Shahdag National Park
Shahdag National Park — is a national park of Azerbaijan. It was established initially over in the Quba Rayon, Qusar Rayon, İsmayıllı Rayon, Qəbələ Rayon, Oğuz Rayon and Şamaxı Rayon administrative districts on December 8, 2006. It was enlarged by presidential decree on July 8, 2010 from to.
It is located in northern Azerbaijan, close to the border with Russia at the Greater Caucasus Mountains.
Mount Bazardüzü, the highest mountain of Azerbaijan is located in Shadag National Park.
The Shahdag National Park is the largest national park not only Azerbaijan but in the whole Caucasus.
The World Bank has allocated a $17 million loan and $8 million grant for the national park's creation, while the government of Japan has provided $8 million as a grant for the project implementation. The Shahdag National Park will help address ecological issues and build a tourist infrastructure in the Caucasus for visitors.
Flora and fauna
Flora
The major types of trees are Caucasian Oak, Caucasian Ash, European Hornbeam, Oriental Hornbeam, Oriental Beech, Silver Birch, White Birch, Common Yew, White Willow, Common Walnut, Wild Cherry, Caucasian Pear, etc.Shrub species occurring in the area include Various-Leaved Hawthorn, Dog Rose, Blackberry, Common Medlar, European Barberry, etc.
Fauna
The national park is home to the rare East Caucasian tur, a mountain dwelling goat antelope found only in the eastern half of the Caucasus Mountains. Other large mammals found here are the Caucasian chamois, Bezoar ibex, domestic goat, Caucasian lynx, Syrian brown bear, wild boar, Indian wolf, common jackal, common jungle cat, red fox, roe deer, badger, and otter, etc.The Shahdag National Park and the eastern point of the Asiatic lion's range in the Trans-Caucasus Area and the Absheron Peninsula, before the end of the 10th century.
Reintroduction has been launched of the European bison, or wizent, which were formerly extirpated from Azerbaijan. Reintroduction in the 1960s and 1970s was initially unsuccessful, as by 1977, all the reintroduced animals had perished. It was thought that the bison had consumed poisonous yew shoots and leaves, and subsequently died.