Guadalevín | |
---|---|
Native name | Río Guadalevín (Spanish) |
Location | |
Country | Spain |
Region | Andalucía |
Basin features | |
River system | Guadiaro |
The Guadalevín is a tributary of the river Guadiaro in Málaga, Andalusia, Spain. Its gorge divides the city of Ronda where it is spanned by three bridges, Puente Nuevo, Puente Viejo and Puente Romano.
The following is a translation of the Spanish Wikipedia article on the Guadalevin.
The Guadalevín River is a short river in the south of Spain (Andalusia) that runs entirely through the Serranía de Ronda, west of the province of Málaga, Spain. It originates in the Sierra de las Nieves, in the municipality of Igualeja, and ends at the Guadiaro river; it is thus in the Mediterranean basins of Andalusia and belongs to its hydrological demarcation. Almost all of its course has been declared a Special Conservation Zone (ZEC).
Its name comes from the Arabic “Wadi-al-Laban” (river of milk).
Course
The headwaters of the Guadalevín river is located in the Sierra de las Nieves Natural Park, specifically in the Cañada del Cuerno, the nucleus of the Pinsapar de Ronda. Downstream, the Fuenfría arroyo joins it and it receives contributions from the Oreganal mountain range, including the Malillo spring. From there it is also called the Rio Grande.
Subsequently, it passes through the city of Ronda where it sculpts its famous Tajo George and enters the Ronda plateau under the name of Guadalevín. In the area of La Indiana it meets the Guadalcobacín river, formed among others by the Ventilla arroyo, a turbulent course that flows through a river gorge with remarkable geodiversity in the municipality of Arriate.
The juncture of the Guadalevín and Guadalcobacín marks the point where the start of the Guadiaro river is generally considered to be located, although some authors assert that it happens a few kilometers below, when the [Guadares] river joins it from the Cueva del Gato.
The Guadalevín River zone is made up of gypsum marl, sandstone and limestone.
Flora
The vegetation of the area presents characteristics typical of the lower Mesomediterranean and Thermomediterranean geological series of Ronda, Malacitano-Almijarense, Alpujarreña, Almería-Western and Manchego-Espunense Mesotrogerian, Juarez-Almería-Edafo-Hygrophilic Geoseries.
Fauna
The characteristic fauna of the area is typical of the riverside, among which are the otter, the leper turtle and the Guadiana vogue. There are also some invertebrates such as crayfish, odonates and the black cork oak spider, which is an endemism from the south of the Iberian peninsula.
Also there are species of fish like the marine lamprey, tusk, the gypsy barbel, the Málaga chub, the eel; different amphibians such as the southern pintopod sapillo or the salamander subspecies that extends south of the Guadalquivir; and birds such as the blackbird, kingfisher and various species of birds of prey.1
See also
Puente Nuevo (Ronda) Puente Viejo (Ronda)
36°44′23.91″N 5°10′4.86″W / 36.7399750°N 5.1680167°W