Abstract
Strong disciplinary academic fragmentation and sectoral division in policies lead to problems regarding the management of landscapes. As a result, there is a focus on the preservation and development of either cultural or natural landscapes. We argue that framing landscapes as “natural” or “cultural” will not help sustainable management. The goal of this paper is to show that even what is referred to as nature, virtually always features an intricate combination of physical geography, biology, and cultural history. It provides an analytical framework that visualizes the three forces at play in physical landscapes. Therefore, we introduce a diachronic triangular approach to study and manage landscapes from a holistic point of view, allowing an exchange of different perspectives. To test this approach, we have applied our model to a diachronic case study on Wadden Sea salt marshes. That area has been influenced by physical-geographical, biological, and cultural landscape forces, which are still visible in the landscape to a large extent. By placing different landscape zones in the triangular concept for different time periods, we can identify and visualize these driving forces through time for this specific landscape. These all play their specific roles in the appearance of the landscape over time in a close mutual interconnection. More importantly, we show that the diverse and complex interplay between these forces makes the current-day landscape what it is. We therefore conclude that the diachronic triangular approach provides a conceptual tool to define and operationalize landscape management in the Wadden Sea area. We welcome similar approaches in other landscapes to assess the usefulness of the diachronic triangular landscape approach.
Highlights
In landscape management, there is a gap between physicalgeographical, biological, and cultural(−historical) approaches, because of the strong disciplinary academic fragmentation and sectoral division in policies (Walsh et al 2020)
There is a gap between physicalgeographical, biological, and cultural(−historical) approaches, because of the strong disciplinary academic fragmentation and sectoral division in policies (Walsh et al 2020). This leads to serious problems regarding the management of heritage and the readability of our landscapes, because policies often have single aims, not taking into account the broader context within the physical landscape (Burbridge 2020; Kolen and Renes 2015)
We propose a diachronic triangular approach that can serve as a tool to study, and manage landscapes from a holistic point of view, allowing for an exchange of opposing worldviews and perspectives, or as put by Walsh et al (2020): contrasting landscape imaginaries
Summary
There is a gap between physicalgeographical, biological, and cultural(−historical) approaches, because of the strong disciplinary academic fragmentation and sectoral division in policies (Walsh et al 2020). This leads to serious problems regarding the management of heritage and the readability of our landscapes, because policies often have single aims, not taking into account the broader context within the physical landscape (Burbridge 2020; Kolen and Renes 2015). Cultural historical and archeological traces are (unintentionally) removed to make place for higher biodiversity, namely, plants and animals. This is with the best intentions, in line with EU Natura 2000 goals, and in some cases, due to lack of knowledge, while we are gaining some
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Topics from this Paper
Wadden Sea Salt Marshes
Wadden Sea Area
Sectoral Division
Landscape Zones
Landscape Management
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