Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
A PORTRAIT OF BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG 21

FORESTED ARDENNES
The Ardennes cover most of southeastern
Belgium and the Oesling area of Luxembourg.
Rivers thread through forested hills, with pock-
ets of farmland in the valleys and pastures on
open upland. To the south, the land drops
away into the rural, wooded Gaume region.


THE MOORS
Much of eastern Belgium is covered by
heath and moorland. Large parts of the
Kempen (or Campine) region in the north
are sandy heathlands of heather and pine
woods. The wildest moors are the Hautes
Fagnes in the upper Ardennes, east of Liège.

The western honey buzzard
(Pernis apivorus) arrives in these
forests during summer to breed.
The bird’s name derives from its
habit of eating the larvae from
wasp and hornet nests.

The European hedgehog
(Erinaceus europaeus)
is an adaptable, mainly
nocturnal mammal
found in heathland.

Roe deer (Capreolus capreolus)
are shy, solitary deer that live
in forests and pasture, eating
grasses and shoots. The males
grow small antlers each year.

The little bustard
(Tetrax tetrax) is a
migratory bird that
breeds on heaths. The
male has a flamboy-
ant mating display.

DEPLETING WILDLIFE
It is estimated that between a third and a half
of Belgium’s animal species are threatened with
extinction. Twelve mammals are listed as either
Endangered, Vulnerable or Near Threatened
by the International Union for Conservation of
Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN). As ever,
the main causes of threat are loss of habitat,
climate change, the arrival of exotic predators
and pollution or other human activities that
cause disturbance. The red squirrel and European
otter (Lutra lutra) are on the Near Threatened
list, as is the European beaver (Castor fiber).
The garden dormouse (Eliomys quercinus) is listed as Vulnerable, along with four
species of bat. But the most threatened are the Cetaceans (whales, porpoises and
dolphins) in the North Sea. The harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena), sperm whale
(Physeter macrocephalus) and beluga or white whale (Delphinapterus leucas) are all
Vulnerable, while the northern right whale (Eubalaena glacialis) is Endangered.

Bechstein’s bat
(Myotis bechsteinii)

The beluga whale
(D. leucas)

Honey mushroom
(Armillaria mellae)
is a forest fungus
that lives on the
roots of trees.

Harebells (Campanula
rotundifolia) are delicate
bell-shaped flowers that
grow wild on the moors.
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