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Protecting not-so-wild places helps biodiversity

Protecting not-so-wild places helps biodiversity
Making dry meat in K'ih tsaa?dze Tribal Park, one of the few places in northeastern British Columbia where the Dunne-Zaa First Nations can participate in traditional activities. Credit: Faisal Moola, Author provided

Few places on our planet remain untouched by humans.

The growing for food, fibre, fuels, shelter and freshwater is driving the loss and degradation of , wetlands, coastal areas and other ecosystems. It has had devastating consequences for , such as clean air, safe drinking water and a stable climate.

The explosive growth of towns and cities and land use changes —forestry, agriculture, mining — (an area larger than India) between 1993 and 2009.

The high seas haven't escaped the breadth and reach of human activity either. Today, industrial fisheries, pollution and marine traffic are .

Studies like these have helped draw attention to the astonishing pace and scale of global habitat loss at a time when .

We are fast approaching the 2020 deadline for achieving the United Nations' Strategic Plan for Biodiversity and its , including Target 11. That initiative obligates countries to protect 17 per cent of terrestrial areas and inland water, and 10 per cent of marine and .

A , published in 2014, showed that most countries would likely fail to meet their own goals. But there is a promising way forward where countries can protect biodiversity and recognize Indigenous peoples as conservation partners.

Humanized geographies

At the global scale, the number of terrestrial and marine protected areas have expanded since 2011. As of July 2018, there were 238,563 designated protected areas recorded in the . These areas collectively protect .

While the is on track to achieve its spatial goals by the 2020 deadline, there are concerns that the focus on .

There is also the danger that in the rush to meet the 2020 deadline, many new protected areas will simply be "paper parks" that remain open to .

The remaining pieces of intact wilderness, such as the Canadian boreal forest, have received considerable attention . But the conservation community and have largely overlooked the need to protect (landscapes changed by people).

The Indigenous Guardians program helps preserve land, language and culture.

This includes remnant wetlands located in urbanized areas such as southern Ontario and on the Lower Mainland of British Columbia as well as industrialized zones, like the Peace Region of northeastern British Columbia, that have been .

Landscapes of regret

Fortunately, there is a way to recognize and support in these developed and managed landscapes.

Countries can meet their global targets for terrestrial and marine conservation outside of formally designated parks and protected areas with "," or OECMs. These include managed forests, urban greenbelts, military lands and waters and territories managed by Indigenous peoples.

These landscapes have too often been dismissed for conservation as "landscapes of regret," owing to their degree of fragmentation and ecological degradation from human activities, including urbanization, agriculture and resource development.

We believe these areas hold out great hope as "landscapes of opportunity" for conservation. They contain important remnant of habitats for endangered wildlife and offer essential ecosystem services such as flood control, and can reconnect urban populations to nature.

A recent global synthesis of conservation studies shows that .

In addition, OECMs offer much-needed recognition and support for Indigenous-led conservation efforts, such as tribal parks. Studies show that tribal parks .

Indigenous guardians

Canada is an , including tribal parks to meet its international conservation goals. For example, have been working together on "Canada Target 1," with the goal of meeting the Aichi target 11. The process involves First Nations, Inuit and Métis, and commits to using both western science and Traditional Ecological Knowledge.

In the 2017 budget, for example, the federal government allocated $25 million over four years to the . The program supports communities engaged in the stewardship of traditional territories, including ecological restoration activities in areas impacted by forestry, oil and gas development and other industrial land use.

The global crisis necessitates conservation action that is both effective and equitable. Recent progress to expand the global coverage of traditional parks and protected areas is encouraging, but we must not lose sight of the critical need for new and innovative forms of governance.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Protecting not-so-wild places helps biodiversity (2019, February 13) retrieved 9 May 2025 from /news/2019-02-not-so-wild-biodiversity.html
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