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Protected Areas of Yakutia-Gift to the Earth

 

Svetlana Yegorova-Johnstone, Representative Ministry of Nature Conservation, Republic of Sakha (Yakutia)

 

First of all I would like to express my deep gratitude to the UNESCO for the invitation to participate in this conference.

 

The Earth is being destroyed at a rate the world has not seen; life is being destroyed five times faster now than a decade ago. Every year we release 23 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the air, increasing the Earth’s temperature and threatening the life of plants, animals and people. The destruction of a forest anywhere affects the quality of air we breathe.

 

The Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) is the most forest-rich republic in Russia - the most forested  country in the world. We have responded to WWF’s challenge to make a Gift to the Earth, by designating a forest bigger than France as one of the world’s largest systems of reserved territories called Ytyk Kere Sirder.

 

Today Mr Kalamanov V.A. underlined  how important  the code of behaviour is in respect  of the environment. Through thousands of years of communication with Nature the peoples of the North have established a unique philosophy of interaction with Nature. According to this philosophy, the environment is a holistic entity, an animated living organism, which is spiritualized and worshipped. Some forests, lakes and mountains are sacred to us. Northern people have their own moral responsibility to Nature. They treat it with great care and respect and they live in complete harmony with it. These attitudes are passed down from generation to generation as a code of behaviour and to break this code of our ancestors is considered a great sin.

 

The concept of State Ecological Policy of the Republic was a major factor of the development of the System of the Protected areas and was first announced by the first President of the Republic Nikolaev M.E. at the very first Congress on Nature Conservation held in April 1994 in Yakutsk.

 

By signing an Agreement on Nature Conservation between the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) and the WWF in Gland, Switzerland on February 10th 1997, the Republic has committed itself to the establishment of an ecologically representative network of protected areas covering 28.5% of each forest type, demonstrating a range of socially and ecologically appropriate models.

 

The present system of protected territories, Ytyk Kere Sirder, not only follows the ancient tradition of our ancestors but also reflects federal and international aspirations. These policies are designed to protect the rights not just of the present generations but of future generations of the native peoples. Their rights to a better and healthier environment; their rights to natural resources and the rights of the Sakha Republic to continue along the road of sustainable development. The protected areas cover some 883.2 thousand square kilometres (28.5% of the republic’s territories), which is roughly the size of two Germanys, and contains 2 Nature Reserves which the Sakha Republic passed on to the Federal System of Particularly Protected Nature Territories, 127 Particularly Protected Nature Territories (5 Nature Parks (Aan Aiylgy), 78 reserved sites of geological resources (Erkeeiy Sirder), 1 protected landscape (Uluu Tyuelbe), 26 unique lakes, 17 natural monuments) and over 100 particularly protected territories of local  significance.

 

I wouldn’t be able to describe all of these but I would like to talk about the National Nature Park “Lenskie Stolby”. The material for this presentation has been carefully prepared by the Ministry of Nature Protection of the Republic of Sakha, the Institute for Biological Problems of Cryolithozone SD RAS, with the assistance of the Institute of Geology, the Permafrost Institute and the Lenskie Stolby National Park. Lenskie Stolby is an obvious candidate as a World Natural Heritage Site for the following reasons:

 

  • In Lenskie Stolby territory you can find ancient skeletal animals, such as archeocyathids and trilobites which were swimming in the shallow waters of the Cambrian sea some 530-520 million years ago . In 1995 the International Union of Geological Science included Lenskie Stolby in the Global Indicated List (GIL GS). The remains of the most ancient organisms found here are unique evidence from the most important stage of the history of Earth’s development and the explosion of biological diversity that occurred on Earth in the Lower Cambrian period.

  • Another outstanding feature of Lenskie Stolby is the permafrost rocks (PFR), the thickness of which is about 100-500 metres. Cryogenic pale-yellow solodic soils were formed on loess-like loams. These soils are typical of the Central Yakutian plain and are not found anywhere else in the world. Scientists suppose that soil formation has been occurring on the ancient Lena terrace since the Eopleistocene in the conditions of permafrost and dry semiarid climate. All this explains the uniqueness of the soil cover and accounts for the special features of the fauna.

  • The presence of rare and endemic plant species including Redowskia sophiifolia which is unique to this territory and nowhere else in the world, and is thought to be a relic of the Lower Pleistocene age.

  • Numerous bone remains of mammoth fauna have been found from the Quaternary Period. These include species such as mammoth (Mammulhus primigenius Blum), bison (Bison priscus Boj), woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiguibatis Blum), Lena’s ancient horses (Eguus lenensis Russ) and reindeer (Rangifer tarandus L.). These species roamed this territory 60,000-24,000 years ago. As you know the “Yukagir” mammoth’s remaims were the best PR for the Republic in EXPO 2005 World Exhibition in Japan the exact copy of which is put out for the observation in your hall today.

  • In the park area there is an exclusively original landscape of wind drift sands - tukulany - forming the type “northern cold desert” which is also typical only for the middle Lena area.

  • Lenskie Stolby was settled by man in ancient times. Obviously primitive people hunted for large mammals grazing in herds and that enabled them to survive in the cold climatic conditions. There are some monuments showing the history of human development during the paleolithic and neolithic periods. Implements of paleolithic people found by Yu.A.Mochanov in Diring-Yuryakh were identical to those in Olduvai South Africa, and the numerous rock drawings, petroglyphs and sites of neolithic people show the evolution of Homo Sapiens.

  • Lenskie, Buotamatskie and Sinskie Stolby are remarkable for their astonishing beauty. You wouldn’t find anything like it throughout the whole territory of the North-East of Eurasia. The famous Russian Poet-Decembrist wrote the following lines : “ As you drift past the mountains you admire the work of Nature: fairy tale castle with its battlements, towers and minarets and the majestic waters of the river heaving at its feet…Silence falls on the virgin creation and the soul in deep communion with the Universe…”

 

The territory of Lenskie Stolby is an integral system, where natural ecosystems, numerous natural monuments and evidence of ancient man’s activity have been well preserved. The territory is protected by the administration and officers of the park and by the law and decrees of the Government of the Russian Federation and the Republic of Sakha.

 

Traditional nature management and licensed use of the biological resources by the members of eight communities of the national minorities of the North located in the park area (there are no settlements) is of key importance for the conservation of the natural monuments and bio-diversity of the ecosystems.

 

Giving the “Lenskie Stolby” the status of The World Nature Heritage Site of UNESCO would increase its chance of survival and protect from the impact of man’s  economic and recreational activities.

 

Svetlana Yegorova-Johnstone, Representative Ministry of Nature Conservation, Republic of Sakha (Yakutia)

 

 

 

 

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