such as stalagmites, stalactites, columns, curtains and travertines.
The Gruta da Fada is open only to pre-authorized groups for environmental education or research.
There is a Forest Trail where visitors can learn about the native plant species.