Parco naturale regionale del Beigua
The Beigua Natural Regional Park is a natural park located in province of Savona and the Metropolitan City of Genoa, both in Liguria. It's the largest protected area of the region. It gets the name from the highest mountain of the area, Monte Beigua.
History
The natural park was established by the l.r. nr. 16 April the 9th 1985 as modified by the l.r. nr. 12 February the 22nd 1995.During March 2005 the Beigua Geopark was recognised as a part of the European Geoparks Network.
Geography
Situated in the inland of the Italian Riviera between Savona and Genoa, the park covers a very interesting area of the Ligurian Apennines. its protected territory, over, includes 26 km of the Apenninic watershed dividing Pianura Padana from the Ligurian Sea drainage basin.The park encompasses three SCIs and one SPA of the Natura 2000 network:Foresta della Deiva – Torrente Erro 788 hectares,Pian della Badia 250 hectares,Beigua – Monte Dente – Gargassa – Pavaglione almost 17.000 hectares,Beigua-Turchino 9960 hectares.
The geopark is wider than the Natural Regional Park and reaches of protected territory.
Main summits of the park
Among the summits located in the park can be cited Monte Beigua, Bric del Dente, Cima Fontanaccia, Monte Rama, Monte Reixa and Monte Sciguello.Concerned municipalities
The natural park is shared among the following municipalities:Arenzano, Campo Ligure, Cogoleto, Genova, Masone, Rossiglione, Sassello, Stella, Tiglieto, Varazze
Geology
The park offers a wide range of geological features, most of them tied to a portion of Jurassic oceanic crust modified during the Alpine orogeny. Among the predominant rocks of the area can be cited gabbros, peridotites and serpentinites, here and there covered by pillow basalts and latter sedimentary and metamorphic layers. Several serpentinite quarries, active in the past, are now abandoned.Wildlife
Some rare plants of the park are Viola bertolonii, Cerastium utriense, Asplenium cuneifolium, Daphne cneorum, Cheilantes marantae.Mountain mires and wetlands host locally endangered species of amphibians as alpine newt, northern crested newt and Malpolon monspessulanus. In the park are very common larger animals as wild boars, roe and fallow deers.