Specific countries
Contenido
A continuación se muestran algunos ejemplos de países individuales que han elaborado Planes de Acción de Biodiversidad sustantivos. En todos los ejemplos, los planes se concentran en plantas y animales vertebrados, con muy poca atención a grupos desatendidos como hongos, animales invertebrados y microorganismos, aunque estos también son parte de la biodiversidad. La preparación de un BAP de un país puede costar hasta 100 millones de libras esterlinas, con costos anuales de mantenimiento de aproximadamente el diez por ciento del costo inicial. Si los planes tuvieran en cuenta los grupos desatendidos, el costo sería mayor. Obviamente, los costos para países con áreas geográficas pequeñas o ecosistemas simplificados tienen un costo mucho menor. Por ejemplo, el BAP de Santa Lucía se ha calculado en el área de varios millones de libras esterlinas.[5].
Australia
Australia has developed a detailed and rigorous biodiversity action plan.[6] This document estimates that the total number of native species may be 560,000, many of which are endemic. A key element of the BAP is the protection of the Great Barrier Reef, which is actually in a much higher state of health than most reefs in the world, and Australia has one of the highest percentages of treated wastewater.[7] However, there are serious ongoing concerns, particularly regarding the continued negative impact on water quality of land use practices. Furthermore, the impact of climate change is feared to be significant.
Considerable analysis has been carried out on the sustainable yield of fuelwood production, a major threat to deforestation in most tropical countries. Biological inventory work; assessment of harvesting practices; and computer modeling of the dynamics of tree fall, rot and harvesting have been carried out to provide data on safe harvesting rates. Extensive research has also been carried out on the relationship between bush clearing and the decline in biodiversity and the impact on phreatics;[8] for example, these effects have been analyzed in the Toolibin Lake wetland region").
New Zealand
New Zealand has ratified the Convention on Biological Diversity and as part of the New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy and Biodiversity Action Plans are implemented into ten separate themes.[9].
The local government and some companies also have their own Biodiversity Action Plan.
Saint Lucia
The Saint Lucia BAP recognizes the impacts of large numbers of tourists on the marine and coastal diversity of the Soufrière (Saint Lucia) area of the country. The BAP specifically recognizes that the carrying capacity for human use and water pollution discharge from sensitive reef areas was exceeded in 1990. The plan also addresses the conservation of the island's historic fishing industry. In 1992, several institutions worked together with native fishermen to produce a sustainable management plan for fishery resources, embodied in the Soufrière Marine Management Area.
The Saint Lucia BAP has significant participation from the University of the West Indies. Special detailed attention is paid to three species of threatened sea turtles, a variety of vulnerable birds, and a number of pelagic fish and cetaceans. In terms of habitat conservation, the plan focuses attention on biologically productive mangroves and notes that virtually all mangrove areas were already under national protection in 1984.[10].
Tanzania
Tanzania's national BAP addresses issues related to the sustainable use of Lake Manyara, a vast freshwater lake, whose use by humans accelerated in the period 1950 to 1990. The designation of the Lake Manyara Biosphere Reserve under UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere Program in 1981 combines conservation of the lake and surrounding high-value forests with sustainable use of the wetland area and simple agriculture. This BAP has brought together the main users of the lake in establishing management objectives. The biosphere reserve has induced sustainable management of wetlands, including control of groundwater and steep source water chemistry.[11].
United Kingdom
The UK Biodiversity Action Plan covers not only terrestrial species associated with lands within the UK, but also marine species and migratory birds, which spend limited time in the UK or its coastal waters. The UK plan covers "391 species action plans, 45 habitat action plans and 162 local biodiversity action plans with specific actions".[12] This plan is noteworthy for its extensive detail, clarity of mechanisms. of danger, specificity of actions, follow-up monitoring program and its inclusion of migratory cetaceans and pelagic birds.
On 28 August 2007, the new Biodiversity Action Plan (BAP) [launched in 1997] identified 1,149 species and 65 habitats in the UK that needed conservation and further protection. The updated list included the hedgehog, house sparrow, snake and garden tiger moth, while otters, bottlenose dolphins and red squirrels still needed habitat protection.[13].
In May 2011, the European Commission adopted a new strategy to halt the loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services in the EU by 2020, in line with commitments made at the 10th meeting of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) held in Nagoya, Japan, in 2010. In 2012, the UK BAP was replaced by the 'UK Post-2010 Biodiversity Framework'.
To support the work of the UK BAP, the JNCC created the UK BAP website in 2001. The website contained information about the BAP process, hosted all relevant documents and provided relevant news and updates. In March 2011, as part of the review of UK government websites, the UK BAP site was 'closed' and the main content was migrated to the JNCC website. 2012[16] ).
USA
Twenty-six years before the international convention on biological diversity, the United States had launched a national program to protect threatened species in the form of the Endangered Species Act of 1966. The legislation created broad authority to analyze and list species of concern and mandated the creation of Species Recovery Plans. Thus, although the US is an unratified signatory to the agreement, it arguably has the longest history and most comprehensive program of protection of species from any country. There are about 7,000 listed species (e.g., endangered or threatened), of which about half have approved recovery plans. While this number of species seems high compared to other countries, the value is quite indicative of the total number of species characterized, which is extremely large.
Uzbekistan
Five main habitat divisions have been identified in the BAP of Uzbekistan: wetlands (including reedbed and artificial marsh habitats); desert ecosystems (including sandy, stony and clayey); steppes riparian ecosystems; and mountain ecosystems. More than 27,000 species have been inventoried in the country, with a high rate of endemism for fish and reptiles. The main threats to biodiversity are related to human activities associated with overpopulation and generally related to agricultural intensification.[17] The main geographical regions covered by the BAP include the Aral Sea Program (threatened by long-term drainage and salinization, mainly for cotton production), the Nuratau Biosphere Reserve") and the Western Tien Shan Mountains Program (jointly with Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan).