Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park

Half of present wild land areas are found in tropical countries and were created after 1970. However, human activities have been seriously altering protected tropical wild lands and 75% of Latin American wild lands lacked effective protection, long-term management plans and economic resources to guarantee effective management. Partial blame for this is directed at how protected areas were conceived and implemented, using the U.S. preservationist model of setting aside undisturbed habitats “for the enjoyment of current and future generations” and not accounting for local people’s histories, interests or rights. The objective of this paper is to trace the historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park in the Peninsula of Osa, Costa Rica. This article presents a historical reconstruction of how an area was created, actors involved and their interactions to provide insights to current outcomes of national conservation planning and management. The park is one of the most diverse ecological systems for its size on earth, but is exposed to settlement, lumber interests, hunting and goldmining. Open communication and searching for win-win situations fomented the creation of Corcovado National Park and may hold the key for its sustainability.KEY WORDSConservation, history, Costa Rican park system, Tropical conservation, Osa Peninsula.

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Main Author: Vaughan, Christopher
Format: Digital revista
Language:spa
Published: Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica 2012
Online Access:https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/134
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spelling oai:revistas.investiga.uned.ac.cr:article1342022-09-02T02:22:31Z Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park Vaughan, Christopher Half of present wild land areas are found in tropical countries and were created after 1970. However, human activities have been seriously altering protected tropical wild lands and 75% of Latin American wild lands lacked effective protection, long-term management plans and economic resources to guarantee effective management. Partial blame for this is directed at how protected areas were conceived and implemented, using the U.S. preservationist model of setting aside undisturbed habitats “for the enjoyment of current and future generations” and not accounting for local people’s histories, interests or rights. The objective of this paper is to trace the historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park in the Peninsula of Osa, Costa Rica. This article presents a historical reconstruction of how an area was created, actors involved and their interactions to provide insights to current outcomes of national conservation planning and management. The park is one of the most diverse ecological systems for its size on earth, but is exposed to settlement, lumber interests, hunting and goldmining. Open communication and searching for win-win situations fomented the creation of Corcovado National Park and may hold the key for its sustainability.KEY WORDSConservation, history, Costa Rican park system, Tropical conservation, Osa Peninsula. La mitad de las áreas silvestres actuales, se encuentran en los países tropicales y se crearon después de 1970. Sin embargo, las actividades humanas han alterado gravemente las áreas silvestres protegidas tropicales y el 75% de las áreas silvestres de América Latina carece de protección efectiva, planes largo plazo y recursos económicos para garantizar una gestión eficaz. Una causa parcial es que las áreas protegidas fueron concebidas utilizando el modelo conservacionista de EE.UU. de apartar hábitats no alterados “para el disfrute de las generaciones actuales y futuras”, sin tomar en cuenta la población local. El objetivo de este trabajo es documentar la ecología histórica de la creación del Parque Nacional Corcovado en la Península de Osa, Costa Rica. Este artículo presenta una reconstrucción histórica de cómo se creó el área, los actores involucrados y sus interacciones, en busca de una mejor planificación nacional de conservación. Considerando su tamaño, el parque es uno de los sistemas ecológicos más diversos del mundo, pero está expuesto a problemas relacionados con la extracción de madera, fauna y oro. La comunicación abierta y la búsqueda de situaciones beneficiosas para todos fomentó la creación del Parque Nacional Corcovado, y puede ser la clave para su sostenibilidad.PALABRAS CLAVEConservación, historia, Costa Rica, sistema de parques, conservación tropical, Península de Osa. Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica 2012-06-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/134 10.22458/urj.v4i1.134 UNED Research Journal; Vol. 4 No. 1 (2012); 55-70 UNED Research Journal; Vol. 4 Núm. 1 (2012); 55-70 1659-441X 1659-4266 spa https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/134/26
institution UNED CR
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country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
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databasecode rev-cuadernos
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libraryname Centro de Información, Documentación y Recursos Bibliográficos
language spa
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author Vaughan, Christopher
spellingShingle Vaughan, Christopher
Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park
author_facet Vaughan, Christopher
author_sort Vaughan, Christopher
title Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park
title_short Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park
title_full Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park
title_fullStr Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park
title_full_unstemmed Creating wildlands in Costa Rica: Historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park
title_sort creating wildlands in costa rica: historical ecology of the creation of corcovado national park
description Half of present wild land areas are found in tropical countries and were created after 1970. However, human activities have been seriously altering protected tropical wild lands and 75% of Latin American wild lands lacked effective protection, long-term management plans and economic resources to guarantee effective management. Partial blame for this is directed at how protected areas were conceived and implemented, using the U.S. preservationist model of setting aside undisturbed habitats “for the enjoyment of current and future generations” and not accounting for local people’s histories, interests or rights. The objective of this paper is to trace the historical ecology of the creation of Corcovado National Park in the Peninsula of Osa, Costa Rica. This article presents a historical reconstruction of how an area was created, actors involved and their interactions to provide insights to current outcomes of national conservation planning and management. The park is one of the most diverse ecological systems for its size on earth, but is exposed to settlement, lumber interests, hunting and goldmining. Open communication and searching for win-win situations fomented the creation of Corcovado National Park and may hold the key for its sustainability.KEY WORDSConservation, history, Costa Rican park system, Tropical conservation, Osa Peninsula.
publisher Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica
publishDate 2012
url https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/134
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