The most effective way to
fully protect nature and conserve it is through planned protection
measures organised at state level. The amount of Italian territory
under state protection in one way or another is 10%. Environmental
protection laws have allowed many nature parks and reserves
to be opened which are used solely for developing nature in
all of its forms. In the Italian parks and nature reserves,
therefore, not only are the animals untouchable but also the
plants, minerals, water and even the air.
Italy has 18 National Parks, 89 Regional Parks, 270 Regional
Reserves, 142 State Reserves, 47 Marsh reserves and 7 Marine
Reserves, which are protected zones managed either by the
State in some form - Regional Councils, Provincial Councils
and Municipalities - or by the environmental and protection
associations such as Italia Nostra, WWF, Lega Ambiente, Greenpeace,
LIPU, Touring Club, etc. The National Parks are: Abruzzo (the
oldest, officially opened in September 1922), Gran Paradiso
(opened a few months after the Abruzzo park), Circeo, Stelvio,
Calabria, Pollino, Monti Sibillini, Archipelago Tuscany, the
Caserta Forests, the Belluno Dolomite mountains, Aspromonte,
Cilento-Valle di Diano, Gargano, Gran Sasso-Laga, Maiella,
Val Grande, Vesuvius, and Gennargentu-Asinara-Golfo di Orosei.
We have listed all of them to show how in Italy Nature is
loved and protected as much in the North as in the South.