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Chile creates a national park to protect wildlife at the edge the world

Chile is creating a national park to protect unique ecosystems and endangered wildlife at the very edge of the map. The proposed?Cape Froward National Park would cover approximately 150,000 hectares of forest, peatlands and glaciers, as well as coastlines facing the Strait of Magellan.

Benjamin Caceres is the wildlife coordinator for Rewilding Chile. He said that humans must regulate their activities, including tourism and industry, to protect fragile ecosystems.

"These are resilient places that create refuges for endangered species and maintain balance."

Rewilding?Chile is a foundation founded by Douglas Tompkins who was a philanthropist, and the founder of North?Face, an outdoor clothing company. In November, Tompkins donated 127,000 hectares to the Chilean Government with the condition of creating a national park within two years. The park will house the southernmost population of endangered huemul deer. Its productive waters also support a vast marine ecosystem including orcas, whales and sea lions.

Gabriela Garrido, the project coordinator, said that authorities hope to complete the decree within the next few months. The park will be added to an 8-million-hectare biological corridor of Patagonia which includes the Kawesqar National Park and Alberto de Agostini?National?Parks.

Carolina Morgado, director of Rewilding, said that the park was intended to be a source of sustainable economic development for the region. It would be the first within the municipality of Punta Arenas - the capital of Chile’s southernmost region.

The foundation is developing plans to create a park that will include hiking trails and facilities for tourists. (Reporting and writing by Nicolas Cortes, Alexander Villegas; editing by Ed Osmond).

(source: Reuters)