Iberá National Park


Iberá National Park is a national park in Argentina. It is located in central Corrientes Province. The park covers 1,381.4 km².
Iberá National Park protects a portion of the Iberá wetlands and adjacent grassland, savanna, and forest. It is in the Humid Chaco ecoregion.
Iberá National Park was created by an act of the Argentinian Congress on December 5, 2018. The park was created from former private cattle ranches acquired since 1999 by the Conservation Land Trust–Argentina, a private foundation established by the conservationists Doug and Kristine Tompkins. In 2015 the Conservation Land Trust donated the lands to the Argentine state to create the park.
The Conservation Land Trust removed most of the cattle from the lands they acquired, and stopped the practice of burning the land to increase cattle fodder. Managed fires have been used to encourage recovery of wild plants and animals, and interior fences were removed to allow wildlife to move freely. Conservation Land Trust is hoping to develop sustainable eco-tourism to support the local economy and build support for further conservation.
The national park adjoins 5530 km² Iberá Provincial Park to the southeast. The provincial park was created in 2009 from public lands controlled by Corrientes Province. The national park and provincial park are both within the Iberá Provincial Nature Reserve, a conservation area 13,245 km² created in 1982. The reserve includes private cattle ranches in addition to the two parks.

Rewilding

In 2007 the Conservation Land Trust established a rewilding program with nonprofit partners to reintroduce several native animals that had been extirpated from the area during the 20th century. Species reintroduced include the giant anteater, collared peccary, South American tapir, pampas deer, and red-and-green macaw. A captive breeding program for jaguars was established, in a set of large enclosures where jaguar cubs can be trained to survive by hunting prey so they can someday survive on their own in the wild. Conservation Land Trust has proposed reintroducing the giant otter to the park.