Once found across the Atlas and Rif
Mountains, the Barbary lion was larger
than the savannah lion, with a thick
black mane and solitary habits. The
last wild Barbary lion was killed in
1921, but the Parc Zoo-logique
National in Rabat has made progress
with a small captive-breeding
program, with cubs that are 80%
Barbary lion.
For more information on birdwatching
in Morocco, Click here.
DUST-UP IN THE DESERT
To see the desert the way nature intended, take a dromedary instead of an all-terrain vehicle. The 4WDs break up the surface
of the desert, which is then scattered into the air by strong winds. By one estimate, the annual generation of dust has
increased by 1000% in North Africa in the last 50 years – a major contributor to drought, as dust clouds shield the earth’s
surface from sunlight and hinder cloud formation. What happens in the desert has far-reaching consequences: dust from the
Sahara has reached as far away as Greenland. If you travel by dromedary instead, desert wildlife won’t be scared off by the
vibrations, and you’re much more likely to spot small, sensitive and rather adorably big-eared desert creatures like the fennec
fox, jerboa and desert hedgehog.
Mountain Wildlife
Forested mountain slopes are Morocco’s richest wildlife
habitats, where it’s easy to spot sociable Barbary macaques
(also known as Barbary apes) in the Rif and Middle Atlas,
especially around Azrou. Less easy to track are mountain
gazelles, lynx and the endangered mouflon , or Barbary sheep.
The mouflon are now protected in a High Atlas preserve near
the Tizi n’Test, where its only predator is the critically
endangered Barbary leopard – the last population of leopards
in North Africa.
Golden eagles soar in Atlas mountain updrafts, and High
Atlas hikes might introduce you to red crossbills, horned larks, acrobatic booted eagles,
Egyptian vultures, and both black and red kites. In springtime, butterflies abound in the
mountains, including the scarlet cardinal and bright-yellow Cleopatra.
NATIONAL PARKS
With cities encroaching on natural habitats, the Moroccan
government is setting aside protected areas to prevent the
further disappearance of rare plant and animal species.
Toubkal National Park in the High Atlas Mountains was the first national park to be created in
- After the vast Souss-Massa National Park was founded in 1991 outside Agadir, Morocco
created four new national parks in 2004: Talassemtane (589 sq km) in the Rif; Al-Hoceima (485
sq km) in the Mediterranean, with outstanding coastal and marine habitats along the
Mediterranean that include one of the last outposts of osprey; Ifrane National Park (518 sq km)
in the Middle Atlas, with dense cedar forests and Barbary macaques; and the Eastern High
Atlas National Park (553 sq km).
NOTABLE NATIONAL PARKS
NATIONAL PARK LOCATION FEATURES ACTIVITIES
BEST
TIME TO
VISIT
Toubkal National
Park (Click here )
near
Marrakesh
highest peak in North Africa hiking, climbing May-Jun