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Title: Ashwani Vasishth


1
Urbanizing Habitat Conservation Planning, Using
Landscape Ecological Interventions An Ecosystem
Approach
  • Ashwani Vasishth
  • vasishth_at_csun.edu
  • California State University, Northridge
  • 2008 Joint ACSP-ASEOP Conference, July 8, 2008,
    Chicago, Illinois

2
A central objective of ecological planning is
  • to enhance the resilience
  • of systems with which we are concerned

3
The question is
  • how do we better integrate humans with nature,
    in regional urban planning?

4
We begin by recognizing two facts
5
Dirt
  • is organic!!!

6
Lawns
  • are synthetic!!!

7
Evolution of Habitat Conservation Planning
  • The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is written in
    1973 as part of the effort to block trade in
    endangered species and in animal products
  • The phrase and also the ecosystems on which they
    depend is added, almost as an afterthought,
    during development of the ESA
  • The critical habitat designation provision of
    the ESA grows into the Habitat Conservation Plan
    (HCP) process

8
Habitat Conservation Plans are the product of an
additive piece-meal and patchwork legislative
process
  • No serious effort has ever been made to design a
    legislated habitat conservation planning process
    from the ground-up,
  • based on ecosystem ecology!!!

9
We Need a Law Based In Ecosystem Ecology and that
Addresses the Concerns of Urbanizing Mega-regions
  • We need an Endangered Ecosystems Act

10
Habitat Conservation Relies On the Designation
of Set-aside Reserves
  • We agree to protect some parts of the region in
    exchange for permission to do what we want
    everywhere else

11
Administrative Jurisdictions In Southern
CaliforniaClose to 190 Cities
12
Habitat Conservation PlansIn Southern California
13
In Places Where Urbanization is Regionalized,
the Endangered Species Act Is Necessary but
Insufficient
  • The urban-suburban-rural divide is increasingly
    ill-defined
  • Fragmented landscapes disallow contiguity
  • Multiple, overlapping and conflicting
    jurisdictions and boundaries limit the
    reserve-design approach

14
In Cases Where Urbanization Has Permeated the
Region Quite Thoroughly
  • habitat conservation must do the same

15
We Need to Better Integrate Habitat Conservation
Planning and Urban Land Use Planning
  • Habitat conservation planning must urbanize
    itself
  • Urban land use planning must ecologize itself

16
We Need to Move from Habitat Conservation
Planning To Eco-regional Management
  • Beyond setting aside wilderness habitat for
    preservation, and besides designating habitat for
    conservation, we need to identify functionally
    critical habitat elements which can then be
    extensively percolated throughout the regional
    landscape

17
An Ecosystem Management Approach to Nature
Conservation Would
  • Urbanize habitat conservation planning
  • Ecologize land use planning
  • Promote wildlife-friendly native vegetation
  • Plan for bio-geo-chemical processes
  • Aim for ecological resilience

18
Urbanization does three things to the land
19
It lays down copious amounts of impervious
surface
  • completely disregarding the fact that dirt is
    alive

20
It lays down broad swaths of lawn grass
  • completely disregarding the fact that
  • lawns are synthetic

21
It transforms the land for an exclusively human
purpose
  • completely disregarding the fact that we are
    inextricably a part of nature

22
If we do nothing else, we must do these three
things
23
Minimize impervious surfaces
  • Permeable and porous paving material
    technologies are quite well-developed and readily
    available for wide-spread use
  • Green roofs have proven themselves to be
    effective in Europe and in the US
  • Bioswales and underground cisterns allow the
    gradual percolation of retained stormwater back
    into the soil

24
Maximize native trees, plants and vegetation
  • Particularly in semi-arid regions, we must begin
    to reculturate ourselves to better appreciate
    nature for what it is, rather than for what we
    idealize it to be
  • Conventional urbanization displaces many native
    species, and the use of native flora may help
    bring them back

25
Manage land use for ecosystem values
  • While human purpose is properly central to the
    built environment, we have enough room to be
    considerate of nature
  • Ecosystem services are grossly underutilized, and
    green infrastructure technologies can save us
    significant costs

26
Transcending the Paralysis Induced By the
Existing Built Environment and its Extreme
Fragmentation
  • Habitat connectivity is less important than
    habitat quality
  • Patch dynamics give rise to robust mosaics

27
We must learn to think like an ecosystem
  • Begin to value processes and functions over
    objects and entities
  • Begin to plan for enhanced resilience
  • Think adaptive management, not problem solution

28
Such an ecosystem-based approach to eco-regional
management
  • would show us the way to an effective
    ecological planning

29
Ashwani Vasishth vasishth_at_csun.edu Department
of Urban Studies and Planning California State
University, Northridge (818) 677-6137 http//www.
csun.edu/vasishth
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