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The Göhrde State Forest ((ドイツ語:Staatsforst Göhrde)) is the largest contiguous mixed forest region in North Germany. It lies in the districts of Lüchow-Dannenberg and Lüneburg. == Description == The Göhrde includes the entire unparished area of Göhrde, parts of the municipality of Göhrde (both in Lüchow-Dannenberg district) as well as parts of the municipalities of Nahrendorf and Boitze (Lüneburg district). The forest is also part of the Elbufer-Drawehn Nature Park and is located on a plateau with an average height of 80 metres above NN (roughly from 50 to 110 m NN) in the northwestern area of the Drawehn. Because the Göhrde region has no rivers it was never settled. The state forest of Göhrde is about 75 km² in area and at its heart has some very old stands of trees. Many of these giant trees (especially English Oaks) have been designated as natural monuments and are protected. The main species of tree in the woods, which lie on the mostly sandy soils and rolling terrain, are the Scots Pine, Common Beech, Spruce and Oak. The long-stemmed oaks are important for silviculture and belong to the most profitable in Germany, due to their closely spaced annual rings, that are produced by the warm, sunny climate and low levels of rainfall. In the ''Breeser Grund'' (Breese Bottom) in the south of the Göhrde a ''Hutewald'' of some has been preserved with old isolated oaks and heath landscapes. Fallow Deer, Red Deer and Mouflon live in the forest. The ''Breeser Grund'' is an EU Special Area of Conservation which is especially worth protecting as are the beech woods in the Göhrde (''Buchenwälder in der Göhrde'') southeast of the village of Göhrde itself. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Göhrde State Forest」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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