Snowdonia is one of the eleven National Parks of England and Wales,
and is the second largest after the Lake District. Designated in 1951,
the Snowdonia National Park Authority celebrated 50 years as a
protected landscape in 2001.
With its varied landscape and wide
range of habitats,high mountains, wooded valleys, rivers, lakes and
coastline, it is not surprising that Snowdonia supports communities of
plants and animals which are of international and national importance.
Approximately 20% of the Snowdonia National Park is specially
designated by UK and European law to protect its distinctive
wildlife.About half of that area has been selected by Government under
the European Habitats Directive as a Special Area of Conservation.
Amongst the arctic alpine plants found in the high peaks, the Snowdon
Lily is unique to Snowdon. So too is the Snowdon or Rainbow Beetle.
Three areas - the Dyfi Estuary Biosphere Reserve, Cwm Idwal and Llyn
Tegid are RAMSAR Sites - wetlands of international importance. The
entire coast and marine environment below low water mark has been
selected for designation as a Marine Special Area of Conservation.
There are 17 National Nature Reserves in Snowdonia; more than in any
other National Park in England and Wales; and 56 Sites of Special
Scientific Interest.
In Llyn Tegid, the largest natural lake in the Park, lives another
Snowdonia rarity, the Gwyniad, a unique sub-species of the European
white fish, trapped in the lake at the end of the last Ice Age, 10,000
years ago.