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FANR 3000: TEST 2

increasing land conversion from rural to built up/developed areas
urban sprawl
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People moving directly to rural areas instead of suburbans
exurban sprawl
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Historically NR management has been divided into what two main research/management areas?
Natural systems and Human systems
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Increasing support for natural and human systems to be a single, complex _____ called ______
social, ecological system called Human Dimension
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Change in thought partly due to growing awareness that the natural environment has entered unprecedented change in it:
biological, terrestrial, climate change, etc.
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Some influencing factors on human dimensions
pollution, technological advances, overhunting, population growth, disease, etc
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In terms of natural resources and human dimensions, there is an increasing demand from the public to be____
asserted in its rights to be informed and included in process of NR
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Define Human Dimensions
the scientific investigation of the physical, biological, sociological, psychological, cultural, and economic aspects of natural resource utilization at the individual and community levels
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Three parts of the Human Dimensions approach
1 - collect info that explains human thought.actions 2 - other considerations to help make decisions (biological, legal, political, etc) 3 - weigh all the information
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People are part of ____
natural resources and ecosystems
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People's past, present, and future _____ have influenced and will continue to influence NR and ecosystems
desires
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Management of NR must conider ____
human well being (physical, emotional, mental, social)
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understand and intergrate ____ with NR into policy, programs and management
culturally derived human demands on values and perceptions of and interactions
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Four basic factors for describing the place of humans in NR
1) Demands 2) Values 3) Perceptions 4) Interactions
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Types of demands
- Consumptive/ nonconsumptive - on site/off site - individual/ community - contemporary/future
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Form basis of human thought, behaviors, and cultures
values
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Basis for attitudes and or behaviors
Perceptions
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different types of human interactions
- on site impacts - direct/indirect
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Describe the Human Dimensions model
There are three intersecting circles: biological, human, and physical. If these circles are equal than the center is stable ecosystems
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Human and NR interactions are _____
natural and dependent on one another
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Natural resources are _____ and ____ to manage because ___
complex and difficult to manage because of us
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Character and complexity of ecosystems have _____ and ____ variation
temporal and spacial
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______ is the key human role in ecosystem sustainability
sound and responsible management
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historical overview of private land ownership
- goes back to days of indians - Europeans had idea of possession by discovery
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what percent of forested habitat in the southern US is privately owned
90%
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Why are programs and such in Georgia difficult to come by
70% of privately owned land is under 40 acres
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Why are there so many different owners in georgia
1 guy sold to a bunch of others, then they sold to others and so on
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What matters to the private land owners?
- land ethic - taxes - sustainability - returns - multiple uses
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Hot button issues with private land owners
- private property rights - triple bottom line: economic, biological, social - unfunded mandates
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What is an unfunded mandate
When the government says you have to do something and you have to pay for it. (Woodpeckers on land)
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To inform decisions in natural resources, managers consider:
- human dimensions - different tools - managers background - agency mandates
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Perceptions of crowding are influenced by ____
number of contacts encountered not by pure numbers of people
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Number of acceptable contacts is arbitrary and based on:
- individual's experience - what they are looking for in the experience - tolerance for contacts
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Define carrying capacity
How much life a piece of land can support
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growth vs. sustainability
...
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used to measure crowding
circle between three things: environmental, social, and managerial
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Constraints, or barriers to participation in outdoor activities
- race - ethnicity - rural vs. urban - age - income
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top reason for not participating in outdoor recreation
not enough time
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As participation increases _____ also increases
specialization
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As level of specialization increases:
- support for rules and procedures increases - resource dependence increases - attachment to equipment - centrality in ones life increases
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Substitution is associated with:
Place attachment (bonding) and experience use history (EUH)
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As bonding and EUH increases, substitution _______
decreases
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As use levels increase, satisfaction ____
decreases
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People often displace:
- avoid crowding - replace by more tolerant user - temporal/spacial
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Management frameworks (decision making tools)
- Visitor Experience and Resource Protection (VERP) - Limits of Acceptable Change (LAC) - Benefits-Based Management (BBM)
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What is the aim of decision making tools?
to use natural/ social science to establish measurable management
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Visitor Experience and Resource Protection (VERP)
- developed by National Park Service - develop public involvement strategy - determine desired conditions - analyze current resources and visitor use - select indicators and standards
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Limits of Acceptable Change (LAC)
- Developed by US forest service - develop opportunity classes - select indicators for each class - inventory resources - Little/no visitor input
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Benefits Based Management (BBM)
- more conceptual than VERP and LAC but harder to measure - benefits include attainment of desired conditions, improvement of conditions, prevention of unwanted condition - allows management to directly measure benefits, specify benefits they wish to provide, design facilities to deliver benefits, measure if benefits are being realized
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management decisions making are dependent on several factors:
- crowding - constraints - specialization - substitution - displacement
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Traditional perspective of sustainable development
- consumption/ depletion/ exploitaion - promote immediate growth vs. long term sustainability
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Sustainability is a concept developed in economics from ______
maximum sustained yield
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idea of "sustainable growth" is an oxymoron because:
you cannot infinitely sustain growth; populations cannot always continue to grow
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what image helped fuel the sustainable development movement?
in 1968 apollo 8 gave us the first picture of our planet from space
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3 waves of conservation
1 - species driven 2 - habitat driven 3 - sustainable development; community and people come first
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Commission in 1987 that releases report title Our Common Future
Brundtland Commission
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Define sustainable development
"meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs"
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in 1992 earth summit in Rio de Janeiro developed blueprint for sustainable development called ____
agenda 21
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What are the three spheres of the sustainable development framework
- economic - environmental - social
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describe the economic sphere
- continually produce goods and services - manageable government and debt - balance harvest, manufacturing, and sales
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describe the environmental sphere
- stable resource base - avoid over use and depletion - maintain ecosystem function
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describe social sphere
- distributional equity - social equity - accountability and participation in politics
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of the many sustainable development goals, what is the top priority
Eradicate poverty and hunger
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Other goals of sustainable development
education, health and disease, social equity, environmental sustainability, global partnerships
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Ecosystem services represent potential ____
sustainability indicators
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What is an ecosystem service?
benefits people obtain from ecosystems
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what are some examples of ecosystems services?
undeveloped forest land in georgia which can provide clean water and climate regulation
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Draw the sustainable development framework
Three circles: social, environment, and economic. In the middle is sustainable development. Between social and environment is Bearable, between social and economic is equitable, and between economic and environment is viable.
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What is Kenyan agriculture called
pastoral agriculture
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For a population growth rate to be sustainable, it must be ____ percent
at least 2%
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Why is New Zealand better?
- equal rights - social reform - Free schooling since 1877 - more progressive - All conservation is under DOC - high minimum wage
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