About Todasosipisa
An independent reference archive focused on the natural ecosystems of Czech national parks — their flora, fauna and ecological management.
What This Archive Covers
Todasosipisa.eu was established as a structured documentation resource for the national parks of the Czech Republic. The focus is on three principal areas: the biological communities present in each park, the ecological processes that sustain them, and the management frameworks applied by park administrations to balance conservation with public access.
The Czech Republic maintains four national parks — Krkonoše, Šumava, Podyjí and Bohemian Switzerland — across landscapes ranging from alpine tundra and ancient montane forest to sandstone canyon systems and thermophilic oak woodland along the Dyje river valley. Each park represents a distinct geological and ecological context, and each has a documented history of both biodiversity gain and management controversy.
Content published here draws on peer-reviewed ecological literature, official monitoring data from park administrations and the Czech Nature Conservation Agency, and publicly available field documentation. Where uncertainty exists in the scientific record, it is noted. No information presented here should be understood as official guidance from any Czech public institution.
Scope and Approach
Articles are structured around species assemblages, habitat types and specific ecological processes rather than tourist routes or visitor amenities. The intended reader is someone with a general interest in ecology who wants accurate, sourced information rather than promotional material. Texts are updated when significant new monitoring results become available or when management frameworks change.
The archive does not accept advertising, does not maintain affiliate relationships with tourism operators, and does not receive funding from any of the park administrations whose work is documented here.
All species records, population estimates and area statistics cited in articles are sourced from peer-reviewed publications or official park administration data. Sources are linked where available.
The archive is concerned with ecosystems rather than with individual species in isolation. Articles examine how species interact with habitat structure, food webs, disturbance regimes and climate variables.
This archive operates independently of park administrations, tourism bodies and environmental advocacy groups. Content reflects documented evidence, not institutional positions or campaign objectives.