Wednesday 27 January 2016

The value of National Parks - a timeless heritage

Dove Lake, Cradle Mountain - Lake St Clair National Park, Australia (c) SO
National Parks, those precious territories of conservation, can be found world-wide across Africa, Asia, South America and Europe but they originated in just two countries - the United States and Australia. The first national park to be proclaimed was Yellowstone in the US in 1872, the second being the Royal National Park in Australia in 1879. Since then the concept has been introduced across the world but with vastly differing results and often severely challenged by land use conflict for human activity.

Australia now has over 500 national parks with over 28 million hectares of land designated as national parkland accounting for almost four per cent of Australia's land areas. A further six per cent of Australia is protected under various land categories such as state forests, nature parks and conservation reserves.

As at 2015, Australia has 19 World Heritage areas, a number of which also encompass national parks. Tthe United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) lists areas and structures as World Heritage when they are deemed worthy of special protection due to representing the best examples of the world's cultural and natural heritage. It's something of a mixed blessing for a number of World Heritage sites have also been lost due to war and religious conflict demonstrating that protection was little more than a theoretical concept

The key World Heritage sites in Australia with a nature significance are listed below:
  • Great Barrier Reef (inscribed 1981)
  • Kakadu National Park (inscribed 1981)
  • Willandra Lakes Region (inscribed 1981)
  • Lord How Island Group (inscribed 1982)
  • Tasmanian Wilderness (inscribed 1982)
  • Gondwana Rainforests of Australia (inscribed 1986)
  • Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park (inscribed 1987)
  • Shark Bay (inscribed 1991)
  • Fraser Island (inscribed 1992)
  • Australian Folssil Mammal Sites (Riversleigh, Naracoote) (inscribed 1994)
  • Heard and McDonald Island (inscribed 1997)
  • Macquarie Island (inscribed 1997)
  • Greater Blue Mountains Area (inscribed 2000)
  • Purnululu National Park (inscribed 2003)
  • Ningaloo Coast (inscribed 2011)
The key challenge is matching conservation with public access for it's becoming more apparent that its possible for national parks to become too popular leading to large volumes of people traversing the fragile ecosystems and habitats with resultant degradation of the natural environment.
Freycinet National Park, Australia (c) Sentinel Owl

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