Information board
Public
ID:0742•••34c3
01.05.2026

A forest is a single, complex organism. From an ecosystem perspective, there are no unimportant or harmful species. Each is valuable and performs its own function. And everything is interconnected.

"Pests" attack weakened and diseased trees.

Squirrels and other rodents store seeds, and in doing so, forget about some of them—this is how new trees emerge.

Golden eagles, peregrine falcons, and other birds of prey, like wolves, work as "forest cleaners": by killing sick rodents, they help prevent the spread of disease.

The inhabitants of a single anthill destroy up to 20 million pests a year. Birds create "baths" in anthills, cleansing themselves of parasites with formic acid.

Woodpeckers and other birds prey on wood-feeding insects.

Wolves regulate the population of ungulates by eliminating weak and sick individuals. Ungulates feed on young tree growth, and when there are too many of these animals, forests suffer.

Location:
,
Geo coordinates:43°15'17.9"N 42°30'22.8"E