Stelvio, Gran Paradiso, Cilento, and the Dolomites represent Italy's most studied and legally protected natural areas. Each park operates under distinct governance structures and contains ecosystems that differ in altitude, species composition, and conservation history.
Explore the Parks Compare DataThe four areas span from the high-alpine glacial zones of the north to the Mediterranean coastal garrigue of the south, covering over 700,000 hectares of nationally and internationally recognised protected land.
Alpine · Established 1935
130,734 hectares spanning Lombardy and Trentino-Alto Adige. Elevation range 650–3,905 m. Shares a 400,000-hectare transboundary block with the Swiss National Park.
Read profile →
Alpine · Established 1922
Italy's oldest national park at 70,318 hectares. Founded specifically to prevent the extinction of the alpine ibex; today holds the primary genetic reservoir for the species across the Alps.
Read profile →
Mediterranean · Established 1991
395,503 hectares of terrestrial and marine territory in Campania. UNESCO World Heritage Site (1998) and Biosphere Reserve (1997). Hosts 28 EU-listed sites of community importance.
Read profile →Inscribed on 26 June 2009, the Dolomites World Heritage property covers 142,000 hectares across multiple provinces. Management is coordinated through the UNESCO Dolomites Foundation via five thematic Operating Networks. Peak daily visitors at Tre Cime di Lavaredo exceeded 13,400 — a figure that prompted formal carrying-capacity studies between 2018 and 2020.
View Cilento profileThe table below summarises key measurable attributes drawn from IUCN, UNESCO, and park authority records. All figures are current as of the last published management reports.
| Park | Total Area (ha) | Elevation Range (m) | IUCN Category | UNESCO Status | Est. Year | Key Species |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stelvio | 130,734 | 650–3,905 | II | — | 1935 | Chamois, golden eagle, brown bear |
| Gran Paradiso | 70,318 | 800–4,061 | II | — | 1922 | Alpine ibex (~2,800), golden eagle, chamois |
| Cilento & Vallo di Diano | 395,503 | 0–1,898 | V | WH + Biosphere Reserve | 1991 | European otter, Eleonora's falcon, Corsican hare |
| Dolomites (UNESCO) | 142,000 | 400–3,343 | Multiple | WH (2009) | 2009 | Endemic rock plants, marmot, golden eagle |
Conservation · Alpine
How Italy's fourth-largest park manages coniferous forests, alpine grasslands, and glacier margins across three administrative bodies.
Wildlife · Alpine
From near-extinction in the 1800s to 2,800 animals and a continent-wide reintroduction programme coordinated from Aosta Valley.
UNESCO · Mediterranean
Italy's largest national park by area holds dual UNESCO recognition and 28 EU-designated sites within a single administrative boundary.
Italy's national parks operate under the framework of Law 394/1991 (Legge Quadro sulle Aree Protette), which established a national register and defined park authority structures. Management ranges from single bodies (Gran Paradiso) to multi-regional coordination frameworks spanning three administrative territories (Stelvio).
About this archiveFor corrections, additional data references, or factual queries about specific park records.
Pine and Field
Via Roma 14, 20121 Milan, Italy
Registered: IT03847201234
VAT: IT03847201234
Tel: +39 02 8765 4321
Email: info@pineandfield.eu