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This article is about protected regions of environmental or cultural value. For protected area of a cricket pitch, see Cricket pitch.
Protected areas are locations which receive protection because of their environmental, cultural or similar value. A large number of kinds of protected area exist which vary by level of protection and by the enabling laws of each country or rules of international organization. Examples include parks, reserves and wildlife sanctuaries. There are over 108,000 protected areas in the world with more added daily, representing a total area of 30.43 million km2 (11.75 million square miles), or over 12 percent of the worlds land surface area (greater than the entire land mass of Africa).1
DefinitionA protected area, as defined by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN, formerly the World Conservation Union), is:
TypesThe IUCN specifies six categories of protected areas:
HistoryInternational commitments to the development of networks of protected areas date from 1972, when the Stockholm Declaration from the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment endorsed the protection of representative examples of all major ecosystem types as a fundamental requirement of national conservation programs. Since then, the protection of representative ecosystems has become a core principle of conservation biology, supported by key United Nations resolutions - including the World Charter for Nature 1982, the Rio Declaration 1992, and the Johannesburg Declaration 2002. Globally, national programs for the protection of representative ecosystems have progressed with respect to terrestrial environments, with less progress in marine and freshwater biomes. See also
Notes
External links
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