Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2557758026> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2557758026 abstract "Biodiversity is under increasing pressure worldwide from increasing human population, global economic and social changes, and climate change. These pressures result from the interaction between the expanding influence of humanity and ecological processes that alter the delivery of ecosystem goods and services (Dudley and Stolton 2012). Most of the world’s national parks conserve places of high biodiversity value, maintain genetic diversity, protect cultural identities, and attract visitors from around the world seeking to experience iconic species and landscapes. Concomitantly, they help safeguard against the more recently identified pressures to biodiversity. In this paper, we address some of the effects that climate change has on the human and natural components of iconic national park systems, and the effects that human interactions have on the natural component of national parks, particularly at the local level. Climate change, changes in land use, and corresponding changes in land cover have been proposed as the three greatest threats to biodiversity in the present century (Mooney et al. 2009). Climate change affects a wide spectrum of organisms, including their morphology, physiology, phenology, life history, abundance, and distribution. Land use and land cover changes have been identified as important feedback mechanisms affecting global change and corresponding shifts in social and ecological behavior of people, communities, and systems (Sommer et al. 2010). The related processes also affect the sustainability of national parks, which are compounded by socioeconomic, environmental, and political drivers to produce landscape fragmentation, over-harvesting of resources, and related pressures. Negative human impacts are two-fold: (1) local communities, reliant on natural areas for food, medicine, employment and cultural reasons, are consuming and often degrading ecosystems as the human imprint expands and intensifies within and along the edges of parks; and (2) tourism is increasingly consumptive in its demands for enhanced access to protected areas and increasing services as part of “experiencing” iconic species and landscapes. We regard iconic national parks as local examples of human–artifactual–natural systems that are influenced by external abiotic, biotic, and globalization processes (see Miller et al., this issue; Walsh et al., this issue). The challenge for management of iconic national parks is to address threats while still meeting the protection and visitor objectives inherent in the" @default.
- W2557758026 created "2016-12-08" @default.
- W2557758026 creator A5004770792 @default.
- W2557758026 creator A5052271360 @default.
- W2557758026 creator A5063503859 @default.
- W2557758026 date "2014-01-01" @default.
- W2557758026 modified "2023-09-24" @default.
- W2557758026 title "Global Change and Human Impact Challenges in Managing Iconic National Parks" @default.
- W2557758026 cites W106846592 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1493136431 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1533809201 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1567615555 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1588918862 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1596341316 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1966746022 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1969450288 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1974948940 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1975620130 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1987747614 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1991383976 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W1993954946 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2007022948 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2014091618 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2022078393 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2031049107 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2045843168 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2063021237 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2063187486 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2064649860 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2068526507 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2078251251 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2078912207 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2086498757 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2093559267 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2110705317 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2115211165 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2116672532 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2125685163 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2132060408 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2132755397 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2136852522 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2140718446 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2140918461 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2148131410 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2150433460 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2152324822 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2160883209 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2167251327 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2167336049 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2185573458 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2287388975 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2575746894 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W2753541396 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W3007257490 @default.
- W2557758026 cites W629585045 @default.
- W2557758026 hasPublicationYear "2014" @default.
- W2557758026 type Work @default.
- W2557758026 sameAs 2557758026 @default.
- W2557758026 citedByCount "1" @default.
- W2557758026 countsByYear W25577580262014 @default.
- W2557758026 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2557758026 hasAuthorship W2557758026A5004770792 @default.
- W2557758026 hasAuthorship W2557758026A5052271360 @default.
- W2557758026 hasAuthorship W2557758026A5063503859 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C107826830 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C110872660 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C122690726 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C130217890 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C132651083 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C149923435 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C16989226 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C2780648208 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C2780993040 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C2908647359 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C29985473 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C39432304 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C4792198 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C58941895 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C66204764 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C107826830 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C110872660 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C122690726 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C130217890 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C132651083 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C144024400 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C149923435 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C166957645 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C16989226 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C18903297 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C205649164 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C2780648208 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C2780993040 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C2908647359 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C29985473 @default.
- W2557758026 hasConceptScore W2557758026C39432304 @default.