Anella Mediterrània<p><strong>'L'Anella Mediterrània' (The Mediterranean Ring)</strong>, created for the 2017 Games, today flourishes as a natural garden within the city. Its large artificial lagoon collects rainwater and has given life to its own ecosystem: a small wetland where plant and animal species typical of the Mediterranean environment coexist.</p> <p>Poplars, ash trees and tamarisks grow among the vegetation, while the edges are covered with yellow lilies, boga and reed beds.</p> <p>Birds such as the mallard duck, the common coot and the European tufted duck glide over the water, and butterflies and dragonflies flutter along its banks, indicators of the good health of the ecosystem.</p> <p>This living garden recalls the natural wealth of the Mediterranean, one of the territories with the most biodiversity on the planet, but also one of the most threatened. For this reason, the ring has become an ecological and educational refuge, where every plant and every bird helps to understand the importance of protecting the life that surrounds us.</p>https://rutes-content.tarragona.cat/en/anella-mediterraniahttps://rutes-content.tarragona.cat/@@site-logo/logo_aj_tgna.png
Anella Mediterrània
<p><strong>'L'Anella Mediterrània' (The Mediterranean Ring)</strong>, created for the 2017 Games, today flourishes as a natural garden within the city. Its large artificial lagoon collects rainwater and has given life to its own ecosystem: a small wetland where plant and animal species typical of the Mediterranean environment coexist.</p> <p>Poplars, ash trees and tamarisks grow among the vegetation, while the edges are covered with yellow lilies, boga and reed beds.</p> <p>Birds such as the mallard duck, the common coot and the European tufted duck glide over the water, and butterflies and dragonflies flutter along its banks, indicators of the good health of the ecosystem.</p> <p>This living garden recalls the natural wealth of the Mediterranean, one of the territories with the most biodiversity on the planet, but also one of the most threatened. For this reason, the ring has become an ecological and educational refuge, where every plant and every bird helps to understand the importance of protecting the life that surrounds us.</p>