Abstract

The importance of rural landscapes is recognized at both the international and national level. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has established a program called Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS) and agricultural landscapes are also listed in the UNESCO World Heritage List. The World Bank and the Convention on Biological Diversity also have departments working on this topic, while landscape has been included in the Common Agricultural Policy of the European Union 2020–2027. One of the most important tools for landscape management, conservation and valorization is the development of a monitoring system, suited to control not only dynamics, but also the effectiveness of the policies affecting rural landscape. A research project of the Italian Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies has identified 123 areas scattered in the entire Italian territory, with an average size of 1300 ha, in order to establish a national monitoring system for traditional rural landscapes. As a result of this national survey, the Ministry decided to establish the National Register of Historical Rural Landscapes, that is also the Italian list for potential application to GIAHS. These landscapes are characterized by a long history, presence of traditional practices, typical foods, complex landscape mosaics and high biocultural diversity. Detailed land use maps have been produced for each area, and among other data, the average number of land use types (19.6 ha) and the average patch size (2.7 ha) detected, confirm the fine grain of these landscapes characterized by high complexity and diversity of the landscape structure. A second survey was carried out five years later, in order to create a national monitoring system based on fixed study areas. The paper shows that in the last five years no major changes occurred, and even in the 33 areas where transformations are considered significant (i.e., >5% of the surface of the area), the characteristic features of the historical landscape are still well preserved. This confirms the resilience of these systems despite climatic and socioeconomic pressures.

Highlights

  • The rural landscape is one of the most historically representative expressions of cultural identity, due to the importance of rural civilizations in history

  • In the areas located in southern Italy, where traditionally numerous polycultures and associations between arboreal, herbaceous, and vegetable cultivations characterized the local agriculture, landscapes have a higher number of land uses (23 land uses)

  • In the hills there is an average higher value (21 land uses), precisely because there are areas still more suitable for traditional agricultural activities, while in mountain areas there are mainly historical pastoral and forest landscapes, traditionally characterized by a lower number of land uses (17 land uses). This data are partly confirmed by the average number of land uses by main type of landscape, with the highest values achieved by agricultural landscapes (22 land uses)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The rural landscape is one of the most historically representative expressions of cultural identity, due to the importance of rural civilizations in history. In Italy, the main institutional initiative regarding the rural landscape is the establishment of the National Observatory for Rural Landscape, Agricultural Practices and Traditional Knowledge in 2012 by the Ministry of Food, Agricultural and Forest Policies. This decision was the consequence of the results of a research project called National Catalogue of historical rural landscapes aimed at identifying and studying the most important rural landscapes at the national level. Historical rural landscapes are indissolubly tied to the maintenance of traditional practices that farmers and shepherds have used for centuries [4] These are ingenious and diversified techniques that have contributed to the creation and preservation of European historical, cultural, and natural heritage [5,6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call