Kivach Nature Reserve | |
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Russian: Кивач заповедник | |
IUCN category Ia (strict nature reserve)
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Kivach Zapovednik
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Location of Reserve | |
Location | Republic of Karelia |
Nearest city | Kondopoga |
Coordinates | 62°20′0″N 33°55′0″E / 62.33333°N 33.91667°ECoordinates: 62°20′0″N 33°55′0″E / 62.33333°N 33.91667°E |
Area | 10,880 hectares (26,900 acres) |
Established | 1931 |
Governing body | Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (Russia) |
Website | http://www.zapkivach.ru/ |
Kivach Nature Reserve (Russian: Кивач заповедник) (also Kivach) is a Russian 'zapovednik' (strict nature reserve) established in 1931 to study and protect taiga of the Republic of Karelia. The site includes the famous 10.7 meter Kivach waterfall on the Suna River. The reserve is situated aout 20 km northwest of the town of Kondopoga in the Kondopozhsky District. It covers an area of 10,880 ha (42.0 sq mi).
The Kivach Reserve covers lake and forest territory just to the northwest of Lake Onega, where the terrain is rockier and more rugged than along the main shores of the lake. The Suna River runs through the reserve, over a ridge of Precambrian Diabase to create the waterfall for which the reserve is best known. The waterfall is diminished from its former size due to the construction of a dam upstream. The reserve's terrain is found in three main types: rocky ridges (the highest point is 160 meters above sea leve), hilly glacial moraines, and Quaternary glacial-lake plains.
Kivach is located in the Scandinavian and Russian taiga ecoregion, which covers Northern Europe between tundra in the north and temperate mixed forests in the south. It is covers parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland and the northern part of European Russia, being the largest ecoregion in Europe. The ecoregion is characterized by coniferous forests dominated by Pinus sylvestris (in drier locations), often with an understory of Juniperus communis, Picea abies and Picea obovata and a significant admixture of Betula pubescens and Betula pendula.
The climate of Kivach is Humid continental climate, cool summer (Köppen climate classification (Dfc)). This climate is characterized by long cold winters, and short, cool summers.
Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky in 1915 at the Kivach waterfall