Although the island is very rocky and impervious, there are various perennial springs and perhaps due to this abundance of water man has been able to live there for centuries. The vegetation cover of Molara is made up of very rich
Maquis shrubland vegetation, with centuries-old
olive trees,
mastic trees and
cistus, degraded in some stretches due to a vast fire that burned the southern part of the island in the 70s. There is wild livestock (cows and goats), abandoned by the previous property. To the east of cala di Chiesa stands the rock of the dinosaur, a bizarre natural sculpture shaped by the winds and the sea. On the south coast are the ruins of a
lime kiln, produced in the past from the
limestone of nearby Tavolara, by burning wood from Molara. Numerous species of
seabirds nest on the island, such as the
peregrine falcon and the rare
Audouin's gull. Even the
Manx shearwater is present with hundreds of pairs, unable to reproduce annually due to an immense population of rats. The island is
privately owned and cannot be visited. == References ==