The zoning exercise conducted for DNP aimed to balance use and conservation, keeping conservation as a priority; however, without compromising the sustainable use of the Park. The use includes that allowed under the legislation, namely recreation and education, and traditional rights of the local communities and the Gujjar-Bakarwals that are dependent on the DNP. The Deosai National Park is designated as “National Park” under the wildlife legislation. However, to allow for development of tailored management principles for different areas within the DNP designated zones, their purpose, and broad management guidelines are described in this chapter: there are four different zones inside the Park Boundaries and two zones outside the park in a comprehensive Buffer Zone. • Core Zone • Wilderness Zone • Sustainable Use Zone • Visitors Intensive-Use Zone Outside the Park boundaries: • Buffer Zone • Buffer Zone Valleys
This archive includes non polar ice cores information from Mont Blanc glaciers available in the DISAT GEOMATIC LAB repository. A total of 14 ice cores were taken from 1973 to 2004 in different location: 10 on Col du Dome, 2 on Mont Blanc summit, 1 on Col de Brenva, 1 on Dom du Guter.
The Land Cover of the DNP map has been obtained from ESA Sentinel-2 imagery. The image used for the interpretation and final classification has been chosen on the basis of phenological state of the vegetation and cloud cover percentage. Moreover, in areas without deciduous vegetation or major seasonal crop variations, one month might suffice. Considering these conditions, a single multispectral image acquired on August 06 2018 has been used. In order to classify the remote sensing image (Sentinel-2), a supervised classification approach using the maximum likelihood (ML) classification algorithm was applied. MLC is a widely used pixel-based, parametric classifier based on the Bayes theorem. It makes use of a discriminant function to assign pixel to the class with the highest likelihood.
The zoning exercise conducted for DNP aimed to balance use and conservation, keeping conservation as a priority; however, without compromising the sustainable use of the Park. The use includes that allowed under the legislation, namely recreation and education, and traditional rights of the local communities and the Gujjar-Bakarwals that are dependent on the DNP. The Deosai National Park is designated as “National Park” under the wildlife legislation. However, to allow for development of tailored management principles for different areas within the DNP designated zones, their purpose, and broad management guidelines are described in this chapter: there are four different zones inside the Park Boundaries and two zones outside the park in a comprehensive Buffer Zone. • Core Zone • Wilderness Zone • Sustainable Use Zone • Visitors Intensive-Use Zone Outside the Park boundaries: • Buffer Zone • Buffer Zone Valleys
The Himalayan Brown bear is a highly threatened species in Pakistan. Its population is sparse and scattered throughout the Gilgit-Baltistan, KPK and AJK. The largest population in South Asia has been recorded in the Deosai National Park and their current population is more than 88 individuals, which indeed is quite below the minimum viable population size established by past researchers
In this Management Plan the boundaries has been delineated with more accuracy and the surface of the Park is 1621.66, 360.34 Km2 less, but if we include the Buffer Zone and the Buffer Zone Valleys the total surface is 3000.7 Km2, almost the same of the proposed surface declared in 1993 at the first declaration of DNP National Park. The difference between the surface of this map and the surface that is delineated in this plan is mainly concentrated in the SE side of the Park where it was not designed on the boundary pillars of Bari-La, but more down in the valleys. The map above is not correct also in the watersheds border especially on the N side, that delimitate the Deosai plateau and has been corrected on the basis of the GIS data, the survey of our and DNP staff, starting from the existing pillars. In these differences, there is the difference in the Core Zone area that is virtually reduced, but it is partially more extended than before or covered with a strict Buffer Zone.
In this map, the extraction of lakes and wetlands from the time-series analysis of Landsat imagery returned. Four maps, referred to the four years 1990, 259 1000, 2009 and 2018 have been created to show the geographic distribution of the lakes a 260 and wetlands in the different time. It can be seen that 66 lakes can be considered permanent in the range of the considered forty years, as they were present in each of the 13 images from 1990 to 2019. Moreover, in the maps, the number of lakes in the year of ref- 263 erence are displayed: 203 in 1990, 139 in 2000, 190 in 2009, and 175 in 2018. The number and surfaces of the lakes have been analysed in the GIS environment extracting the following information: • 66 lakes are permanent from 1990; • The number and the total surface of the small lakes show a gentle decrease from 1990 toward 2019; • The surface of the wetlands shows a clear increasing in the considered interval. These results are published as: Melis, M.T.; Dessì, F.G.; Casu, M. New Remote Sensing Data on the Potential Presence of Permafrost in the Deosai Plateau in the Himalayan Portion of Pakistan. Remote Sens. 2023, 15, 1800. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15071800
in the DNP, a network of touristic trails is delineated connecting some relevant points and hotspots. The idea is to offer the tourists that spend a night inside the Park some opportunities to enjoy the Deosai plateau beauty without disturbing the wildlife and the environment, in a sustainable way. The rules for these trails are: • Starting from the campsites • Only inside the Sustainable Use Zone • Connecting the Park with the Corridor • Only by feet • Camping allowed only in the delineated areas • Take-back system for waste management (no bins) The main trails are: • Sheosar Lake tour • Wildlife Watch Tower • K2 view Point cross to Satpara • Trails connected with the Corridor area to the villages of Shilla and Dappa
The study of the DNP Management Plan proposed the recognition of a corridor between the DNP and CKNP. In the map, this proposed