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Congrès Mondial sur les Parcs - Durban - Afrique du Sud - 7-17 Septembre 2003 - Bénéfices par delà les frontières

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La page d'accueil du site internet du 5ème Congrès Mondial des Parcs, elle contient un brève introductionsur ce que représente le Congrès et les liens à toutes les sections du site.
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Résultats du Congrès
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Tout ce que vous voulez connaître sur les personnages clés du CMP, UICN, CMAP, Parcs Nationaux de l'Afrique du Sud et des autorités sud-africaines, mais aussi tout plein de liens utiles en rapport au thèmes du CMP
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OUTPUTS OF THE CONGRESS

Outputs on the United Nations List
and State of the World's Protected Areas

UN LIST OF PROTECTED AREAS
INFORMATION SITE

Background // Facts & Figures // Marine // PAs Top 20 // Biomes // Links 

What: The "State of the World's Protected Areas Report" will be available as a draft at the Congress. It will comprise a detailed review of the status of the world's PAs. It will assess the extent of PA coverage and highlight key challenges as well as future priorities.
How to get involved: A draft of this document will be made available for review by participants at the WPC. Please contact Stuart Chape from UNEP-WCMC if you would like to provide comments.

Key contact: Stuart Chape (UNEP-WCMC) and Pedro Rosabal (IUCN Secretariat)
Web Address:
http://www.unep-wcmc.org/protected_areas/index.html

Background

The 2003 United Nations List of Protected Areas released at the Vth IUCN World Parks Congress in Durban, South Africa, is the most comprehensive report ever on parks. It includes World Heritage Sites, Biosphere Reserves and other sanctuaries ranging from the biggest national park: Greenland, which spans 97 million hectares, to privately-owned sites covering as few as ten square kilometres.

The report, compiled by UNEP’s World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) in collaboration with IUCN and its World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA), illustrates growth in areas being set aside for conservation.

The first national park, Yellowstone in the United States, was established in 1872. By the 1960’s, some 10,000 protected areas were created. Today, there are more than 100,000. The earliest recorded examples of government-backed protection however goes back millennia, to 250 BC, when the Emperor Asoka of India set up protected areas for mammals, birds, fish and forests.

In terms of surface covered, in 1962 - the year of the first IUCN World Parks Congress – some two million square kilometres were protected; today, over 18 million square kilometres benefit from protected area status.


Cumulative growth in protected areas by 5-year increment: 1872-2003
Click on the image to see a PDF version of the figure
Cumulative growth in protected areas by 5-year increment: 1872-2003

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Facts and Figures

The report lists 102,102 sites covering an area of 18.8 million square kilometres of which 17 million square kilometres – equating to 11.5 % of the Earth’s land surface, is terrestrial. Protected areas now cover more land than that under permanent, arable, crops.

67% of the world’s protected areas have been assigned an IUCN management category, covering 81% of the total area protected.

World's Area Protected
Click on the image to see a PDF version of the figure
World's Area Protected

Cumulative growth in global number of protected areas 1997-2003 by IUCN Category.

Click on the image to see a PDF version of the figure
Cumulative growth in global number of protected areas 1997-2003 by IUCN Category.

Cumulative growth in global area of protected areas 1997-2003 by IUCN Category.

Click on the image to see a PDF version of the figure
Cumulative growth in global area of protected areas 1997-2003 by IUCN Category

Since the Earth Summit in Rio, developing country governments have demonstrated extraordinary commitment and over 40% of protected area sites are today found in such countries.

Data per region is available in the report.

With the Vth IUCN World Parks Congress taking in place in South Africa, here is the data for Eastern and Southern Africa, with the number and % distribution of categorised and non-categorised protected areas in the pie chart bellow, and areas and % distribution of categorised and non-categorised protected areas in the pie chart on the right.

Click on the image to see a PDF version of the figure
Number and % distribution of categorised and non-categorised protected areas

Overall, Europe leads the way in terms of the numbers of protected areas with over 43,000 listed followed by North Eurasia, nearly 18,000; North America, over 13,000 and Australia and New Zealand with close to 9,000. The Pacific, with around 320, has the fewest. There are nearly 4,390 in Eastern and Southern Africa with a further 2,600 in Western and Central Africa.

However, in terms of size, it is Central America with 14.5 million square kilometres of protected areas covering almost 25 % of the region, that tops the list followed by North America, 4.5 million square kilometres or just over 18 % of the region’s land surface.

South America, with nearly four million square kilometres of protected areas, tops the list in terms of percentage of land in protected areas. Close to 42 % of the region is held in protected areas.

Protected areas cover 1.6 million square kilometres or over 14.5 % of Eastern and Southern Africa and over 1.1 million square kilometres or over 10.5 % of land in Western and Central Africa.

The Pacific has over 20,000 square kilometres of protected areas representing about 1.5 %of its land area.

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Marine

The report lists an estimated 4,116 marine protected areas covering over 1.6 million square kilometres. However, this represents less than 0.5 % of the seas and oceans.

Most of these sites, including for example Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, have been designated since the 1970s. Australia and New Zealand have the largest area of marine protection, covering over 420,000 sq km. Although Europe has the largest number of marine protected areas, over 800, these are small and many offer only limited levels of protection. The coastlines of Southern and Eastern Africa and of South Asia are some of the least protected, making the Indian Ocean, with its wealth of coral reefs, seagrasses, and mangrove forests, perhaps the most poorly protected ocean.

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The 20 Largest Protected Areas
1.
Greenland - 97.2 million hectares
2.
Ar-Rub’al-Khali wildlife management area in Saudi Arabia - 64 million hectares
3.
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park in Australia - 34.5 million hectares
4.
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands' Coral Reef Ecosystem Reserve of the United States at over 34 million hectares
5.
Amazonia forest reserve in Colombia - more than 32 million hectares
6.
Qiang Tang nature reserve in China - almost 25 million hectares
7.
Macquarie Island in Australia - around 16 millions hectares
8.
Cape Churchill wildlife management area in northern Canada - just under 14 million hectares
9.
Northern Wildlife Management Zone in Saudi Arabia, 10 million hectares
10.
Alto Orinoco-Casiquiare biosphere reserve in Venezuela and Bolivia - 8.4 million hectares
11.
Vale do Javari indigenous area in Brazil - 8.3 million hectares.
12.
Ouadi Rimé-Ouadi Achim a in Tchad - with 8 million hectares.
13.
US Arctic in the USA- with 7.8 million hectares.
14.
Yanomami (AM-RO) in Brazil - 7.75 million hectares.
15.
Yukon Delta in USA - 7.74 million hectares.
16.
Aïr and Ténéré in Niger - 7.73 million hectares.
17.
Pacifico in Colombia - 7.39million hectares.
18.
Sur del Estado Bolívar in Venezuela - 7.26 million hectares.
19.
Tassili N'Ajjer in Algeria - 7.2 million hectares.
20.
Coutada in Angola - 6.8 million hectares.

More information & source: http://sea.unep-wcmc.org/wdbpa/toptwenty.cfm

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Biomes

The report lists 14 so-called land or terrestrial “biomes”. Biomes are defined as “the world's major communities, classified according to the predominant vegetation and characterized by adaptations of organisms to that particular environment "

This table bellow shows the area covered by the world’s major terrestrial biome (such as tropical humid forests or cold-winter deserts), the total number of sites per biome, and the equivalent percentage. For example, between a third and ten % of some of the planet’s vital natural features such as the Amazonian rainforests, the Arctic tundra and the tropical savannah grasslands are now held in these protected areas.

Click on the image to see a PDF version of the figure
Extent of protection of the world's major terrestrial biomes

The rate at which the planet’s marine world is gaining protection causes even greater concern. Less than 0.5 % of the world’s seas and oceans are within protected areas.

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Links and Documents

2003 United Nations List of Protected Areas - PDF Document 1.3MB

IUCN / UNEP Press Release - 09.09.2003 - Planet’s List of Protected Areas Tops 100,000 Mark - PDF Document

UNEP-WCMC - http://www.unep-wcmc.org/

UNEP- http://www.unep.org

The underlying database for the World Database on Protected Areas can be viewed at: http://sea.unep-wcmc.org/wdbpa/

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Les résultats du COngrès
WPC OutoutsResultados del CMP
The Durban Accord is a high level vision statement for PAs in the 21st Century - a message to the world from the Congress.
The WPC Recommendations are 30 stand-alone recommendations linked to WPC workshop streams and cross cuts themes.
The Inputs into the CBD process will provide input from the WPC to the Conference of the Parties (COP) 7.  This COP will be held in Malaysia in February, 2004, and will focus on protected areas.
Questions émergentes du CMP
Renforcer les aires protégées: Dix domaines d’action privilégiés pour la décennie à venir
Managing Protected Areas in the 21st Century will be a handbook for PA practitioners collating the learning from Durban.  Rich in case studies, models, lessons learned and drawn mostly from the IUCN World Parks Congress Streams and Cross Cutting Themes, it will be the 'User Manual' for the Durban Accord.
World Parks Congress Outputs from the Transboundary Protected Areas Task Force of the IUCN-WCPA
PALNet - Protected Areas Learning Network
The United Nations List & State of the World's Protected Areas (PAs) Report will be the global report card for the world's PAs.  These documents are being prepared by the United Nations Environment Programme - World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC), with input from the World Commission on Protected Areas.
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