austrian Ramsar sites
Austria signed the Convention in 1983 and has since designated 23
“Ramsar Sites” and also included them in federal law.
Autertal – St. Lorenzen Raised Bog (Carinthia)
Mires of the Bayerische Wildalm-Wildalmfilz (Tyrol)
Donau-March-Thaya-Auen (Lower Austria)
Güssing Fish Ponds (Burgenland)
Hörfeld Mire (Carinthia, Styria)
Lafnitztal (Styria, Burgenland)
Mires and Lakes of Keutschach-Schiefling (Carinthia)
Mires of the nassköhr (Styria)
Mires of the Pass Thurn (Salzburg)
Mires of the Sauerfelder Wald (Salzburg)
Mires of the Schwarzenberg (Salzburg)
Mires of the Überling (Salzburg)
national Park Kalkalpen (upper Austria)
neusiedler See – Seewinkel – Waasen (Burgenland)
upper Drava River (Carinthia)
Pürgschachen Mire (Styria)
Rhine Delta at Lake Constance (Vorarlberg)
Rotmoos in the Fuscher Valley (Salzburg)
Sablatnig Mire (Carinthia)
Lower Inn Reservoirs (upper Austria)
Lower Lobau (Vienna)
Waldviertel Ponds, Peat Bogs and Floodplains (Lower Austria)
Wilder Kaiser (Tyrol)