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Chris Raymond Land and Biodiversity Services Division, DWLBC

Mapping landscape values for natural resources management planning. Chris Raymond Land and Biodiversity Services Division, DWLBC. Outline. What are landscape values? Why map them? How do you map them? What do the results look like? What are the implications for NRM planning?.

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Chris Raymond Land and Biodiversity Services Division, DWLBC

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  1. Mapping landscape values for natural resources management planning Chris Raymond Land and Biodiversity Services Division, DWLBC

  2. Outline • What are landscape values? • Why map them? • How do you map them? • What do the results look like? • What are the implications for NRM planning?

  3. What are landscape values? • Attachment or emotional bond that people develop with place • Use value (places that provide tangible benefits) • Economic Value • Recreation Value • Non-use value (places that represent ideas) • Spiritual Value • Future Value

  4. Map Layer GIS Information **LANDSCAPE VALUES** Government assets Commercial activity Wildfire threat Salinity Threatened species Water quality Soil type Towns and suburbs Planning Study Index Reference

  5. Why map landscape values? • Lack of systematic methods for identifying and integrating community values into NRM • Values are linked to political acceptability of land-use decisions • Integral to Goal 3 of the State NRM Plan (Peoples and Communities) • 3.4.4 “Seek and value the knowledge, skills and expertise of local people, including Aboriginal landholders, in planning and on-ground delivery” • Identify place-specific priorities for NRM investment.

  6. How do you map landscape values? • Sample • Survey Instrument • Map • Landscape Values Typology • Survey Mail Out (Dillman TDM) • Data Entry • Results Analysis

  7. Title is typed in Blue

  8. What do the results look like?Case Study 1: Otways Region of Victoria

  9. STUDY AREA Hotspot analysis of aesthetic value

  10. Hotspot analysis of spiritual value

  11. Hotspot analysis of tourism developmentpreferences

  12. West Central Alberta, Canada

  13. Implications for NRM planning • Systematic and representative process • Transparent • Identify areas of values conflict and special management concern • Overlay with other land attributes for integrated resource management • Recognises the role of non-use values in resource decision making • Provides a baseline for monitoring and evaluation

  14. References • Brown, G. 2005. Mapping spatial attributes in survey research for natural resource management: Methods and applications. Society and Natural Resources 18(1):17-39. • Brown, G., and Raymond, C. (2007) The relationship between place attachment and landscape values: Toward mapping place attachment. Applied Geography 27(2):89-111. • Raymond, C., and Brown, G. (2006) A method for assessing protected area allocations using a typology of landscape values. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 49(6):797-812. • Raymond, C., and Brown, G. (2007). A spatial method for assessing resident and visitor attitudes toward tourism growth and development. Journal of Sustainable Tourism. Anticipated publication in Volume 15, issue 4 or 5..

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