The
national park was set up in 1985 on 8.000 hectares of land consisting of mangrove
swamps, coastal zones and completely deforested areas in Herrera Province.
It lies along a Pacific coastal strip between the mouths of the River Santa
Maria and the River Parita on the bay of the same name.
The protected area extends over a fragile ecosystem known as 'albina', a completely
deforested zone that was ruined by the activities of the people was colonized
the area in the second half of the twentieth century.
The park's fragile coastal forests, which used to reach as far as the mangrove
swamps, were totally destroyed to make way for grazing land, leaving poor
acid soils exposed to the erosion caused by strong winds, winter rains and
the ebb and flow of the tides.
The park lies in the most arid part of the country, where average annual precipitation
is 1.100mm and average annual temperatures exceed 27° C, reading a desert
like landscape unknown elsewhere in Panama. The beauty of the landscape, devoid
of any kind of vegetation and criss-crossed by deep fissures and gullies caused
by erosion, is one of the attractive features of this national park.
On the coast, there are still large mangrove swamps and some tracts of dry
forest where macano trees (Caesalpinia coriaria), 'alconoque' (Mora oleifera)
and 'piñuela' (Bromelia pinguin) can be found. Wildlife is scarce in this
desert like environment, but on the coast various seabirds can be seen, including
flocks of pelicans. 162 species of migratory have been recorded. In Sarigua,
important archaeological remains have been discovered from an 11.000 year
old fishing settlement, the oldest known inhabited place on the Isthmus of
Panama, and from the oldest farming settlement in the country which dates
from 5.000 to 1.500 years ago.
