Angerlohe

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Angerlohe

The Angerlohe is an approx. 40 hectare forest area in the Munich district of Untermenzing .

After the Allach Forest, the Angerlohe is the most important remnant of the former Lohwald belt in terms of area. It is an oak-hornbeam forest , which in historical times was used as a so-called coppice forest at intervals for firewood. The light character created by this use has largely been lost, but there are small clearings with valuable flora. The ground vegetation of the Angerlohe is lush. There are u. a. endangered or protected species such as B. Märzenbecher , Türkenbund , Arum , yellow and white wood anemone and numerous types of mushrooms are represented. Deadwood is not removed and is therefore abundant. The protected green toad lives in three ponds .

The Angerlohe is part of the Munich green belt and designated as a landscape protection area. Together with the parts of the landscape bordering to the north and the Allacher Lohe, it was reported to the European Union as a fauna-flora-habitat area (FFH area no. 7734-302) for the European Natura 2000 biotope network .

Individual evidence

  1. Linda Jessen: Biotope for the green toad. The habitat is dwindling: why the ponds dry up. In: evening newspaper. August 18, 2017, accessed April 18, 2020 .
  2. ^ State capital Munich, Department for Urban Planning and Building Regulations: Angerlohe Landscape Protection Area. A former Lohwald. In: muenchen.de - The official city portal. City of Munich and Stadtwerke München GmbH, accessed on April 18, 2020 .

Web links

Commons : Angerlohe  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 48 ° 11 ′ 19.7 "  N , 11 ° 28 ′ 49.8"  E