National
Parks and State Forests
Protected areas of Australia
Protected
areas of Australia include Commonwealth and off-shore
protected areas managed by the Australian government,
as well as protected areas within each of the
six states of Australia and two self-governing
territories (Northern Territory and Australian
Capital Territory), which are managed by the eight
state and territory governments.
Commonwealth
and off-shore protected areas in the Australian
Capital Territory, the Northern Territory, the
Christmas Island Territory, the Cocos (Keeling)
Islands Territory, the Norfolk Island Territory
and the Australian Antarctic Territory are managed
by Parks Australia, a division of the Department
of the Environment and Water Resources, with the
exception of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park,
which is managed by the Great Barrier Reef Marine
Park Authority, a separate body within the department.
The
following list shows only the Commonwealth and
off-shore protected areas that are managed by
the Australian government; a small portion of
all the protected areas of Australia. Each state
and territory is responsible for the management
of the state and territory protected areas under
its jurisdiction. This does not include the Commonwealth
areas listed below, some of which (e.g. Uluru-Kata
Tjuta National Park) are inside state and territory
boundaries. Most Australian "national"
parks are managed by the state and territory governments.
National
Parks
* Booderee
* Christmas Island
* Kakadu
* Norfolk Island
* Pulu Keeling
* Uluru-Kata Tjuta (Credit:
Wikipedia)
A
national park is a reserve of land, usually, but
not always declared and owned by a national government,
protected from most human development and pollution.
National parks are a protected area of IUCN category
II. The largest national park in the world is
the Northeast Greenland National Park, which was
established in 1974.
History
Prologue
In
1810, the English poet William Wordsworth described
the Lake District as a "sort of national
property in which every man has a right and interest
who has an eye to perceive and a heart to enjoy".
The painter George Catlin, in his travels though
the American West, wrote in 1832 that the Native
Americans in the United States might be preserved
"by some great protecting policy of government
. . . in a magnificent park . . . A nation's park,
containing man and beast, in all the wild and
freshness of their nature's beauty!" Similar
ideas were expressed in other countries—in
Sweden, for instance, the Finnish-born Baron Adolf
Erik Nordenskiöld made such a proposition
in 1880. The Scottish-American naturalist John
Muir was inspirational in the foundation of national
parks, anticipating many ideas of conservationism,
environmentalism, and the animal rights movement.
Establishment
The
first effort by any government to set aside such
protected lands was in the United States, on April
20, 1832, when President Andrew Jackson signed
legislation to set aside four sections of land
around what is now Hot Springs, Arkansas to protect
the natural, thermal springs and adjoining mountainsides
for the future disposal of the US government.
It was known as the Hot Springs Reservation. However
no legal authority was established and federal
control of the area was not clearly established
until 1877.
The
next effort by any government to set aside such
protected lands was in the United States, when
President Abraham Lincoln signed an Act of Congress
on June 30, 1864, ceding the Yosemite Valley and
the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias (later becoming
the Yosemite National Park) to the state of California:
"[T]he
said State shall accept this grant upon the express
conditions that the premises shall be held for
public use, resort, and recreation; shall be inalienable
for all time.
In
1872, Yellowstone National Park was established
as the world's first truly national park. When
news of the natural wonders of the Yellowstone
were first published, the land was part of a territory.
Unlike Yosemite, there was no state government
that could assume stewardship of the land, so
the federal government took on direct responsibility
for the park, a process formally completed in
October 1, 1890. It took the combined effort and
interest of conservationists, politicians and
especially businesses—namely, the Northern
Pacific Railroad, whose route through Montana
would greatly benefit by the creation of this
new tourist attraction—to ensure the passage
of the legislation by the United States Congress
to create Yellowstone National Park.
The
'dean of western writers,' American Pulitzer prize-winning
author Wallace Stegner, has written that national
parks are 'America's best idea,'—a departure
from the royal preserves that Old World sovereigns
enjoyed for themselves—inherently democratic,
open to all, "they reflect us at our best,
not our worst." Even with the creation of
Yellowstone, Yosemite, and nearly 37 other national
parks and monuments, another 44 years passed before
an agency was created in the United States to
administer these units in a comprehensive way
- the U.S. National Park Service (NPS). Businessman
Stephen Mather pushed hardest for the creation
of the NPS, writing then-Secretary of the Interior
Franklin Knight Lane about such a need. Lane invited
Mather to come to Washington, DC to work with
him to draft and see passage of the NPS Organic
Act, which was approved by Congress and signed
into law on August 25, 1916.
The
number of areas now managed by the National Park
Service in the United States consists of 391 different
sites, of which only 58 carry the designation
of National Park.
Following
the idea established in Yellowstone there soon
followed parks in other nations. In Australia,
the Royal National Park was established just south
of Sydney in 1879. In Canada, Banff National Park
(then known as Rocky Mountain National Park) became
its first national park in 1885. New Zealand had
its first national park in 1887. In Europe the
first national parks were a set of nine parks
in Sweden in 1909. Europe has 370 national parks
at the moment. In 1926, the British administration
in South Africa designated Kruger National Park
as the nation's first national park.
After
World War II, national parks were founded all
over the world. The Vanoise National Park in the
Alps was the first French national park, created
in 1963 after public mobilization against a touristic
project.
Features preserved
National
parks are usually located in places which have
been largely undeveloped, and often feature areas
with exceptional native animals, plants and ecosystems
(particularly endangered examples of such), biodiversity,
or unusual geological features. Occasionally,
national parks are declared in developed areas
with the goal of returning the area to resemble
its original state as closely as possible.
In
some countries, such as England and Wales, areas
designated as a national park are not wilderness,
nor owned by the government, and can include substantial
settlements and land uses which are often integral
parts of the landscape. Scotland's first National
Park, The Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National
Park, was established in July 2002 while the Cairngorms
National Park was established in March 2003.
Park
mandates
Most
national parks have a dual role as offering a
refuge for wildlife and as serving as popular
tourist areas. Managing the potential for conflict
between these two roles can become problematic,
particularly as tourists often generate revenue
for the parks which, in turn, are spent on conservation
projects. Parks also serve as reserves for substantial
natural resources, such as timber, minerals and
other valuable commodities. The balance of the
demand for extraction of these resources, against
the damage this might cause, is often a very important
challenge in national park management. National
parks have been subject to illegal logging and
other exploitation, sometimes because of political
corruption. This threatens the integrity of many
valuable habitats.
Other sites designated for preservation
Some
countries also designate sites of special cultural,
scientific or historical importance as national
parks, or as special entities within their national
park systems. Other countries use a different
scheme for historical site preservation. Some
of these sites, if they meet the criteria required,
are awarded the title World Heritage Site by the
UNESCO.
In
many countries, local governmental bodies may
be responsible for the maintenance of park systems.
Some of these are also called national parks.
(Credit:
Wikipedia).
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Websites
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NSW
Department of Primary Industry (Forests)
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