Register or log in at GRIN

Your e-mail-address or password is wrong
Register now
For new authors: free, easy and fast
This will be used as your user name, please specify a valid e-mail address

Lost password

Your e-mail-address or password is wrong

Request a new password
A Case Study on Management of National Parks and Biodiversity Conservation in Br... close

Please wait

Please install the Adobe Flash Player if no e-book is displayed.

A Case Study on Management of National Parks and Biodiversity Conservation in Brazil

Scholarly Essay, 2007, 37 Pages
Author: Fernando Avila-Pires
Subject: Environmental Sciences

Details

Category: Scholarly Essay
Year: 2007
Pages: 37
Grade: 1(a)
Bibliography: ~ 73  Entries
Language: English
Archive No.: V73984
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-73698-5

File size: 224 KB
Notes :
Paper prepared for the Conference on "Management of National / Natural Parks and Biodiversity Conservation in Africa". Accra (Ghana) from 2 - 6 April 2007.


Abstract

Abstract The widely used expression Latin America refers to the Iberian conquerors, the Spanish and Portuguese navigators that arrived in the American continent at the end of the 15th century and in the early 16th’s. Ensuing territorial disputes over known and unknown lands of the New World were tentatively settled by Papal bullas and treaties between the kingdoms of Castella and Portugal. From 1581 to 1640 Portugal was under Spanish rule, which was somehow beneficial to Brazilian territorial expansion, beyond the limits established in former treaties. The final treaty that ended wars in the Iberian peninsula was signed in 1668. The modern era began in the late 1930’ when several Latin American countries imposed regulations upon the exploitation of natural resources - oil prospecting and mining in particular - not because of the their ecological impacts upon the environment but mostly for political, economic and protectionist considerations. There can be no sustainable development without a guarantee of those conditions which are propitious for the improvement of animal, plant, and human health. This item was the object of a former paper (Avila-Pires, 2003), where it was shown that The relationships between ecological diversity and health arose from the amalgamation of notions coming from fields as diverse as cultural anthropology, ethno botany, medical geography, medical ecology, epidemiology, human ecology, and economic development.


Excerpt (computer-generated)

A Case Study on Management of National Parks and Biodiversity
Conservation in Brazil1

by

Fernando Dias de Avila-Pires
 

 


Introduction  2

Highlights of regional technologies of the past  7

The awakening of public concerns  9

The heritage from the past and the public appeal of the National Geographic-type, image of faunal biodiversity 12

Technologies for the future : Brazil, a case study  14

Conservation efforts in Brazil  17

Development, biodiversity, and health 19

Biodiversity  21

National Parks and Protected Areas: a study in island biogeography  25

References  28

Hallmarks  33

 



Key words: national parks, conservation, biodiversity, conservation, Brazil, Latin America


 

Introduction

Latin America - Mexico, Middle and South America - is a conglomerate of independent nations, plus a few Dutch, French, and British islands, a small French territory - the French Guyana, and a large number of surviving pre-Columbian native tribes or nations of distinct ethnic origins. Trinidad-Tobago, Guyana and Suriname became independent from the United Kingdom and the Netherlands in the 1960’. No visible trace of early Viking sailors survived. Besides, each war in the Old World, forced a wave of migrants to search for asylum in the New World. Italians, Polish, Hungarians, Russians, Germans, Japanese, Syrians, Lebanese, among others formed in some cases tightly closed enclaves, speaking long forgotten dialects that have vanished in their native countries, but more often mingling with the host populations, and retaining but just a few folkloric traces of their original cultures.

The widely used expression Latin America refers to the Iberian conquerors, the Spanish and Portuguese navigators that arrived in the American continent at the end of the 15th century and in the early 16th’s. Ensuing territorial disputes over known and unknown lands of the New World were tentatively settled by Papal bullas and treaties between the kingdoms of Castella and Portugal. From 1581 to 1640 Portugal was under Spanish rule, which was somehow beneficial to Brazilian territorial expansion, beyond the limits established in former treaties. The final treaty that ended wars in the Iberian peninsula was signed in 1668.

All along the 17th and 18th centuries, astronomers, naturalists and soldiers made extensive expeditions to demarcate land and river frontiers and make inventories of natural productions. Attempts by French and Dutch expeditions to establish permanent colonies in Brazil were short lived. Spanish became the official language of the majority of Latin American countries, while Portuguese is spoken in Brazil.

Until the 19th century, the environmental policies in Latin America were those imposed by the European settlers, and obviously directed towards the exploitation of natural resources, vegetal, animal, and mineral. Natives were also considered a natural resource, and duly enslaved, at a time when the Catholic church condoned and justified slavery. The earliest regulatory initiatives were aimed at the restriction of trading rights or at the limitation of property and use. Thus, the Portuguese expression madeira de lei was adopted to designate those noble species of trees which belonged legally to the king, to be used in naval construction or in fine wood craftsmanship. It has been recently estimated that from the16th to the 19th century, about 470 thousand logs of Cesalpinia echinata, the Brazil wood, were exported to Portugal for its precious red die. There followed the introduction of species from Europe, and the colonies in Asia and Africa. Botanical gardens were established in the New World to cultivate and spread the costly spices from the Orient and a variety of introduced cultivated plants and domestic animals. New diseases and parasites arrived with men and animals, as it was well documented by the early travelers and chroniclers. From the Americas, plants, animals and materia medica were sent to Europe, causing profound changes in the Old World nutritional habits (Avila-Pires, 2003). Gold, silver and gems would be a later development in the process of territorial occupation of Brazil. On the Pacific side, Spanish conquerors found a number of developed native societies already submitted and ruled by the Inca Empire, with large riches in precious metals ready to be plundered. To the north of the Equator, the Aztec and Mayan civilizations suffered the same fate. During the 1780’ the governments of Spain and Portugal exploited their American domains in a thorough and systematic fashion. Reports of early naturalists are available nowadays in fac-simile and in commented editions. They help us with the reconstruction of former patters of geographical distribution of pre-Columbian fauna and flora. Early in the 19th century, with the invasion of Lisbon by the Napoleonic armies, the Portuguese court moved to Brazil. Foreign naturalists were permitted or encouraged to travel and explore the hinterland, except the mining districts and a new era for the Natural History of the New World began.

Involvement of naturalists with the politics of economic development is not a new phenomenon. Cardoso (2003) shows how Domenico Vandelli, trained in medicine and natural history in his native Italy, supported the notion that a better knowledge of natural resources was a fundamental condition for addressing problems of efficiency in their economic allocation. His idea that natural history should be the basis for an economic agenda was a central element in the emergence of political economy as an autonomous scientific discourse during the last decades of the eighteenth century. Vandelli was also instrumental in advocating the financing of an expedition in the late 1700’ to study the natural productions of Brazil, with the objective of establishing a program of systematic economic exploration. Isolated initiatives for specific situations like the restriction of collecting aigrettes date from imperial times.

Environmental policies, in the modern sense were directed to environmental protection and were formally introduced in 1864, when the United States Congress donated an area in the Yosemite Valley to the State of California to be used for public use, recreation, and as a refuge for animals. Eight years later, in 1872, Yellowstone was created as the first National Park, “…hereby reserved and withdrawn from settlement, occupancy or sale under the laws of the United States and dedicated and set apart as a public park or pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people.” The rationale behind it was the protection of certain threatened species and scenic landscapes.

Mexico established its first National Park, El Chico, in 1898, while in South America it was Argentina who was pioneer, in 1934, with Nahuel Huapi National Park. The modern era began in the late 1930’ when several Latin American countries imposed regulations upon the exploitation of natural resources - oil prospecting and mining in particular - not because of the their ecological impacts upon the environment but mostly for political, economic and protectionist considerations. In the Annex: Hallmarks the main international initiatives have been listed.

Thirty years later efforts of naturalists – zoologists, botanists, anthropologists, archeologists – were rewarded with a limited dose of success that gathered momentum with the growing interest and support from public opinion in favor of nature conservation. This movement was to gain force during the two following decades. The concept of conservation substituted the previous protection policies, intended to salvage threatened animals and plants and to establish national parks and preserves, sometimes focusing on certain species, and not on natural communities, which should be the basis for environmental conservation, as shown by Avila-Pires in 1972. Reasons given for the need to protect nature went from the sentimental and poetic to utilitarian and pragmatic (Halffter, 1993, Halffter, 2003; Halffter, 2005).

During the 1960’ and 1970’ democratic or dictatorial governments in Latin America either adopted or revised conservation laws. In the case of revolutionary governments it was done through Presidential Law-Decrees or by Congress, with little discussion or argument. But it was not a simple process. Scientists in one side, legislators and jurists in another, and considerable national and international commercial and political interests sometimes intervened and some of the problems that loomed in the near future were the object of discussion during the 8th Reunion of the Central Council of the International Union of Magistrates, in 1971 (Union Internationale des Magistrats, 1971). Brazil revised the legislation of the thirties during the period beginning in 1964, under a military dictatorship, which viewed conservation as an integral part of the national security policy, as we shall see.

Argentina approved Law nº 5781 in 1956 to regulate fishing activities and since 1967 a number of Provincial laws on National Parks and Faunal Preserves. A preoccupation with tourism was behind some of the initiatives. One drawback was the permission to introduce exotic animals, as wild boar and European deer in National Parks. In 1974 Bolivia approved the Law-Decree nº 11686 of August 13, 1974 established the Ley General Forestal de la Nación or General Forest Law of the Nation. It was regulated by the Resolución Suprema or Governmental Resolution nº 183204 of February 2, 1977. Also in the 1970’ Bolivia passed the Law-Decree nº 12301 dealing with Wildlife, National Parks, Hunting and Fishing.

[...]


1 Conference on "Management of National / Natural Parks and Biodiversity Conservation in Africa. Accra (Ghana) from 2 - 6 April 2007.


Comments

No comments yet

Add Comment
Your comment is reviewed before being published

Other users also were interested in the following titles:

Erstellen einer schriftlichen Hausarbeit

Author: Claudia Nickel
Presentations, Models, Tutorials, Instructions, 2006 Download as PDF-file for 4,99 EUR

Grundtechniken wissenschaftlichen Arbeitens

Author: Maik Philipp
Presentations, Models, Tutorials, Instructions, 2004 Download as PDF-file for 5,99 EUR

This text can be quoted and accessed from this url:

http://www.grin.com/e-book/73984/a-case-study-on-management-of-national-parks-and-biodiversity-conservation
please wait Please wait