Department of Occupational and Environmental Studies, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South Africa.
J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2023 Aug;73(8):589-599. doi: 10.1080/10962247.2023.2221661. Epub 2023 Jun 21.
Human land use has begun exerting pressure on global ecosystems, causing a decline in biodiversity, and putting pressure on the biosphere's ability to support life. Migration and rapid population growth in urban areas have resulted in a growing volume of solid waste in nature reserves due to littering and illegal dumping. The existence of illegal dumping and littering continues to be a worldwide problem, even in protected areas. With the rise of informal settlements nationwide that contributes to illegal dumping and littering in developing nations undermines any effort to address the challenges of service delivery and creates unexpected environmental impacts. Even though there are numerous challenges to protected areas everywhere, urban proximity to protected areas exacerbates the threat level. This review aims to show the significance of human interaction with natural areas through community engagement, acknowledgment of traditional knowledge, and co-existence between conservationists and local communities. These in essence advocate for environmental sociology. The paper made use of a systematic literature review to critically analyze the topic and observe the trends. The literature reveals that thousands of protected areas are already impacted by urban areas.: The study sheds light on future urban development and pollution control. Our communities' environmental and social conditions are influenced by major urban areas, suburbs, and informal settlements. This is the first study to examine the urban sprawl of informal settlements that intrude on nearby natural areas. For decades, nature reserves have played an important role in conserving biodiversity. Littering and illegal dumping have increased the amount of solid waste in the metropolitan nature reserve as a result of rapid urban sprawl. The division of large natural areas into smaller spatial units can hinder the migration of species. By interspersing undeveloped and developed areas, leapfrog development patterns further divide natural landscapes. Long-term sustainability depends on understanding the causes, effects, and policy implications of sprawl.
人类的土地利用已经开始对全球生态系统施加压力,导致生物多样性下降,并对生物圈维持生命的能力造成压力。由于乱扔垃圾和非法倾倒,城市地区的移民和人口快速增长导致自然保护区的固体废物量不断增加。非法倾倒和乱扔垃圾的现象仍然是一个全球性的问题,即使在保护区也是如此。随着全国非正规住区的兴起,导致发展中国家的非法倾倒和乱扔垃圾现象加剧,破坏了为应对服务提供方面的挑战而做出的任何努力,并造成了意想不到的环境影响。尽管保护区面临着许多挑战,但城市与保护区的接近程度加剧了威胁程度。本综述旨在通过社区参与、承认传统知识以及保护主义者和当地社区之间的共存,展示人类与自然区域互动的重要性。这些实际上倡导环境社会学。本文利用系统文献综述对该主题进行了批判性分析,并观察了该主题的发展趋势。文献表明,数以千计的保护区已经受到城市地区的影响:该研究为未来的城市发展和污染控制提供了参考。我们的社区的环境和社会条件受到主要城市、郊区和非正规住区的影响。这是首次研究非正规住区的城市扩张如何侵入附近的自然区域。几十年来,自然保护区在保护生物多样性方面发挥了重要作用。由于城市的迅速扩张,垃圾和非法倾倒使大都市自然保护区的固体废物量增加。将大型自然区域划分为较小的空间单元会阻碍物种的迁移。跨越式发展模式通过交错未开发和已开发区域,进一步分割自然景观。长期的可持续性取决于理解蔓延的原因、影响和政策含义。