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Important risks to the
preservation of the national park of Los Roques.
At present it is
considered that the park is in good state of preservation. Its
distance form the coast (166 kilometers), the reduced
communities that historically have occupied it, the development
of industries at a small scale and the creation of the national
park in 1972 has allowed the archipelago to be in conditions
quite similar to those experienced by early settlers. However,
changes which have recently taken place in the last two decades
have made it clear the existence of a series of situations that
may endanger the preservation of biodiversity and the beauty of
this natural enclave.
The most important risk is related to the growth of tourist
activity. In little less than a decade the park has seen a few
thousand visitors with need for basic services to almost 80
thousand visitors per year and the type of more sophisticated
and demanding tourism. This growth in tourism has generated new
jobs and has brought with it an increase of steady population:
from 400 inhabitants in the early 80īs In Gran Roque, it has
gone to one thousand in the year 2000. Population growth and the
increase of visitors have produced a greater demand for basic
services (water, electricity and removal of solid waste and
water treatment) with the corresponding environmental impact.
Navigation within the park has increased as well as the pressure
of visitors on keys and beaches.
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Up
to now there is no evidence that population growth has caused
irreversible impact, but it is foreseeable that they may occur
if tourist activity continues to grow at the same rate it has
over the years. The unique authority together with the help of
the Spanish government has carried out a study of tourist load
capacity in order to establish the limits of this growth and the
most important risks it brings.
Population growth has also produced a problem of space in Gran
Roque. At present the area allocated for housing, according to
the ordaining plan, has been almost used up. The purchasing of
homes for guest houses and other tourist activities has put
aside the population to the inner most part of the town with
over crowding in some areas of Gran Roque. At the same time the
demand for labor for tourist services has attracted towards Gran
Roque workers from allover the country. This situation produces
great pressure from the community to urbanize areas which at
present are restricted. If at any time the area that can be
allocated for urban growth is increased, this decision should be
accompanied with a regulation for the settlement of new
inhabitants; if is not so, in a very short time Gran Roque will
lose its present aspect and all its surface will become built
up.
See map of
Los Roques.
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