Landscape Management Flashcards
What are the 4 main reasons why protected areas are needed?
- Preserve biodiversity
- As scientific benchmarks to evaluate change
- Maintain natural cycles and ecological processes
- Present and future generations
Define a Protected Area:
An area free of logging, mining, hydro-electrical, oil, and gas development, as well as other activities that could significantly adversely affect natural habitat.
How is permanency for protected areas ensured?
Through legislative means.
What is TLE?
Treaty Land Entitlement
Define a TLE:
A quantum of land is set aside for each person in a First Nation community, at the time there was no accurate data to properly allocate the land per person, but this still has not yet been completed 100 years late
How do nature reserves become “islands”?
By being surrounded by development and farmland.
What is the SLOSS controversy?
The debate of Single Large reserves or several small reserves.
What are the 6 principles of nature reserves in relation to islands?
- Single large preferable to several small totalling same area
- Large preserve holds more than small
- If small reserves; should be grouped closely
- Arrange in cluster rather than linear
- Corridor connection to aid dispersal
- Make circular to reduce edge effects
How are habitat patches and islands similar?
- Small units of land separated from similar areas by a barrier (different habitat or human development rather than water)
- Relationships between patch size and bird species diversity have been documented that are similar to relationships for true islands
How are habitat patches and islands different?
- How much of a barrier does the intervening land represent
- Isolated from what? Where is the ‘source’ population?
- Time: how long has the patch been isolated?
What is the MUM?
A Multiple Use Module
Memories the process of a MUM
Slide 8
What are the primary protected areas?
- Core Reserve
- Buffers
- Corridors
What are the issues faced with Core Protected Areas?
- Criteria for selection
- Edge Effects
- Buffers
- Corridors
- Replicates
- Temporal vs. Spatial
- Size
What are the species considered in Species specific planning?
- Umbrella Species
- Keystone species
- Guilds
- Multi-species
- Biodiversity hot spots
- Single species