Big Bend National Park
TX
-
440.3
Thousand visitors
in 2017 - 15 Total listed species
- $37.3M Visitor spending in 2017
Protected species include:
-
Chisos Mountain Hedgehog Cactus
Listed since 1988
-
Guadalupe Fescue
Listed since 2017
Big Bend National Park features expanses of Chihuahuan Desert shrubland and grassland interspersed with high-elevation woodland in the Chisos Mountains.
Rugged rocks and deep canyons along the Rio Grande river are among the park’s most striking features, with wetlands and springs adding to the park’s biological diversity.
Big Bend is home to 60 species of cacti and over 450 species of birds, more than any other national park.
Species ranging from Latin America and the eastern, western, or northern United States overlap in Big Bend, creating an ecosystem teeming with plant and wildlife diversity.
What is the role of the Endangered Species Act?
National parks would not be complete without the animals and plants that call them home. The Endangered Species Act is the most important tool to make sure species vital to the parks are protected for the long term.