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The Eurasian lynx ranges from central and northern Europe across Asia. Since the beginning of the 20th century, the Eurasian lynx was considered extinct in the wild in Slovenia and Croatia. A resettlement project, begun in 1973, has successfully reintroduced lynx to the Slovenian Alps and the Croatian regions of Gorski Kotar and Velebit, including Croatia's Plitvice Lakes National Park and Risnjak National Park.
In both countries, the lynx is listed as an endangered species and protected by law. Lynx-spotting can be arranged in cooperation with the Risnjak National Park. Several lynx resettlement projects begun in the 1970s have been successful in various regions of Switzerland. Since the 1990s, there have been numerous efforts to resettle the Eurasian lynx in Germany. Lynx are found in the Białowieża Forest in northeastern Poland , in Estonia and in the northern west parts of China in the tibetian mt. range.
In Romania the numbers exceed 2,000, the largest population in Europe outside of Russia, although most experts consider the official population numbers to be overestimated. Lynx are more common in northern Europe, especially in Sweden, Estonia, Finland, and the northern parts of Russia.
The population in Sweden is estimated to be 1200 - 1500 individuals, spread all over the country but more common in middle Sweden and in the mountain range. Lynx population in Finland was 1900 - 2100 individuals in year 2008, and the number have been increasing every year since 1992. Its been estimated that lynx population in
Finland is nowadays larger than ever before. Lynxes in Britain were wiped out in the 17th Century but there is a plan to reintroduce them to curb the numbers of deer. The critically endangered Iberian lynx lives in southern Spain and formerly in eastern Portugal. There is a lynx reproduction centre planned outside Silves in the Algarve in southern Portugal.