Iagorlîc Reserve

The agency employs 13 people (4 in administration, 5 in the research department and 4 in the protective services).

In 1990, part of the land was transferred to the management of neighboring state farms, reducing its size to today's 863 ha.

Due to the Transnistrian conflict and economic difficulties, scientific research began only in 2000.

In the reserve, habitats of natural forests, artificially planted forests (mainly created as part of the reinforcement of the banks of the reservoir), steppe formations, wet meadows and ruderal formations, and water areas are distinguished.

[3] In the reserve, 101 species of rare protected plants have been found, including 16 from the Red Data Book of Plants (both Moldovan and Ukrainian), including the Moldovan grass (Koeleria moldavica), endemic to the left bank of the Dniester.