Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Introduction:
Protected areas are locations which receive protection because of their environmental value, or
environmental plus cultural values. Examples include parks, nature reserves, and wildlife sanctuaries. Not
included in the term are historic sites such as buildings that do not include natural environmental aspects, but
some are "cultural landscapes" which reflect interaction of humankind and nature. The term protected area
includes Marine Protected Areas, which refers to protected areas whose boundaries include some area of
ocean. A large number of kinds of protected area exist, which vary by level of protection and by the enabling
laws of each country or rules of international organization. There are over 108,000 protected areas in the
world with more added daily, representing a total area of 30,430,000 km2 (11,750,000 sq m), or over 12
percent of the world's land surface area, greater than the entire land mass of Africa. By contrast, as of 2
February 2009, only 0.8 of one percent of the world's oceans are included in the world's ~ 5000 Marine
Protected Areas.
More precisely it can be defined as, "A clearly defined geographical space, recognized, dedicated and
managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with
associated ecosystem services and cultural values.
Protected Areas
Types:
There are six IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) Protected Area categories:
I.
II.
III.
Natural monument:
Protected area managed mainly for conservation of specific natural features.
IV.
V.
VI.
Protected Landscape/Seascape:
Protected area managed mainly for landscape/seascape protection and recreation.
Managed Resource Protected Area:
Protected area managed mainly for the sustainable use of natural ecosystems.
Protected Areas
Protected Areas
To protect the long-term ecological integrity of natural areas that are undisturbed by significant
human activity, free of modern infrastructure and where natural forces and processes predominate, so
that current and future generations have the opportunity to experience such areas.
To provide for public access at levels.
To enable indigenous communities to maintain their traditional wilderness-based lifestyle and
customs, living at low density and using the available resources in ways compatible with the
conservation objectives.
To protect the relevant cultural and spiritual values and non-material benefits to indigenous or nonindigenous populations, such as solitude, respect for sacred sites, respect for ancestors etc.
To allow for low-impact minimally invasive educational and scientific research activities, when such
activities cannot be conducted outside the wilderness area.
Protected Areas
National Park:
To protect natural biodiversity along with its ecological structure and supporting environmental
processes, and to promote education and recreation.
To maintain viable and ecologically functional populations and assemblages of native species at
densities sufficient to conserve ecosystem integrity and resilience in the long term.
To contribute in particular to conservation of wide-ranging species, regional ecological processes and
migration routes.
To manage visitor use for inspirational, educational, and recreational purposes.
To contribute to local economies through tourism.
Protected Areas
Natural Monument:
To protect specific outstanding natural features and their associated biodiversity and habitats.
To provide biodiversity protection in landscapes or seascapes that has otherwise undergone major
changes.
To protect specific natural sites with spiritual and/or cultural values where these also have
biodiversity values.
To conserve traditional spiritual and cultural values of the site.
Protected Areas
Habitat/Species Management areas aim to protect particular species or habitats and management
reflects this priority. Many of these protected areas will need regular, active interventions to address the
requirements of particular species or to maintain habitats, but this is not a requirement of the category.
The main objectives of these areas declared by IUCN are:
Protected Areas
Protected Landscapes/Seascapes:
A protected area where the interaction of people and nature over time has produced an area of distinct
character with significant ecological, biological, cultural and scenic value: and where safeguarding the
integrity of this interaction is vital to protecting and sustaining the area and its associated nature conservation
and other values.
The main objectives of these areas declared by IUCN are:
To protect and sustain important landscapes/seascapes and the associated nature conservation and
other values created by interactions with humans through traditional management practices.
To maintain a balanced interaction of nature and culture through the protection of landscape and/or
seascape and associated traditional management approaches societies, cultures and spiritual values.
To contribute to broad-scale conservation by maintaining species associated with cultural landscapes
and/or by providing conservation opportunities in heavily used landscapes.
To provide opportunities for enjoyment, well-being and socio-economic activity through recreation
and tourism.
To provide natural products and environmental services.
To provide a framework to underpin active involvement by the community in the management of
valued landscapes or seascapes and the natural and cultural heritage that they contain.
To encourage the conservation of agrobiodiversity6 and aquatic biodiversity.
To act as models of sustainability so that lessons can be learnt for wider application.
Protected Areas
To protect natural ecosystems and use natural resources sustainably, when conservation and
sustainable use can be mutually beneficial.
To promote sustainable use of natural resources, considering ecological, economic and social
dimensions.
To promote social and economic benefits to local communities where relevant;
To facilitate inter-generational security for local communities' livelihoods therefore ensuring that
such livelihoods are sustainable.
To integrate other cultural approaches, belief systems and world-views within a range of social and
economic approaches to nature conservation.
To contribute to developing and/or maintaining a more balanced relationship between humans and the
rest of nature.
To contribute to sustainable development at national, regional and local level (in the last case mainly
to local communities and/or indigenous peoples depending on the protected natural resources).
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Protected Areas
History:
International commitments to the development of networks of protected areas date from 1972, when
the Stockholm Declaration from the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment endorsed the
protection of representative examples of all major ecosystem types as a fundamental requirement of national
conservation programs. Since then, the protection of representative ecosystems has become a core principle of
conservation biology, supported by key United Nations resolutions - including the World Charter for Nature
1982, the Rio Declaration at the Earth Summit (1992), and the Johannesburg Declaration 2002.
Globally, national programs for the protection of representative ecosystems have progressed with
respect to terrestrial environments, with less progress in marine and freshwater biomes.
Criticism:
Some countries such as China, Madagascar, Namibia and Venezuela place a protection category over
lands, but provide little enforcement, such that the areas are not substantively protected from development or
misuse.
Protected areas often involve the exclusion of resources users from the protected area. As such they
have been criticized for the displacement of local population. Much of the new protected areas are in
developing countries which makes the local population vulnerable.
In some places, wildlife is protected by armed guards, killing 'poachers' looking for subsistence.
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Protected Areas
Conclusion:
Nature has always helped in flourishing the mankind. But this isn't about what nature gives to us, its what we,
as a human being give back in return. Are we concerned about nature? Does saving the endangered species
and taking necessary actions for those who are on the brink of extinction means something to us? Then lets
join hands with the nature and the wildlife organizations to save mother Earth!
The natural projects and programs started by the Indian government such as Project Tiger, Nature
Camps and Jungle Lodges have been organized to promote wildlife awareness among the people. These
projects not only help in preserving our natural heritage but also encourage eco-tourism.
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