Vápenice (natural monument)


Vápenice is a natural monument south-east of the village of Slatinky in the Prostějov District of the Czech Republic. It is a part of the nature park Velký Kosíř. The area is administered by the Nature Conservation Agency of the Czech Republic.
Bedrock of Vápenice consists of Devonian dolomites and the Lažánky limestone, which are partly covered by Badenian calcareous clays and sands. This is the reason why the area has become an enclave of lime-tolerant vegetation.
The locality is protected because of the rare plant community, especially hot dry grasslands, growing on terrain bumps, which are remnants of former minor limestone quarries. Beside them there used to be a number of little fields and pastures for livestock. Some of the balks which used to separate the fields are preserved and help to prevent erosion. There are also some residues of orchards in the northern part of the area.
Steppe-like vegetation grows here mostly. The place is also valued for one of the richest populations of greater anemone in Central Moravia; in the 2004 census 19,699 blooms were counted here. Other notable plants growing here are snowdrop anemone, European Michaelmas daisy, sickle hare's ear, Blue Sedge, Downy-fruited Sedge, Carex michelii, European dwarf cherry, Dorycnium herbaceum, field cow-wheat, spiny restharrow, military orchid, knapweed broomrape, Pilosella macrantha, Primula veris subsp. canescens, fragrant scabious and Thesium dollineri. Bigger stones are covered by saxicolous lichens, which are an important indicator of the level of air pollution. The grasslands need to be maintained and shrubs of black locust, common dogwood and European privet have to be regularly removed here.
Weed vegetation of the Caucalidion lappulae alliance can be found at the edges of some surrounding fields, including rare species summer pheasant's-eye, poorman's weatherglass, Caucalis platycarpos, hare's ear mustard, longleaf and Thymelaea passerina.
Vápenice is also important from an entomological point of view. There live a number of insects dependent on the local shrub-steppe grasslands. Some of notable species which were observed here are for example European mantis and moth Jersey tiger.
The area of the locality is 0.19 km2 and it lies 250–300 metres above sea level. It has been protected as a natural monument of the Czech Republic since 1 November 1990, when its status was declared by the Regional Authority of the Olomouc Region. The locality was also registered by the IUCN in the category IV and together with other abandoned limestone quarries at the slopes of Velký Kosíř was included among the Natura 2000 sites under the name Kosíř – lomy, code CZ0714076. One of the reasons for listing it is that the locality is valued as an important orchid site.