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PROTECTED AREAS WORLDWIDE
What are protected areas? Most
people agree that such territories
are dedicated to protecting and
maintaining biodiversity and are
often managed through legal
means. Yellowstone National
Park, established in 1872, is often
cited as the start of the modern
era of protected areas. From a
mere handful in 1900, the number
of protected areas worldwide
now exceeds 104,790, covering
more than 20 million km^2
(7.7 million mi^2 ). North America
claims the most protected land of
any region (in terms of total area),
amounting to almost 18 percent
of its territory. South Asia, at
about 7 percent, has the least
amount of land under some form
of protection. Not all protected
areas are created or managed
equally, and management
categories developed by the
International Union for Conserva-
tion of Nature (IUCN) range from
strict nature reserve to areas for
sustainable use. Management
effectiveness varies widely and can
be affected by such factors as
conservation budgets, and political
stability. Throughout the world—but
especially in tropical areas—protected
areas are threatened by illegal hunting,
overfishing, pollution, and the removal
of native vegetation. Countries and
international organizations no longer
choose between conservation and
development; rather the goal for
societies is to balance the two for
equitable and sustainable resource use.
BIODIVERSITY HOTSPOTS
Conservation International
identifies world regions
suffering from a severe loss
of biodiversity.
WORLD HERITAGE SITES
The United Nations
Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) recognizes natural
and cultural sites of “universal
value.”
LARGEST NATIONAL PARK
North East Greenland National
Park, Greenland, 972,000
km^2 (375,000 mi^2 )
LARGEST MARINE PARK
Northwestern Hawaiian
Islands Marine National
Monument, U.S., 360,000
km^2 (140,000 mi^2 )
LARGEST TROPICAL
FOREST PARK
Tumucumaque National Park
in the Brazilian Amazon
24,135 km^2 (9319 mi^2 )
GeoBytes
UNPROTECTED AREA
88% of Earth’s
land surface
PROTECTED
AREA
12%
Protected areas worldwide
represent 12 percent of the Earth’s
land surface, according to the U.N.
Environmental Programme World
Conservation Monitoring Centre.
Only 0.5 percent of the marine
environment is within protected
areas—an amount considered
inadequate by conservationists
because of the increasing threats
of overfishing and coral reef loss
worldwide.
HAWAII VOLCANOES
NATIONAL PARK, HAWAII
The park includes two of
the world’s most active
volcanoes, Kilauea and
Mauna Loa. The landscape
shows the results of 70
million years of volcanism,
including calderas, lava
flows, and black sand
beaches. Lava spreads out
to build the island, and
seawater vaporizes as lava
hits the ocean at 1149°C
(2100°F). The national
park, created in 1916,
covers 10 percent of the
island of Hawaii and is a
refuge for endangered
species such as the hawks-
bill turtle and Hawaiian
goose. It was made a World
Heritage site in 1987.
GALÁPAGOS NATIONAL
PARK, ECUADOR
Galápago means “tortoise”
in Spanish, and at one time
250,000 giant tortoises
roamed the islands. Today
about 15,000 remain, and
3 of the original 14
subspecies are extinct—
and the Pinta Island
tortoise may be extinct
soon. In 1959, Ecuador
made the volcanic
Galápagos Islands a
national park, protecting
the giant tortoises and
other endemic species.
The archipelago became a
World Heritage site in
1978, and a marine reserve
surrounding the islands
was added in 2001.
WESTERN UNITED STATES
An intricate mix of public
lands—including national
forests, wilderness areas,
wildlife refuges, and
national parks such as
Arches (above)—embraces
nearly half the surface area
of 11 western states. Ten
out of 19 World Heritage
sites in the United States
are found here. It was in
the West that the modern
national park movement
was born in the 19th
century, with the establish-
ment of Yellowstone and
Yosemite National Parks.
MADIDI NATIONAL PARK,
BOLIVIA
Macaws may outnumber
humans in Madidi, Bolivia’s
second largest national
park, established in 1995.
A complex community of
plants, animals, and native
Indian groups share this
18,900–km^2 (7300–mi^2 )
reserve, part of the
Tropical Andes biodiversity
hotspot. Indigenous
communities benefit from
ecotourism.
AMAZON BASIN, BRAZIL
Indigenous peoples help
manage reserves in Brazil
that are linked with Jaú
National Park. The park
and reserves are part of
the Central Amazon
Conservation Complex, a
World Heritage site
covering more than 60,000
km^2 (23,000 mi^2 ). It is the
largest protected area
in the Amazon Basin and
one of the most biologi-
cally rich regions on the
planet.
ARCTIC REGIONS
Polar bears find safe
havens in Canadian parks,
such as on Ellesmere
Island, and in Greenland’s
huge protected area—
Earth’s largest—that
preserves the island’s frigid
northeast. In 1996
countries with Arctic lands
adopted the Circumpolar
Protected Areas Network
Strategy and Action Plan
to help conserve ecosys-
tems. Today 15 percent of
Arctic land area is protected.
What do protected areas around
the world have in common? How
are their concerns shared by
state and local governments and
organizations?
GLOBAL
LOCAL
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