Along of the main chain stretches the High Tauern National Park (
Nationalpark Hohe Tauern), to which the
Austrian Alpine Club as freeholder and the three states of Carinthia, Salzburg and Tyrol have contributed territory. With an area of about , it is by far the largest of Austria's seven
national parks as well as the largest nature reserve in the Alps. It is divided into a core zone of including the Grossglockner and Grossvenediger massifs, with complete prohibition of agricultural use, and a fringe zone of used for
forestry and alpine-meadow farming. Five special nature sanctuaries are protected from any human disturbance. The park of the
IUCN II category comprises the
Pasterze and numerous further
glaciers, the
Krimml Waterfalls, several glacial valleys and
alluvial fans, as well as extended
tundra areas and forests. Among the
flora of the Alps, especially
Swiss Pines grow along the
tree line; above
subshrub, mainly
alpenrose but also the
endemic Saxifraga rudolphiana, up to
nival level at about 2,800 m (9,200 ft). The fauna includes
chamois,
Alpine ibex and
red deer, as well as
griffon vulture and the
golden eagle. The formerly extinct
bearded vulture and the
Alpine marmot have been successfully reintroduced. The park was established according to a 1971 declaration signed by the participating states at
Heiligenblut, it nevertheless took until 1981, when the first parts around Großglockner and Hochschober in Carinthia were put under protection. The adjacent parts finally joined in 1992.
Tourism has become less harmful to the environment. A particular emphasis is put on the protection and maintenance of traditional ways of life in the Alps. ==Peaks==