Germany Because a large proportion of the biodiversity of Germany was able to invade from the south and east after human activities altered the landscape, maintaining such artificial landscapes is an integral part of nature conservation. The full name of the main nature conservation law in Germany, the
Bundesnaturschutzgesetzes, is thus titled in its entirety
Gesetz über Naturschutz und Landschaftspflege, where
Landschaftspflege translates literally to "landscape maintenance" (see reference for more). Related concepts are
Landschaftsschutz, "landscape protection/conservation", and
Landschaftsschutzgebiet, a "nature preserve", or literally a (legally) "protected landscape area". The
Deutscher Verband für Landschaftspflege is the main organisation which protects landscapes in Germany. It is an umbrella organisation which coordinates the regional landscape protection organisations of the different
German states. Classically, there are four methods which can be done in order to conserve landscapes: maintenance, and redevelopment.
Landschapsbeheer Nederland is an umbrella organisation which promotes and helps fund the interests of the different provincial landscape management organisations, which between them include 75,000 volunteers and 110,000 hectares of protected nature reserves. Sustainable landscape management is being researched in the Netherlands.
Peru An example of a producer movement managing a multi-functional landscape is the Potato Park in
Písac, Peru, where local communities protect the ecological and cultural diversity of the 12,000ha landscape. Landscape conservation can be studied at the Department of Cultural Conservation (at
Dacapo Mariestad) of the University of Gothenburg, in both Swedish and English.
Thailand An example of cooperation between very different actors is from the
Doi Mae Salong watershed in northwest Thailand, a Military Reserved Area under the control of the
Royal Thai Armed Forces. Reforestation activities led to tension with local
hill tribes. In response, an agreement was reached with them on land rights and use of different parts of the reserve.
United Kingdom Among the leading exponents of UK landscape scale conservation are the
Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). There are 49 AONB in the UK. The
International Union for Conservation of Nature has categorised these regions as "category 5 protected areas" and in 2005 claimed the AONB are administered using what the IUCN coined the "protected landscape approach". In Scotland there is a similar system of
national scenic areas. The UK
Biodiversity Action Plan protects semi-natural grasslands, among other habitats, which constitute landscapes maintained by
low-intensity grazing. Agricultural environment schemes reward farmers and land managers financially for maintaining these habitats on registered agricultural land. Each of the four countries in the UK has its own individual scheme. Studies have been carried out across the UK looking at much wider range of habitats. In
Wales the
Pumlumon Large Area Conservation Project focusses on upland conservation in areas of marginal agriculture and forestry. The North
Somerset Levels and
Moors Project addresses wetlands.
Other ; a traditional human-influenced secondary forest bordering agricultural fields in Japan. The satoyama'' conservation movement spread in the 1980s in Japan and by 2001 there were more than 500 environmental groups involved. Landscape approaches have been taken up by governments in for example the
Greater Mekong Subregion project and in Indonesia's
climate change commitments, and by international research bodies such as the
Center for International Forestry Research, which convenes the Global Landscapes Forum. The
Mount Kailash region is where the
Indus River, the
Karnali River (a major tributary of the
Ganges River), the
Brahmaputra River and the
Sutlej river systems originate. With assistance from the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, the three surrounding countries (China, India and Nepal) developed an integrated management approach to the different conservation and development issues within this landscape. Six countries in
West Africa in the
Volta River basin using the 'Mapping Ecosystems Services to Human well-being' toolkit, use landscape modelling of alternative scenarios for the riparian buffer to make land-use decisions such as conserving hydrological
ecosystem services and meeting national
SDG commitments. ==Variations==