The main island of Margarita has an area of . Its capital city is
La Asunción. The main urban center is
Porlamar. Other important towns are
Juan Griego,
Pampatar (home of the Port Authority),
Punta de Piedras,
San Juan Bautista, Las Guevaras, Las Hernández, Villa Rosa, Bella Vista (Margarita), and
El Valle del Espíritu Santo. Nueva Esparta is located between the
coordinates 10º44, 11º10` of North latitude and 63º (degrees) 46` (minutes), 64º13` of West longitude, in the insular region of the country. The State is limited in all its cardinal points by the Caribbean Sea. Together, the three islands of the State bring together magnificent beaches, wonderful mangroves and other landscapes that make it a true island paradise. Margarita, the largest of them, has a maximum elevation on Copey Hill (900 meters above sea level) and includes the Macanao mountain core to the west. Coche and Cubagua are rocky cores covered with marine sediments and have a flat relief, with cliffs. The climate is arid or semi-arid, to the point that there are no permanent current rivers. The Nueva Esparta state is divided into 11 municipalities.
Municipalities Geology The state territory is characterized by events of volcanism, sedimentation, emersion, deposition and uprising. Igneous-metamorphic rocks of the Mesozoic era form the foundation of the mountainous areas and their foothills, including the hill landscape, with the exception of the undulating reliefs of Pampatar, constituted by tertiary sediments, as well as the coastal plain. The lowest marine areas are
Pleistocene and
Holocene formations, composed of alluviums, coastal and alluvial terraces, calcareous sandstones and lagoon deposits. Coche and Cubagua are rocky cores covered with marine sediments from the Pre-Cambrian geological era.
Relief The eastern sector of Margarita Island has three small
mountain ranges, aligned in a southeast–northwest direction, whose altitude stops are the Copey, Matasiete, La Guardia and Guayamurí hills; To the southwest, the relief is flat, with the exception of moderate elevations, known as Las Tetas de María Guevara. The Macanao Peninsula, in the western sector, has an elongated east–west massif, between the Macanao and Guarataro hills. The rest are coastal plains that descend towards wide-ranging beaches. The islands of Coche and Cubagua offer a flat terrain with some cliffs. The relief is composed of coastal plains, lagoons and mountain ranges. The coastal plains of the eastern massif descend to oceanic beaches of great breadth and white sands that constitute a great tourist attraction, also conducive to sports and recreation activities. Among the highest elevations found in the state, there are:
Hydrography There are no significant permanent water currents, but thin rivers lately seasonal due to climatic changes that have raised temperatures throughout the planet in recent years. Dry most of the year and with torrential in short periods of rain. Of these, the main ones are San Juan (San Juan poses), San Francisco, La Asunción, El Valle, Chaguaramal, El Muco, La Vieja, Negro and Tacarigua. The lagoons of
La Restinga, Los Mártires and
Las Marites, together with the hot springs of the Holy Spirit Valley and the San Francisco sector, complete a scarce, insufficient and unsuitable
hydrographic system to supply the local population with potable water.
Climate , Margarita Island Nueva Esparta has a
hot semi-arid climate, with microclimates ranging from very warm arid to warm-moderate semi-arid. The semi-arid climate dominates in Margarita. In Porlamar, the rainfall is only annually with an average temperature of . The areas with the highest rainfall are located in the Serranía de El Copey, reaching per year. This, together with local fogs, allows the development of cloud forests, which derive on lower slopes in formations of premontane dry forests. Precipitation is lower in the Macanao Peninsula, ranging from annually, with temperatures from . In Coche, the average annual temperature is also high with rainfall of annually. Dry conditions are rigorous in Cubagua with only of rainfall per year, qualifying as a
hot arid climate. If it is considered that in the coastal and beach sites, such as Porlamar, there are only 66 days of appreciable rainfall per year, the optimal conditions for various types of tourism are experienced. Some examples of its climate are Cerro Copey,
Laguna de la Restinga, Macanao peninsula, and the islands of Coche and Cubagua. On rare occasions, tropical cyclones affect the islands of the state due to their low latitude. Some cyclones that have affected the islands either directly or indirectly have been
Hurricane Joan–Miriam in 1988 and
Tropical Storm Bret in 1993.
Soils The soil is thin and underdeveloped, subject to an intense erosive process due to
overgrazing. The oscillations of the sea level and the deforestation carried out for agricultural use contribute to this. The valleys' soils, the best quality lands, are well developed, have an organic layer, are protected from the erosive action of the wind and are covered with vegetation, but only occupy a small proportion of the state. In the areas of Piedmont, the cones of injection and colluvial materials give rise to very stony soils. The islands of Coche and Cubagua have soils with salinity and strong erosion, resulting from the action of the winds, which gives their surface layer a stony character.
Vegetation On Margarita Island, the climatic and / or edaphic effects have produced a mixture of life zones, with varied ecosystems that range from tropical desert weeds, in low and dry areas, to thorny mountains and tropical dry forest in areas of greater height. In the Copey hill is the premontane humid forest and in the swampy and saline areas mangroves abound. The most representative species are olive trees,
divi-divi and pardillo, around the hills Matasiete, El Copey, and Guaraguao. The very dry forest is in areas of very intervened vegetation. The main species are: cují, guatacare, guamache, cardón, divisive and olive. The spines and desert weeds, dominant formations of the state, occupy the coastal plains. Its main species are abrojo, cují, yaque, oregano, naked Indian, prickly pear, cardon, divisive, guamache and others. Mangrove concentrations are located in
La Restinga,
Las Marites and other coastal water areas. The most important species are the red mangrove, button and the black mangrove. Most of the state presents a vegetation corresponding to the insular coastal subregion of the type: • Halophilic Coastal Herbazales: in low, open communities, in saline depressions of the coast, floristically poor (glass, glass grass, rabbit broom). • Herbazales Litorales Psamófilos: (yerba de grama – Batatilla de Playa). • Coastal
Xerophilic shrubs: Cují, Yaque, Cuica, Yabo, Palo Verde, Guatacaro, Gatacare, yaguarey or cord data, Guasabara, Guasabano, Tuna Guafabora, Guayacán. • Coastal Mangroves: red mangrove, black mangrove, pink mangrove, white mangrove, button mangrove and the corresponding to the Copey mountain range. • Low to Medium Forests: Puy, Curaro, Aragüaney, Egg Yolk, Naked Indian, Indian Hide, Torco, White Spoon, Lemongrass. • Sub-evergreen Submontane Ombrophile Forests: Aragüaney, Chaparro Bobo, Guamo, Palmito, Palmiche, Macanilla. • Evergreen Dwarf Submontane shrubs: Cup, White Butter. • Agricultural and Urban Lands: natural vegetation has been removed or altered in such a way that it is no longer recognizable as such.
Fauna '' from Margarita Island Fauna in the region include: • Mammals: cottontail rabbit, red-tailed squirrel, white-tailed deer, skunk, ocelot, tufted capuchin, and nine-banded armadillo. • Birds: chachalaca, troupial, partridge, cardinal, dove • Reptiles: iguana, rattlesnake, coral snake, anoles The region has a great variety of animals; Among the most prominent animals of Margarita Island are: •
White-tailed deer (
Odocoeilus virginianus margaritae): This deer is estimated to have a maximum weight of about 30 kg and feeds on leaves, fruits and plant materials. It is also one of the smallest white-tailed deer subspecies. They are found mainly in the Macanao Peninsula, and in the Cerro el Copey Park, where these particular white-tailed deer are rarely seen. •
Ocelot (
Leopardus pardalis melanurus): This cat is from the family Felidae. Studies have not confirmed whether this mammal is in danger on the island, since it is rated Least Concern by the IUCN. This cat in Margarita and Venezuela is known as
cunaguaro. Its general weight is 11 kg, a medium-sized feline. It feeds on young reptiles, birds, turtle eggs, monkeys, among others. •
Margarita Island capuchin (
Sapajus apella margaritae): This is another subspecies of Margarita animals that is in danger of extinction. It weighs about 1.5 and 4 kg. They are found in troops, and their danger is due to habitat loss and hunting. In their diet they are frugivorous, herbivores and insectivores. •
Red-tailed squirrel (
Notosciurus granatensis nesaeus): a subspecies of squirrel endemic to the island. •
Nine-banded armadillo (
Dasypus novemcintus): a mammal related to anteaters and sloths. It has a distinctive shell to protect it from predators. , Margarita Island Other species of animals found are eastern cottontails (
Sylvilagus floridanus) and several species of reptiles, such as
green iguanas (which were once more common on Margarita, but hunting for the consumption of their eggs and meat has made them rare on Margarita),
rattlesnakes,
coral snakes, and
anole lizards. Many species of birds can be found and seen in many places on the island, such as the
paraulata llanera, or tropical mockingbird (
Mimus gilvus), the Carib grackle or
llanero (
Quiscalus lugubris), the scaled dove (
Columbina squammata), the spectacled thrush (
Turdus nudigenis), the glaucous tanager (
Thraupis glaucocolpa), red-crowned woodpecker (
Melanerpes rubricapillus), the
tucusito hummingbird (
Leucippus fallax), the emerald hummingbird or
mellisbanero (
Chlorostilbon), barred antshrike
(Thamnophilus doliatus), the rufous-vented chachalaca or
guacharaca (
Ortalis ruficauda ruficauda), the Venezuelan turpial (
Icterus icterus), the vermillion cardinal or
cardenalito (
Cardinalis phoeniceus), partridges, turtledoves, and the yellow-shouldered amazon or
cotorra margariteña (
Amazona barbadensis), a natural symbol of the island. It is also possible to find species such as the giant centipede (
Scolopendra gigantea).
Flora The semi-arid climate of the Nueva Esparta state is one of the fundamental reasons for the evolution of two main types of vegetation. In the state, there are abundant areas of tropical vegetation on the slopes of the main hills of the island. • Species include: puy, curari, araguaney, egg yolk, naked Indian, Indian hide (
Bursera simaruba); torco, white spoon (
Croton xanthochloros); copey (
Clusia major),
Maytenus karstenil,
Coccoloba coronata, cascarón (
Machaerium robinifolium), lemongrass (
Ximenia americana)
Neea anisophyla,
Ouratea guildingii and
Chionanthus caribaea.
Natural resources The State stands out for its scenic resources, represented in natural landscapes, such as lagoons, beaches, hills, salt flats and wind formations, all of great tourist potential. However, it does not have large energy resources, and its availability of minerals is limited to the existence of gravel, sand, limestone, dolomite, chromite, manganese, talc and stone. The vegetation and natural resources of the state are few for being an arid zone in the middle of the Caribbean Sea, but plants such as cacti and palm trees are seen in warm areas. ==Politics and government==