Wildlands Project and Biodiversity Treaty Maps
MAGNITUDE
OF THE WILDLANDS PROJECT
"Conservation must be practiced on a truly grand scale," claims
Reed Noss. And grand it is. Taken from the article, "The Wild-
lands Project: Land Conservation Strategy" in the 1992 special issue of Wild Earth, Noss provides
the whopping dimensions of this effort.
Core reserves are wilderness areas that supposedly
allow biodiversity to flourish. "It is estimated," claims Noss,
"that large carnivores and ungulates require reserves on the scale
of 2.5 to 25 million acres.... For a
minimum viable population of 1000 [large mammals], the figures
would be 242 million acres for grizzly bears,
200 million acres for wolverines, and 100 million acres for
wolves. Core reserves should be managed as roadless
areas (wilderness). All roads should be permanently closed."
Corridors are "extensions of reserves. .. Multiple corridors interconnecting a
network of core reserves provide functional redundancy and mitigate against disturbance.... Corridors
several miles wide are needed if the objective is to maintain ( resident populations of large
carnivores."
Buffer zones should have two or more zones "so
that a gradation of use intensity exists from the core reserve to
the developed a landscape. Inner zones should have low road density
(no more than 0.5 mile/square mile) and low-intensity use such
as...hiking, cross-country skiing, birding, primitive camping,
wilderness hunting and fishing, and low-intensity silviculture
(light selective cutting).
Taken From: The United Nations Convention on Biological
Diversity, Article8a-e; United Nations Global Biodiversity Assessment, Section 13.4.2.2.3; US Man and the Biosphere Strategic
Plan, UN/US Heritage Corridor Program, “The Wildlands Project”, WildEarth, 1992.
Click below to see the Wildlands
Project map for the noted area.
US Wildlands Project
US Wildland Project with County Lines
California and Nevada
Deep South - Florida, Mississippi,
Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina
Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Viriginia
Maryland, West Viriginia, Viriginia, and North Carolina
Michigan and Wisconsin
Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota
Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa
Northern Rocky Mountains - Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming
Northeast - Maine, Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Jersey
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky
Oregon and Washington
Southern Rocky Mountains - Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico
South Central - Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana