Dinira National Park
| Dinira National Park Parque Nacional Dinira | |
|---|---|
Location | |
| Location | Venezuela |
| Coordinates | 9°25′N 70°10′W / 9.417°N 70.167°W |
| Area | 453.28 km2 (175.01 sq mi) |
| Established | November 30, 1988 |
The Dinira National Park (Spanish: Parque nacional Dinira) is a protected area with the national park status located in the Cordillera de Mérida between the states Lara, Portuguesa and Trujillo in the South American country of Venezuela. It was created on November 30, 1988.
It was created in order to protect the upper basin of the Tocuyo River. In total there are five basins, Orinoco, Guanare, Motatán, and Lake Maracaibo, including the Tocuyo River.
It has an area of 45,328 hectares of mountainous relief which are home to the headwaters of the Tocuyo River and numerous streams of regional importance. This motivated the natives who populated it to call it Dinira, because its waters feed other currents below. It can rain up to 1,300 mm annually.