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Mirador State Park

Mirador State Park
Parque Estadual de Mirador
IUCN category II (national park)
Map showing the location of Mirador State Park
Map showing the location of Mirador State Park
Nearest city Mirador, Maranhão
Coordinates 6°34′51″S 45°11′41″W / 6.580787°S 45.194683°W / -6.580787; -45.194683Coordinates: 6°34′51″S 45°11′41″W / 6.580787°S 45.194683°W / -6.580787; -45.194683
Area 437,000 hectares (1,080,000 acres)
Designation State park
Created 4 June 1980
Administrator Secretaria de Estado de Meio Ambiente e Recursos Naturais

The Mirador State Park (Portuguese: Parque Estadual de Mirador) is a state park in the state of Maranhão, Brazil. It protects the headwaters of an important source of water for communities in the state, including the state capital. The park has been starved of funds for administration and surveillance. It has suffered from illegal logging, burning, grazing and hunting.

The Mirador State Park is in the municipality of Mirador, Maranhão. It has an area of about 437,000 hectares (1,080,000 acres). The park covers the Serra do Itapecuru, which rises to 660 metres (2,170 ft) between the basins of the Alpercatas and Itapecuru rivers. It protects the watershed and headwaters of several tributaries of the upper Itapecuru, an important source of water for twenty cities in Maranhão including São Luís.

The climate is dry, subhumid, with annual rainfall of 1,200 millimetres (47 in). Average maximum temperatures are 31.4 to 33 °C (88.5 to 91.4 °F). Average minimum temperatures are 19.5 to 21 °C (67.1 to 69.8 °F). Vegetation is mainly cerrado, cerradão and gallery forest. A 2013 survey of flora found 53 families, 98 genera and 140 species. The families with the greatest number of species were Malpighiaceae, Leguminosae, Rubiaceae, Cyperaceae, Convolvulaceae, Melastomataceae, Malvaceae, Vochysiaceae and Dilleniaceae.

Trees include red and yellow ipê (Tabebuia), arueira and cedar. Vegetation is low, gnarled trees with thick bark. Economically important trees include the pau-terra (Vochysiaceae), pequi (Caryocar brasiliense), lobeira (Solanum lycocarpum), ainda, bacuri, pequi and murici for fruit, and the medicinal sucupira (Pterodon emarginatus) and jatobá (Hymenaea courbaril). The fava-danta (Dimorphandra mollis), common in the park, is the source of the alkaloid pilocarpine for the pharmaceutical industry. Most of the riparian trees are large buriti palms.


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