Federal and Public Lands

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Federal and Public Lands AP Environmental Science

Federal Land •

National Resource Lands - the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) controls these lands set aside for commercial and recreational uses. Includes federal rangelands. Commercial mining, grazing, and logging allowed



National Wildlife Refuges - protected land managed by the Department of Fish and Wildlife; commercial logging allowed with a permit



National Forest - forests and grasslands managed by National Forest Service, commercial logging and grazing allowed with a permit



National Park - manage and preserve forest and grassland, managed by National Park Service. No commercial resource extraction allowed, recreational use only.



Wilderness Preservation Area - for recreation only, logging not allowed

Public Land Management •

Federal government controls about 35% of the land in the US.



Major federal agencies: •

Bureau of Land Management (BLM)



National Forest Service



National Park Service



US Fish and Wildlife Service

Threats to Public Land •

overuse



commercial exploitation



pollution



habitat destruction and wildlife threats



poor management

Solutions •

overuse - issuing fewer and more costly permits



commercial exploitation - increase the price of harvesting resources on federal lands; recycling resources to reduce demand for extracting new resources



pollution - minimize and clean up polluted area



habitat destruction and wildlife threats - decreased tourism traffic and use of land



poor management - increase costs of using federal lands, sustainable resource management and conservation procedures, better funding and staffing of federal agencies to allow for increased enforcement of laws.

Land Conservation Strategies •

mitigation - to moderate a problem. For example, by preserving or restoring a wetland in one location to moderate the impact of damaging a wetland elsewhere.



restoration- to restore to former condition. Ecosystem restoration involved management actions to facilitate the recovery of an ecosystem.!



preservation - to keep or remain intact through reduced and/or sustainable use



remediation - to correct or fix. For example, actions to remove a pollutant from an area.

Laws and Policies •

1964 Wilderness Act - established road-free areas within Wildlife Refuges or National parks, restricts activities in these areas



1978 Wild and Scenic Rivers Act - protects rivers with important scenic, recreational, fish and wildlife, or other values



greenbelts - open or forested areas at the edge of a city; restricts development and limits growth of urban areas; increases quality of life for city dwellers.