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Discover protected lands in Canada balancing ecosystems, cultural values, and compatible resource use.

Canada: Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources (IUCN Category VI) Parks

Canada features specific protected areas designated as IUCN Category VI, known as Protected Areas with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources. These large sites conserve ecosystems and cultural values while integrating compatible, low-level, non-industrial use of natural resources into their management approach. This route helps you explore the geographic distribution and specific examples of these conservation landscapes within Canada's diverse national geography, moving from category definition to individual park insights.

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Parks in this category

Discover the geographic spread of Canada's Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources sites, highlighting key conservation landscapes.

Explore Canada's Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources Parks List
Discover the list of Canada's protected areas specifically designated as Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources, allowing you to trace their geographic distribution and conservation profiles. Explore how these Canadian landscapes balance ecological preservation with compatible natural resource use, providing a focused atlas view into their regional context and management approaches.
National parkBritish Columbia

Pacific Rim National Park Reserve

Mapped boundaries and regional geographic context in British Columbia.

Pacific Rim National Park Reserve stands as a distinct protected natural landscape, serving as a critical component of Canada's national park inventory. This page facilitates an atlas-style exploration of its mapped boundaries and its position within the broader geography of British Columbia. Understanding the park's protected status and its integration with the surrounding natural terrain offers valuable insight into conservation landscapes.

511 km²1970VI
National parkBritish Columbia

Gulf Islands National Park Reserve

Mapped boundaries and regional geographic context.

Delve into the protected landscape of Gulf Islands National Park Reserve, a significant national park located in British Columbia. This entry provides detailed insights into its mapped boundaries, regional geographic setting, and its identity as a protected area. Understand the park's place within the natural terrain and atlas of Canada, offering a clear geographic overview for focused discovery and landscape context.

36 km²2003VI
Country pattern

Review Canada's approach to integrating conservation with compatible resource use across its diverse protected landscapes, including coastal regions.

Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources: Exploring Canada's IUCN Category VI Parks
IUCN Category VI defines large protected areas that conserve ecosystems and cultural values while allowing compatible, low-level use of natural resources. In Canada, this applies to national park reserves such as Pacific Rim and Gulf Islands, which exemplify integrated conservation with sustainable human activities.

Matching parks

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These parks and protected areas currently define how Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources appears across Canada.

Category focus

A generally large protected area that conserves ecosystems and cultural values while allowing compatible, low-level, non-industrial use of natural resources as part of its management approach.

Representative parks

Pacific Rim National Park ReserveGulf Islands National Park Reserve
Management profile

Conservation with sustainable use

Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources
IUCN Category VI is used for protected areas where conservation remains primary, but where the sustainable use of natural resources is recognized as a legitimate and integrated part of management. These are usually large areas that remain mainly in a natural condition and that conserve ecosystems, associated cultural values, and traditional resource-management systems. The category is especially important in places where conservation is best achieved not by excluding all use, but by supporting forms of use that are low-level, non-industrial, ecologically compatible, and embedded in long-term stewardship.

Definition

A Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources is a protected area that conserves ecosystems and habitats together with associated cultural values and traditional natural resource management systems. Such areas are generally large, mainly in a natural condition, with a proportion under sustainable natural resource management, and where low-level non-industrial natural resource use compatible with nature conservation is seen as one of the main aims. Under IUCN guidance, the primary management objective should apply to at least three quarters of the protected area, often referred to as the 75 per cent rule.

Key characteristics

Category VI areas are usually extensive and ecologically substantial, often including forests, marine areas, drylands, wetlands, savannas, river basins, or mixed landscapes where ecosystems remain broadly intact. They are not open-ended multi-use areas and are not meant to legitimize intensive industrial extraction under a conservation label. Their defining feature is that conservation and sustainable use are deliberately linked, usually through practices that are small-scale, traditional, community-based, or otherwise demonstrably compatible with maintaining biodiversity and ecosystem function over the long term. These areas often carry strong social and cultural dimensions, especially where local communities or indigenous peoples have long histories of stewardship tied to natural resource use.

Management focus

Management in Category VI requires balancing conservation outcomes with clearly bounded and ecologically compatible use. This often means zoning, harvest rules, customary governance, community agreements, species and habitat monitoring, restoration where needed, and limits on activities that would exceed ecological thresholds. Managers may support traditional livelihoods, non-timber forest product collection, small-scale fisheries, extensive pastoralism, or other locally adapted uses where these do not undermine the area's conservation purpose. The category demands active judgment and governance rather than simple permissiveness: sustainable use must remain subordinate to the area's primary conservation objective, and industrial-scale or ecologically damaging exploitation is inconsistent with the category.

Protection purpose

The purpose of Category VI is to conserve large natural areas and their biodiversity while recognizing that carefully governed, low-level, sustainable resource use can in some places contribute to long-term conservation, local stewardship, and social legitimacy.

Management objective

Typical objectives include maintaining ecosystems in a largely natural condition, conserving biodiversity and ecological processes at scale, supporting traditional and compatible natural resource management systems, preventing industrial or ecologically destructive uses, strengthening community and indigenous stewardship where appropriate, aligning livelihoods with conservation goals, applying zoning and monitoring to keep use within ecological limits, and ensuring that the protected area's primary function remains long-term nature conservation.

Global context
Wider background behind Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources
This reference block covers the broader history and global examples that define Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources as an IUCN management category, rather than the country-specific park pattern shown elsewhere on the page.

Category history

Category VI reflects an important evolution in international conservation thinking. Earlier protected-area models often emphasized strict exclusion or visitor-oriented preservation, but many countries and communities argued for recognition of conservation systems in which biodiversity protection and sustainable use had long coexisted. The IUCN category system responded by creating a category that could accommodate large conservation areas managed for nature first, but with compatible and bounded use of natural resources as part of that conservation approach. This was especially significant in regions where community management, customary use, or extensive traditional economies played a major role in maintaining ecosystems. The category continues to be important in debates about equity, livelihoods, indigenous rights, and the governance of large conservation landscapes and seascapes.

Global examples

Examples commonly associated with Category VI include large forest reserves with community-based resource management, extensive marine or coastal conservation areas allowing regulated small-scale use, protected areas supporting traditional extraction of non-timber products, and landscapes where conservation is combined with long-established, low-intensity resource practices. Exact designations vary across national systems, but the category is generally applied to protected areas that remain mainly natural while allowing carefully governed use that is compatible with biodiversity conservation and long-term ecological integrity.

More categories

Compare Canada's National Parks and Protected Landscapes, Tracing a Fuller Conservation Atlas

Explore Canada's Diverse IUCN Protected Area Categories Beyond Sustainable Use
Explore Canada's comprehensive range of IUCN protected areas, broadening your understanding from Sustainable Use of Natural Resources to include National Parks and Protected Landscapes. Compare these diverse conservation strategies and trace the varied geographic spread of Canada's distinct protected area classification system.

IUCN category ii

National Park

A large natural or near-natural protected area managed to safeguard ecological processes, characteristic species, and ecosystems while also supporting education, recreation, and compatible visitor use.

Example parks

Banff National Park, Jasper National Park, Kluane National Park and Reserve, Waterton Lakes National Park, Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site, Gros Morne National Park, Wood Buffalo National Park, Kootenay National Park, Grasslands National Park, Yoho National Park

IUCN category v

Protected Landscape/Seascape

A protected area where the long-term interaction of people and nature has created a distinct landscape or seascape with significant ecological, cultural, and scenic value.

Example parks

Rouge National Urban Park

Uncovering Key Geographic Insights and the Distribution of Canada's Diverse Protected Landscapes

Frequently Asked Questions About National Parks and Protected Areas in Canada
Discover essential information on Canada's national parks, encompassing their geographic distribution and the defining characteristics of these vast conservation landscapes. These answers provide crucial context for understanding park geography, conservation efforts, and the natural heritage within Canada's extensive protected network.
MoriAtlas Explorer

Continue Exploring Canada's Protected Area with Sustainable Use of Natural Resources Landscapes

Delve deeper into Canada's IUCN Category VI protected lands, understanding how these areas balance conservation with the sustainable use of natural resources. This detailed route offers insights into how specific parks across Canada exemplify this management approach, providing a richer geographic context for Category VI protected areas and facilitating further exploration of their unique ecosystems and cultural significance within the national atlas.