4.4 Article

Do national parks protect natural landscapes?

Journal

JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnc.2022.126229

Keywords

Nature conservation; Corine Land Cover; Landscape conservation; Landscape transformation; Poland

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This paper examines whether national parks in Poland protect the most natural landscapes and evaluates the level of human impact. The findings reveal that the majority of national parks preserve landscapes with minimal human transformation, indicating the extent of anthropogenic landscape alteration.
Establishing national parks should result from a desire to protect natural or near natural landscapes with the lowest degree of anthropogenic transformation. This paper tries to ascertain whether national parks in Poland protect the most natural landscapes and how far they have been affected by humans. The level of anthropogenic transformation of natural landscapes was assessed based on an analysis of the percentage of natural, semi-natural and anthropogenic land cover. The vast majority of national parks in Poland (21 out of 23) protect landscapes which have been minimally transformed by humans (RATTNP ranges from 1.01 to 1.16). Only two kinds of natural landscapes, those that are the most transformed by humans, are not represented within the set of the Polish national parks. Hence, the distribution of national parks reflects the degree of anthropogenic landscape transformation. The proposed method could be applied to any type of spatial unit and thus be the basis for designating areas that should be protected.

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