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Part 5: Practical Applications

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Determining areas of world to be protected ... Managed Wildlife Sanctuaries & Nature Reserves. Protected Landscapes & Seascapes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Part 5: Practical Applications


1
Part 5 Practical Applications
2
Part 5 Practical Applications
  • Chapter 15 Establishing Protected Areas
  • Chapter 16 Designing Networks of Protected
    Areas
  • Chapter 17 Managing Protected Areas
  • Chapter 18 Outside Protected Areas
  • Chapter 19 Restoration Ecology

3
Establishing Protected Areas
  • Chapter 15

4
Establishing Protected Areas
  • Most effective way to conserve biological
    diversity
  • Peak of establishment of protected areas
  • 1970s
  • Fell off in 1980s
  • Political reasons
  • Perception enough protected

5
Existing Protected Areas
  • 9 total land surface
  • 13 million square km
  • 4 strictly protected
  • 1 marine environments
  • Establishment difficult
  • 20 needs to be protected to manage for
    commercial fishing

6
Creating New Protected Areas
  • Mechanisms
  • Government action
  • Purchases
  • Individual
  • Conservation organizations
  • Customs of indigenous peoples
  • Development of biological field stations

7
Creating New Protected Areas
  • Steps
  • Identifying species and biological communities at
    highest priority for conservation
  • Determining areas of world to be protected
  • Linking new conservation areas to existing
    conservation networks using techniques such as
    gap analysis

8
Identifying Priorities for Protecting Biodiversity
  • Establishing Priorities for Protection
  • Distinctiveness
  • Endangerment
  • Utility

9
Distinctiveness
  • Higher priority
  • Biological community with rare endemic species
  • Opposed to common, widespread species
  • Taxonomically unique species
  • Only species in that genus
  • Unusual genetic characteristics

10
Endangerment
  • Species in danger of extinction
  • Small populations
  • Biological communities threatened with imminent
    destruction

11
Utility
  • Species with present or potential value to people
  • Food species
  • Major economic value coastal wetlands

12
Prioritization Systems
  • Complementary
  • Species approaches
  • Protect particular species
  • In doing so protect entire biological community
  • Focal species
  • Individual species of special concern
  • Rare, endangered, keystone, or culturally
    significant species
  • Indicator species
  • Species associated with endangered biological
    community
  • Northern spotted owl of old growth forests of
    Pacific northwest
  • Flagship species
  • Charismatic megafauna
  • Capture public attention

13
Prioritization Systems
  • Approaches using biological diversity indicators
  • When data about whole communities unavailable
  • Diversity in plants and birds good indicators
  • Water quality monitoring example
  • Britian
  • Protect hot spots of richness
  • Protect hot spots of rare species
  • Protect sets of complementary areas
  • Community and ecosystem approaches
  • Representative site
  • Includes the species and environmental conditions
    characteristic of the biologic community

14
National Priorities for Establishing Protected
Areas
  • National governments (or local) must determine
    own priorities
  • Global Environmental Facility
  • 1991
  • 500 million yearly
  • Biodiversity 1/3

15
Determining Which Areas Should be Protected
  • 14 major terrestrial biomes
  • Ecosystem types linked by the structure and
    characteristics of their vegetation
  • Greatest priority is temperate grasslands and
    lake systems
  • Limited in area
  • Only small their area is protected
  • See table 15.1 page 428

16
Centers for Biodiversity
  • Identifies key areas of world
  • Great biological diversity
  • High levels endemism
  • Global hot spots for preservation
  • species extinctions
  • habitat destruction
  • 25 global hot spots
  • Encompass 44 worlds plant species
  • 28 bird species
  • 30 mammals
  • 38 reptiles
  • 54 amphibians
  • 1.4 land surface
  • table 15.2 page 430
  • Figure 15.6 page 429
  • None in United States
  • Most in tropics

17
Wilderness Areas
  • Wilderness
  • Large blocks of land unaffected by humans
  • Roadless
  • High priority for conservation and protection
  • My thought
  • No roadsSo no drilling!!!
  • Make do with less oil
  • More gas efficient cars
  • Make less trips
  • Car pool
  • For what it is worth!
  • What was your trip to the Boundary Waters worth???

18
How Much Protection is Needed
  • Compromise
  • Protecting biological diversity
  • Ecosystem function
  • Satisfying immediate long-term needs for
    resources

19
The IUCN System of Classification
  • Strict Nature Reserves Wilderness Areas
  • National Parks
  • National Monuments Landmarks
  • Managed Wildlife Sanctuaries Nature Reserves
  • Protected Landscapes Seascapes
  • Managed Resource Protected Areas

20
Strict Nature Reserves/Wilderness Areas
  • Protect species
  • Protect natural process
  • Undisturbed state
  • Provide representative examples of diversity
  • For scientific study
  • Education
  • Environmental monitoring

21
National Parks
  • Large areas
  • Scenic and natural beauty
  • Maintained to provide protection
  • Use
  • Scientific study
  • Education
  • Recreation
  • Occassional commercial extraction of resources

22
National Monuments/Landmarks
  • Smaller reserves
  • Preserve unique biological, geological, or
    cultural features of special interest

23
Managed Wildlife Sanctuaries Nature Reserves
  • Human manipulation involved
  • Removing exotic species
  • Prescribed burns
  • Controlled harvest

24
Protected Landscapes Seascapes
  • Allow traditional uses by resident peoples
  • Notebly in areas with disinctive culture,
    aesthetic, or ecological characteristics
  • Provide tourism and recreation

25
Truly Protected Areas
  • By strictest definition only
  • Strict nature reserves and wilderness
  • National Parks
  • National momuments and landmarks
  • By looser definition
  • Managed wildlife sanctuaries/ reserves
  • Protected landscapes/seascapes

26
Protected Areas
  • Existing Protected Areas
  • 4500 worldwide strictly protected
  • 5899 partially protected
  • Represents only 4 Earths land surface
  • Varies greatly among countries
  • Maximum could only be 7-10 due to demands

27
Establishing Protected Areas with Limited Data
  • In general new areas should encompass
  • Endemic species of restricted range
  • Community types underrepresented in other
    protected areas
  • Support threatened species
  • Contain resources of potential use to people
  • Species of potential ag or medicinal use
  • Ecosystem services understood by public
  • Rapid biodiversity assessments (RAP)
  • Map vegetation
  • List species
  • Check for species of special concern
  • Estimate total number of species
  • Look out for species and features of special
    interest

28
Linking New Protected Areas to Reserve Networks
  • Link new areas to existing
  • Use technology to assist in this
  • GAP analysis

29
Gap Analysis
  • Method to compare biodiversity priorities with
    existing and proposed protected areas
  • This identifies gaps in preservation that need to
    be filled with new areas
  • GIS/GPS method
  • Figure 15.11, page 443

30
Summary
  • Protect habitat
  • 9 Earths surface protected
  • Strictly protected 4
  • Priorities for protection
  • Distinctiveness
  • Endangerment
  • Utility
  • Hot spots
  • Gap analysis

31
Designing Networks of Protected Areas
  • Chapter 16

32
Designing Networks of Protected Areas
  • Issues involved
  • Money
  • Land
  • Ecology
  • Three Rs
  • Representation
  • Resiliency
  • Redundancy

33
Issues of Reserve Design
  • Size
  • SLOSS
  • Single large or several small
  • How many to protect
  • Shape
  • How far apart
  • Connected by corridors?

34
Creating Adequately Sized Reserves
  • SLOSS
  • Single large
  • Capable of supporting large, wide-ranging,
    low-density species
  • Large carnivores
  • Minimize edge habitat
  • Encompass more species
  • Have greater habitat diversity
  • Several small

35
Principles of reserve design 16.1 page 450
  • Ecosystem completely protected
  • Larger reserve
  • Unfragmented
  • More reserves
  • Corridors maintained
  • Stepping stones to facilitate movement
  • Diverse habitats
  • Shape close to round
  • Mix of large and small reserves
  • Reserves managed regionally
  • Buffer zones for humans

36
Reserve Design Fig. 16.1
37
Reserve Design Species Preservation
  • Population size best predictor of extinction
    probability
  • More than one population desirable
  • Could manage as metapopulation

38
Minimizing Edge Fragmentation Effects
  • Round minimizes edge effect most
  • Center farther from edge
  • Minimize edge to area ratio
  • Square better than rectangle
  • Long, linear have more edge
  • Most are irregular shapes due to land acquisition
    issues
  • Avoid internal fragmentation by roads, etc.
  • Aggregate small reserves into larger blocks
  • Embed in larger matrix
  • May reduce effects of fragmentation
  • Greater representation of species and habitats
  • Maintain corridors

39
Conservation Networks
  • Strategies for aggregating small nature reserves
    into larger conservation networks
  • Chicago Wilderness Project
  • Prairie Passage

40
Linking Reserves With Habitat Corridors
  • Habitat Corridors
  • Strips of protected land between reserves
  • Links isolated areas
  • Allows plants and animals to disperse
  • Facilitates gene flow
  • Facilitates colonization of suitable sites
  • Migration routes
  • Preserve animals that migrate seasonally
  • Habitat Corridors Drawbacks
  • May facilitate movement of pest species and
    disease
  • May expose greater risk of predation
  • Human hunters as example
  • Animal predators
  • Advantages generally outweigh drawbacks

41
Habitat Corridor Case Studies
  • Wildlands Project
  • Proposes plan to link all large protected areas
    in US
  • Corridors in Loouisiana Wetlands
  • Community Baboon Sanctuary

42
Landscape Ecology Park Design
  • Landscape Ecology
  • Interaction of actual land-use patterns,
    conservation theory, and park design
  • Integrates patterns of habitat types on a
    regional scale
  • Their influence on species distribution and
    ecosystem processes
  • More studied in Europe
  • New housing design in United States with
    greenscapes

43
Landscapes Fig.16.9
44
Landscape Ecology
  • Area where a cluster of interacting stands or
    ecosystems is repeatedin similar form
  • Scattered patch
  • Open clearning in a forest
  • Groves of trees in a field
  • Network landscapes
  • Roads on plantation
  • Riparian network of rivers and tributaries in
    forest
  • Interdigitated landscapes
  • Tributary streams
  • Shifting forest with grassland borders
  • Checkerboard landscapes
  • Farmland under cultivation
  • Lots in residential development

45
Conclusion
  • Optimal procedures for designing network of
    protected areas
  • Approach each land acquisition on individual
    merits
  • Plan ahead

46
Summary
  • Design protected networks
  • SLOSS
  • Minimize edge effects
  • Corridors
  • Landscape ecology

47
Managing Protected Areas
  • Chapter 17

48
Introduction
  • Determine objective of protected area
  • What is the management plan?
  • Active management does not always produce desired
    results
  • Removal of predators result in increased
    herbivores
  • Cleaning parks of dead trees removes habitat
  • Removing horns to stop poaching results in
    animals lack of defense mechanism

49
Monitoring as a Management Tool
  • Water level
  • Soil erosion
  • Plant counts
  • Vegetative cover
  • Saguaro cactus

50
Identifying Managing Threats
  • Exotic species
  • Low population size among rare species
  • Habitat destruction
  • Fragmentation or degradation
  • Human use

51
Managing Invasive Species
  • Aggressive remove at first arrival
  • While at low densities
  • Cost effective compared to mass eradication later
  • Once established often impossible to remove

52
Managing Habitat
  • May need aggressive management to maintain all
    habitat types
  • If part of management plan
  • Natural disturbances may have failed to persist
  • Rare species may not have persisted either
  • Full range of successional habitats no longer
    present

53
Managing Water
  • Biological reserves most likely to be affected by
    human alterations of hydrology
  • Located in lower potions of watershed
  • Everglades
  • Contaminated
  • Urban
  • Agricultural
  • Sediment
  • Pesticides
  • Nutrients
  • Sewage
  • industry

54
Managing Keystone Resources
  • Food
  • Water
  • Minerals
  • Natural shelter
  • Alternatives
  • Feeding platforms
  • Artificial pools
  • Planting native fruit trees
  • Building artificial ponds

55
Managing Parks People
  • Zoning
  • Core concept
  • Undisturbed core
  • Buffer zone
  • Traditional activities, monitoring, research
  • Transition zone
  • Sustainable development
  • Public Use Zone

56
Regulating Activities inside Protected Areas
  • Incompatible with maintaining biological
    diversity
  • Must be abolished or regulated
  • Commercial harvesting of game and fish
  • Intensive harvesting of natural plant products
  • Fruits, fibers, resins, mushrooms
  • Illegal logging and farming
  • Fire
  • What are they thinking?????
  • Your thoughts here
  • Recreational activities
  • Off trail

57
Park Management Resources
  • Must be adequate funding for effective park
    management
  • Must also have funding for personnel
  • Vast sums spent on zoos and developed countries
  • Compared to undeveloped countries

58
Summary
  • Protected areas must be managed to maintain
    biological diversity
  • Management
  • Burning
  • Disturbance
  • Creation of successional stages
  • Keystone resources protected
  • Core concept
  • Adequate funding

59
Habitat Management
  • Keystone Resources
  • Resources on which many species depend
  • Preserve
  • Reconstruct
  • Keystone species
  • Providing enough keystone resources in
    concentrated area, allowing species to expand

60
Outside Protected Areas
  • Chapter 18

61
Introduction
  • If we cant protect whats inside protected
    areashow can we protect what is outside?
  • Shortsided to rely on parks and reserves to
    protect biodiversity alone
  • Park boundary is psychological
  • Cant abuse the surrounding lands

62
Value of Unprotected Habitat
  • Strategy of encouraging private landowners to
    protect rare species and biological communities
  • Wetland reserve program
  • Conservation reserve program
  • Florida panther

63
Multiple Use Habitat
  • Government-owned land (large areas)
  • Designated for many uses
  • Provide variety of goods and services
  • Ecotourism
  • Products
  • BLM
  • Logging
  • Grazing
  • Ecotourism
  • Mining
  • Wildlife
  • Recreation
  • Hunting

64
Ecosystem Management
  • Enhanced multiple-use management
  • Landscape scale
  • Involves many stakeholders
  • Integrates scientific knowledge of ecological
    relationships within a complex sociopolitical and
    values framework toward the general goal of
    protecting native ecosystem integrity over the
    long term

65
Ecosystem Management
  • Themes
  • Seeking and understanding connections between all
    levels and scales in the ecosystem hierarchy
  • Ensuring viable populations of all species
  • Monitoring significant components of the
    ecosystem
  • Changing rigid policies and practices of
    land-management agencies
  • Minimizing external threats
  • Recognizing that humans are part of the ecosystem
    and influence management goals

66
Case Studies
  • Managed Coniferous Forests
  • African Wildlife outside Parks
  • Community-Based Wildlife Management in Zambia

67
Restoration Ecology
  • Chapter 19

68
Introduction
  • Ecological Restoration
  • Process of intentionally altering a stie to
    establish a defined indigenous, historic
    ecosystem
  • Emulate the structure, function, diversity, and
    dynamics of the specified ecosystem
  • Provides data
  • Restoration Ecology
  • Science of restoration
  • Research and scientific study of restored
    populations, communities and ecosystems
  • Interprets and evaluates projects to lead to
    improved methods

69
Damage Restoration
  • Natural phenomena
  • Volcanoes
  • Fire
  • Flood
  • Hurricanes
  • Some ecosystems so degraded cannot recover
  • Soil erosion
  • Mitigation
  • Compensate for habitats damaged or destroyed
    elsewhere

70
Ecological Restoration Techniques
  • No action
  • Rehabilitation
  • Replace a degraded ecosystem with another
    productive type using a few or many species
  • Partial restoration
  • Restore some species
  • Dominant one
  • Complete restoration
  • To original species composition and structure

71
Case Studies
  • Wetlands Restoration in Japan
  • Grand Canyon-Colorado Ecosystem
  • Restoration in Urban Areas

72
Wetlands
  • Major work done
  • wetland mitigaton
  • Flood control
  • Water quality maintainence
  • Preservation of biological communities
  • Florida Kissimmee River project
  • Tutorial for Comprehensive Everglades Restoration
    Plan

73
Lakes
  • Cultural eutrophication
  • Excess mineral nutrients
  • Byproducts of human activity
  • Increased algal production
  • Then die and eventually decompose
  • The decomposition process utilizes oxygen
  • Deprives the water of oxygen that fish, etc. need
  • Creates areas of Dead Zone
  • Low dissolved oxygen areas of waterbad for fish
  • Lake Erie
  • Cultural eutrophication
  • Sewage treatment facilities
  • Phosphorus reduction
  • Special no phosphate detergents required now

74
Prairies
  • Prairie restoration
  • Prairie reconstruction
  • Iowa
  • Hawkeye
  • Living Roadway Trust Fund

75
Future of Restoration Ecology
  • Major growth area in conservation biology
  • Society for Ecological Restoration
  • Journals
  • Restoration Ecology
  • Ecological Restoration

76
Summary
  • Ecological Restoration
  • Restoration Ecology
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