scholarly journals Kaitiakitanga, place and the urban restoration agenda

2019 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Erana Walker ◽  
◽  
Priscilla Wehi ◽  
Nicola Nelson ◽  
Jacqueline Beggs ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Roland Schröder ◽  
Sebastian Glandorf ◽  
Kathrin Kiehl
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 127271
Author(s):  
Luisa S. Lemgruber ◽  
Veronica Maioli ◽  
Agnieszka E. Latawiec ◽  
Alexandro Solórzano ◽  
Luiz F.D. Moraes ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 04015005 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Ramachandran ◽  
S. K. Long ◽  
T. Shoberg ◽  
S. Corns ◽  
H. J. Carlo

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Christopher Woolley

<p>Globally, biodiversity is in crisis. One contributing factor is the rapid urbanisation of the world’s population. Land cover change associated with urbanisation radically alters ecosystems, making them uninhabitable for many species. Additionally, people who live in cities often have reduced contact with nature and there are fears that a lack of nature experience may diminish concern for the environment and biodiversity among urbanites. For these reasons, people in cities are increasingly being encouraged and empowered to reduce environmental impacts and connect with nature through urban restoration and backyard conservation. Internationally, lizards are a common feature of urban biodiversity but in New Zealand, where many species are threatened, little is known about populations of endemic skinks and geckos in cities. In order to effectively manage urban lizard populations, greater knowledge is needed about where and how lizards are surviving in cities, and what potential exists for their restoration. I investigated species diversity and abundance of lizards in New Zealand cities, making comparisons with historical species distributions to inform urban restoration and investigating the potential role that participatory conservation might play in their protection.  To collate current knowledge about past and present distributions of urban-dwelling lizards, I reviewed records for six New Zealand cities from published and unpublished literature and databases. Little research was identified from cities and the majority of lizard records were of one-off sightings, or surveys related to salvage or biosecurity operations. Comparing current species records with historical species distributions, it found that the diversity of lizards in all of the cities has declined dramatically since human colonisation.  To begin to fill the identified knowledge gap and to provide baselines for future monitoring, I carried out skink surveys in four cities and trialled a citizen science project that collected public sighting records from residential backyards. Surveys undertaken in urban habitats captured four species of endemic skink: Oligosoma aeneum in Hamilton, O. polychroma, O. aeneum and O. ornatum in Wellington, O. polychroma in Nelson, and O. aff. polychroma Clade 5 in Dunedin. Site occupancy and number of captures were highly variable among the species and cities, with a very high proportion of sites occupied by skinks in Nelson and Wellington compared with Hamilton and Dunedin. Modelling showed O. polychroma catch per unit effort was positively related to rat tracking rates when grass cover was low but showed a negative relationship when grass cover was high. Higher proportions of urban land cover within 500 m were negatively associated with body condition.  The public sightings website gathered more than 100 records from around the Wellington region over one summer, suggesting citizen science may be a cost-effective solution for building knowledge about lizards in residential gardens that are otherwise difficult to survey. While skink sightings were reported from all over the city, gecko sightings appeared in clusters. Compared with a random sample of street addresses, both skink and gecko sightings were more common closer to forest land cover, but only skink sightings were more common in backyards that were north facing.  Finally, I administered a questionnaire survey to understand how socio- demographic characteristics relate to willingness to engage in three different pro-conservation activities that might benefit lizards: pest mammal trapping, biodiversity monitoring and pest mammal monitoring. Public willingness to engage in all three activities was positively related to respondents’ nature relatedness and nature dosage, while only the two monitoring activities were positively related to education. The relationship between willingness and nature relatedness was weaker for pest trapping than it was for the two monitoring activities, suggesting that willingness to trap may be determined by factors other than environmental concern.  Native lizards are an important component of New Zealand’s urban biodiversity. Despite cities having lost significant proportions of their original lizard fauna, a wide variety of habitats in cities still support numerous species. Some of these species seem well adapted to cope with the challenges of urban living, while further research is required to understand whether populations of other species are stable or in decline. To ensure the persistence of lizards in cities, further surveys using a variety of methods should be undertaken to assess lizard diversity and abundance in urban habitats and understand population trends of rare and sparsely distributed species. Public sightings may provide a useful starting point for assessing distribution patterns and allowing the targeting of surveys. In the future, through urban restoration, cities may offer opportunities to conserve a larger proportion of endemic species by reintroducing species that have become regionally extinct.</p>


Author(s):  
Tomás QUINTANA LÓPEZ

LABURPENA: Ostatu emateko eta itzultzeko eskubideek badute tradiziorik Espainiako ordenamendu juridikoan, baina dimentsio berri bat eman die lurzoruari buruzko maiatzaren 28ko 8/2007 Legeak, eta batik bat ekainaren 26ko 8/2013 Lege berriagoak, hirien birgaitze, biziberritze etaberrikuntzari buruzkoak. Azken horrek hirigintza berri batean txertatu du eskubide horien araubidea, hiriaren kontserbazioari eta berrikuntzari arreta handiagoa eskainiz hirien hedapenari, hirigintzari eta eraikuntzari baino, oso sustraituak lurzoruaren legegintzan, joan den mendearen erdialdera onartutako lehen hirigintza-legetik hona. Ostatu emateko eta itzultzeko eskubideei buruzko estatu-arauak aztertzen dira lan honetan. RESUMEN: Los derechos de realojo y retorno, que cuentan con alguna tradición en el ordenamiento jurídico español, han adquirido una nueva dimensión en el marco de la renovada legislación de suelo que se pretende iniciar con la aprobación de la Ley 8/2007, de 28 de mayo, de Suelo, de la que constituye un hito fundamental la más reciente Ley 8/2013, de 26 de junio, de Rehabilitación, Regeneración y Renovación Urbanas, ley ésta última que contribuye a insertar el régimen de los mencionados derechos en un urbanismo más atento a la conservación y renovación de la ciudad construida que a la expansión de la misma y, con ella, a los fenómenos urbanizador y edificatorio, que tan arraigados han estado en la legislación del suelo desde la primera ley urbanística española aprobada a mediados del siglo pasado. Las actuales normas estatales reguladoras de los derechos de realojo y retorno son objeto de atención en el presente estudio. ABSTRACT: Rights to rehousing and return, which enjoy some tradition in Spanish legal order, have assumed a new dimension within the updated legislation on land that tries to begin with the enactment of Act 8/2007 of May 28th on Land, a crucial milestone to the more recent Act 8/2013 of June 26th of Urban Restoration, Regeneration and Renovation, act that contributes to include the regime of the aforementioned rights onto a more focused urbanism on conservation and renovation of the built city than on its extension itself, and with it, on the urban and constructing phenomena, which have been so ingrained in the land legislation from the first spanish urban act enacted halfway the past century. The current State provisions that regulate rights to rehousing and return are object of attention by this study.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document