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Chapter 18 Land Resources and Conservation
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Vocabulary Urban- city/high density Rural- sparsely populated areas
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Current Land Use 55% private 3% Native American 35% Federal government (mostly Alaska & 11 western states) 7% State & Local government Federal land managed by U.S. Dept. of Interior (Bureau of Land Management, Fish & Wildlife Service, National Park Service) & by Dept. of Agriculture, U.S. Forest Service
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Land Use Types Wilderness National Parks Wildlife Refuges Forests Rangelands Wetlands Agricultural lands Suburbia/Urban lands
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Wilderness –Land not greatly disturbed by human activities & where humans visit but do not live
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Wilderness (cont) Government to set aside wilderness lands as part of National Wilderness Act of 1964- authorized U.S. Preservation Systems –42% of wilderness areas are in National parks –33% of wilderness areas are in National forests –22% of wilderness areas are in Wildlife refuges Given the highest protection of any federal lands –50% are in Alaska & western states
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Wild & Scenic Rivers Act of 1968 Protect rivers w/ outstanding beauty, recreational value, unique geological features, important habitat or species & historic value. –50% are in Alaska & Pacific NW w/ < 1% of nation’s total river systems –No development on shoreline –Mining claims are allowed
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National Parks –Large scenic areas & cultural & historic sites Sites/Lands purchased with money from Land & Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 Primary role of National Park Service is to teach people about natural environment, management of natural resources & history Problems= over crowding & resource violations Natural Regulation- letting nature take its course most of the time.
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Wildlife Refuges Land committed to wildlife habitat Established in 1903 by T. Roosevelt (National Wildlife Refuge System) 508 refuges representing all major ecosystems
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Forests Occupy< 1/3 earth land area Ecosystem service include –Provide timber –Recreation –Transpiration=> biological cooling –O 2 /CO 2 regulation
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Forest Management Options: 1. Tree plantation- monoculture 2. Ecological sustainable forest management- sustain forest diversity & ecosystem services but keep it commercially viable. 3. Selective cutting- cut individual or small strands of trees
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Forest Management Options: 4. Shelter wood cutting- removal of all mature trees in an area over a period of time. 5. Seed Tree cutting- almost all trees are harvested leaving a scattering of desirable trees left behind to provide a scattering of trees. 6. Clear cutting- All Trees harvested –Deforestation
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Effects of Deforestation: Soil erosion Regional/Global climate changes 97% of water absorb from soil is transpired Erosion and decrease in soil fertility CO 2 increases
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Tropical Rain forests ~1/2 Tropical Rain forests found in Brazil, Congo, & Indonesia. Tropical Rain forests are disappearing due to: –Slash & burn agriculture –Commercial logging Tropical Dry Forests are destroyed for fuel Boreal Forests- worlds largest biome(11%) Conservation easement- legal agreement protecting forests property form development for specific # of years.
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Rangelands Grasslands (temperature & tropical) –Provide food for livestock –Preserved for biological habitat –Mined for minerals –Contains mainly grasses, forbs, & shrubs Grasslands- predominately grasses w/ fibrous root system w/ growth buds below grade –Tends to be overgrazed which can lead to desertification
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Rangelands Cont Rangeland is ~ 30% of total land area w/ ~ 1/3 publicly owned and 2/3 privately owned BLM manages most rangeland via the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934, Federal Land Policy & Management Act of 1976, & Public Rangelands Improvement Act of 1978
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Wetlands Transitional lands between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems Ecosystem Services: –Recharge ground water –Reduce damage from flooding –Improve water quality –Provide habitat –Produce many commercial products > ½ of wetlands have been lost since colonial times
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Wetland loss controlled under: 1972 Clean Water Act (good for coastal, poorer for inland wetlands) 1986 Emergency Wetlands Resources Act –Requires FWS to inventory & map wetlands –Development of wetlands allowed only w/ creation of new restored wetland in same amount –Problems w/ definition of wetlands 1985 Food Security Act –Created wetlands reserve program => voluntary program to protect/restore privately owned freshwater wetlands
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Wetland loss controlled under: Federal government owns < 25% of wetlands in lower 48 states –Remaining 75% is privately owned Coastal wetlands = Saltwater wetlands –Highly productive –Protects coastal lines from erosion –Reduce damage from hurricanes Protected under similar legislation & rolling easements Marine sanctuaries (12 in nation) protect off shore areas that act as breeding grounds for marine animals/plants & protect sites of historic values
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Agricultural lands U.S. has > 300 million acres of prime farmland (lands w. soil, growing conditions & available water to produce food, forage, fiber & oilseed crops) Note: not all prime farmland is used to grow crops; 1/3 contains roads, pastures, buildings, etc. Biggest problem facing agricultural lands is urbanization
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Prevention of Urbanization: 1996 Farm Bill- established Farmland Protection Program, a voluntary program that helps farmers keep their land in agriculture by selling their conservation easements to prevent conversion to non- agricultural uses for at least 30 yrs.
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Solution to Urbanization Urban planning such as smart growth –Define urban planning –32% of world’s total land area is agricultural lands (~ 11.6 billion acres) (30% of world’s land is considered uninhabited by humans)
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