An assessment of Brazilian conservation units – a second look

Authors

  • José Augusto Leitão Drummond Universidade de Brasilia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5801/ncn.v15i1.924

Abstract

This is a second overview of the Brazilian conservation unit system for mid-2010. It updates author et al, 2009. It examines six dimensions of federal and state protected areas – age, numbers, types of units, absolute and average sizes, distribution by states and biomes, and degree of compliance with CBD-inspired goals. Major findings: (i) the system maintained a rapid growth rate; (ii) national parks and national forests are the most prominent units; (iii) distribution of units by region and biome remains unbalanced; (iv) state units grew remarkably over the last five years; (v) state units are biased towards sustainable use; (vi) sustainable use units grew more than fully protected units; (vii) Amazonia remains the most extensively protected biome; and (viii) quantitative goals of biome protection are closer to being reached. In 2010 Brazil held the fourth position globally in protected areas; it created the largest number of units between 2000 and 2010; it has the largest combined area of protected tropical formations. However, several regions and biomes remain under protected. 

Author Biography

José Augusto Leitão Drummond, Universidade de Brasilia

Professor Associado II, Centro de Desenvolvimento Sustentável, UnB

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Published

2012-08-30

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Section

Artigos