239:(IUCN Category IV) is similar to a natural monument or feature, but focuses on more specific areas of conservation (though size is not necessarily a distinguishing feature), like an identifiable species or habitat that requires continuous protection rather than that of a natural feature. These protected areas will be sufficiently controlled to ensure the maintenance, conservation, and restoration of particular species and habitats—possibly through traditional means—and public education of such areas is widely encouraged as part of the management objectives.
170:
309:, developments are not intended to allow for widescale industrial production. The IUCN recommends that a proportion of the land mass remain in its natural condition—a decision to be made on a national level, usually with specificity to each protected area. Governance has to be developed to adapt the diverse—and possibly growing—range of interests that arise from the production of sustainable natural resources.
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207:. These monuments can be natural in the fullest sense or include elements that have been influenced or introduced by humans. The latter should hold biodiversity associations or could otherwise be classified as a historical or spiritual site, though this distinction can be quite difficult to ascertain.
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Natural monuments or features often play a smaller but key ecological role in the operations of broader conservation objectives. They have a high cultural or spiritual value that can be utilised to gain support of conservation challenges by allowing higher visitation or recreational rights, therefore
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Category VI may be particularly suitable to vast areas that already have a low level of human occupation or in which local communities and their traditional practices have had little permanent impact on the environmental health of the region. This differs from category V in that it is not the result
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To be categorised as a natural monument or feature by IUCN's guidelines, the protected area could include natural geological or geomorphological features, culturally-influenced natural features, natural cultural sites, or cultural sites with associated ecology. The classification then falls into two
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A IUCN Category II area is similar to a wilderness area in its size and its main objective of protecting functioning ecosystems. However, category II areas tend to be more lenient with human visitation and its supporting infrastructure. Category II areas are managed in a way that may contribute to
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Human visitation is limited to a minimum, often allowing only those who are willing to travel of their own devices (by foot, by ski, or by boat), but this offers a unique opportunity to experience wilderness that has not been interfered with. Wilderness areas can be classified as such only if they
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Human impacts on strict nature reserves are increasingly difficult to prevent because climate and air pollution and newly emerging diseases do not stop at the boundaries of protected areas. If perpetual intervention is required to maintain these strict guidelines, the area will often fall into
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In some cases, strict nature reserves are of spiritual significance for surrounding communities and are also protected for this reason. The people engaged in the practice of their faith within the region have the right to continue to do so, providing it aligns with the area's conservation and
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The main objective is to safeguard regions that have built up a distinct and valuable ecological, biological, cultural, or scenic character. In contrast with previous categories, Category V permits surrounding communities to interact more with the area, contributing to the area's sustainable
93:(IUCN Category Ia) is an area which is protected from all but light human use in order to protect its biodiversity and also possibly its geological/geomorphical features. These areas are often home to dense native ecosystems where all human disturbance except scientific study,
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subcategories: those in which the biodiversity is uniquely related to the conditions of the natural feature and those in which the current levels of biodiversity are dependent on the presence of the sacred sites that have created an essentially modified ecosystem.
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has developed the protected area management categories system to define, record and classify the wide variety of specific aims and concerns when categorising protected areas and their objectives. Further supplementary guidelines have been developed specific to
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The surrounding areas of a category II site may be for consumptive or non-consumptive use but should nevertheless act as a barrier for the defence of the protected area's native species and communities to enable them to sustain themselves in the long term.
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that fall into this category should represent an integral balance between people and nature and can sustain activities such as traditional agricultural and forestry systems on conditions that ensure the continued protection or
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Habitat or species management areas may exist as a fraction of a wider ecosystem or protected area and may require varying levels of active protection. Management measures may include (but are not limited to) the prevention of
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and education is prohibited. Because these areas are so strictly protected, they provide ideal pristine environments that enable measurement of external human influence by means of comparison with other areas.
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A protected landscape or protected seascape (IUCN Category V) covers a body of land or ocean with an explicit natural conservation plan, but usually also accommodates a range of for-profit activities.
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are devoid of modern infrastructure, though they allow human activity to the level of sustaining indigenous groups and their cultural and spiritual values within their wilderness-based lifestyles.
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Category V is one of the more flexible classifications of protected areas. As a result, protected landscapes and seascapes may be able to accommodate contemporary developments, such as
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and ecosystem processes (including evolution) are allowed to flourish or experience restoration if previously disturbed by human activity. These are areas which may buffer against the
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local economies through promoting educational and recreational tourism on a scale that will not reduce the effectiveness of conservation efforts.
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Despite "national park" being the common name of category II, not all protected areas titled "national park" fit the criteria for category II.
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The enlisting of such areas is part of a strategy being used toward the conservation of the world's natural environment and biodiversity. The
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118:(IUCN Category Ib) is similar to a strict nature reserve, but generally larger and protected in a slightly less stringent manner.
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Day, Jon; Dudley, Nigel; Hockings, Marc; Holmes, Glen; Laffoley, Dan; Stolton, Sue; Wells, Sue; Wenzel, Lauren, eds. (2019).
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This categorisation method is recognised on a global scale by national governments and international bodies such as the
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Oddly shaped rock pillars sculpted by wind and sea create the unique islandscape of the natural reserve
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247:, creation of artificial habitats, halting natural succession, and supplementary feeding practices.
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The Galápagos, Ecuador, is managed under category IV to preserve the islands' native flora and fauna
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199:(IUCN Category III) is a comparatively smaller area that is specifically allocated to protect a
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Guidelines for applying the IUCN protected area management categories to marine protected areas
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of long-term human interaction that has had a transformative effect on surrounding ecosystems.
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IUCN Guidelines for
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Though human involvement is a large factor in the management of these
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Category VI – protected area with sustainable use of natural resources
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Data for The Galápagos
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management and engaging with its natural and cultural heritage.
478:"Guidelines for Applying Protected Area Management Categories"
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and protect threatened species and ecological communities.
509:; Watson, Alan; Stringer, Angie; Kormos, Cyril F. (2016).
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offering an incentive for the preservation of the site.
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Data for
Serengeti National Park on Protected Planet
219:Category IV – habitat or species management area
27:International classification for protected areas
667:International Union for Conservation of Nature
51:International Union for Conservation of Nature
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427:(Second ed.). Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
251:Category V – protected landscape or seascape
121:These areas are a protected domain in which
149:, Tanzania is a designated Category II area
574:"Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve"
359:Guidelines for Protected Areas Legislation
165:Category III – natural monument or feature
627:IUCN: World Commission on Protected Areas
43:IUCN protected area management categories
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174:Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve
576:. The Canadian Encyclopedia. 2015-01-03
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356:Francoise Burhenne-Guilmin (2011).
333:World Commission on Protected Areas
85:Category Ia – strict nature reserve
74:Convention on Biological Diversity
45:, are categories used to classify
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338:World Database on Protected Areas
521:10.2305/IUCN.CH.2016.PAG.25.en
299:Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
39:IUCN protected area categories
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390:Biodiversity and conservation
110:Category Ib – wilderness area
49:in a system developed by the
632:Database of Protected Areas
450:"Protected Area Categories"
137:Category II – national park
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285:and aquatic biodiversity.
555:Category II National Park
127:effects of climate change
95:environmental monitoring
18:IUCN Management Category
297:Satellite image of the
237:species management area
147:Serengeti National Park
102:management objectives.
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580:2024-01-12
344:References
279:ecotourism
263:Landscapes
80:Categories
323:UNEP-WCMC
267:seascapes
34:IUCN Logo
558:Archived
485:IUCN.org
317:See also
245:poaching
205:habitats
72:and the
65:(MPAs).
53:(IUCN).
233:habitat
197:feature
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186:Canada
182:Quebec
481:(PDF)
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364:IUCN
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145:The
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