Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: ecological networks and greenways
- 2 The context and concept of ecological networks
- 3 Greenways in the USA: theory, trends and prospects
- 4 Ecological functioning of ecological networks: a species perspective
- 5 Impacts of roads on ecological networks and integration of conservation and transportation planning: Florida as a case study
- 6 Ecological corridors on a European scale: a typology and identification of target species
- 7 Planning the future landscape between nature and culture
- 8 From models to reality: design and implementation process
- 9 Design of the Pan-European Ecological Network: a national level attempt
- 10 Ecological ‘black spots’ within the ecological network: an improved design for rural road network amelioration
- 11 An ecological network for the Milan region based on focal species
- 12 Connecting corridors: implementing metropolitan greenway networks in North America
- 13 The Florida Statewide Greenways Project: its realisation and political context
- 14 The ecological network development in the Yungas, Argentina: planning, economic and social aspects
- 15 The river corridor of the Guadiamar
- 16 Conclusions: into the twenty-first century
- References
- Index
14 - The ecological network development in the Yungas, Argentina: planning, economic and social aspects
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: ecological networks and greenways
- 2 The context and concept of ecological networks
- 3 Greenways in the USA: theory, trends and prospects
- 4 Ecological functioning of ecological networks: a species perspective
- 5 Impacts of roads on ecological networks and integration of conservation and transportation planning: Florida as a case study
- 6 Ecological corridors on a European scale: a typology and identification of target species
- 7 Planning the future landscape between nature and culture
- 8 From models to reality: design and implementation process
- 9 Design of the Pan-European Ecological Network: a national level attempt
- 10 Ecological ‘black spots’ within the ecological network: an improved design for rural road network amelioration
- 11 An ecological network for the Milan region based on focal species
- 12 Connecting corridors: implementing metropolitan greenway networks in North America
- 13 The Florida Statewide Greenways Project: its realisation and political context
- 14 The ecological network development in the Yungas, Argentina: planning, economic and social aspects
- 15 The river corridor of the Guadiamar
- 16 Conclusions: into the twenty-first century
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The degradation of the subtropical forest in the Argentine north-west can be considered as an example of the effects of neo-liberal policies on nature conservation. These schemes refrain from any attempt at land use planning. What is more, these policies determine profound alterations in this mountain rainforest, which will strongly affect regional sustainability.
The Yungas ecoregion and the Paranaense forest are the hotspots of biodiversity in Argentina; the Yungas is the more extensive one. There are about 5000000 hectares of rainforest in north-west Argentina. As an example, the Yungas host 60% of the total number of bird species of the country as well as some particular mammals such as the jaguar (Panthera onca) and the Andean taruca (Hippocamelus antisensis). The latter is a mountain deer nominated as ‘national natural heritage’. At the same time, this subtropical rainforest is the water producer and the natural water basin for a vast irrigation region. Moreover, the Yungas is a huge carbon sink consisting of extensive forests grading into Andean grasslands at the highest altitudes (Figure 14.1). However, the condition of the Yungas is changing quickly, as indicated by the fact that an estimated 1 250 000 ha have been converted from nature into agriculture between 1975 and 1988 (Reboratti 1989). In this chapter we present an assessment of the changes in this conversion process, and discuss the effects of forest fragmentation on the connectivity of forest patches.
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- Ecological Networks and GreenwaysConcept, Design, Implementation, pp. 251 - 269Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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