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Discover landscapes shaped by enduring interaction between people and nature across Kazakhstan.

Kazakhstan's Protected Landscape/Seascape Protected Areas: IUCN Category V Defined

Kazakhstan features protected areas designated as Protected Landscapes/Seascapes, aligning with IUCN Category V. These are areas where the enduring relationship between human activities and nature has sculpted distinct environments, possessing notable ecological, cultural, and scenic importance. This route helps you understand the global definition of this category and identify which specific parks and protected areas within Kazakhstan embody these lived-in, managed natural and cultural geographies.

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Central Asian countrylandlocked countryformer Soviet republicpresidential republictranscontinental country
Parks in this category

Explore the unique characteristics and geographic spread of Kazakhstan's protected landscapes.

Discover Kazakhstan's Protected Landscape/Seascape Parks and IUCN Category V Protected Areas
Explore a curated list of Protected Landscape/Seascape parks in Kazakhstan, offering a focused view of the country's IUCN Category V protected areas. This atlas view helps compare protected landscapes shaped by human-nature interaction, highlighting their distinct ecological and cultural characteristics within Kazakhstan's diverse regions.
Watercolor illustration of mountains, a river, and hills with a pink cloud in a circular frame.
Protected areaNorte RegionMountain

Alvão Natural Park

Explore its mapped boundaries and landscape within the Norte Region.

Alvão Natural Park is recognized as a protected area offering unique opportunities for geographic study and atlas exploration. This detail page provides an in-depth look at its protected landscape, mapping its precise boundaries and situating it within the diverse geography of Portugal's Norte Region. Understand the park's intrinsic value as a mapped natural area and discover its contribution to the regional conservation landscape.

72.03 km²1983TemperateModerate access
Country pattern

Explore how human-influenced conservation areas define specific regions of Kazakhstan's geography.

Understanding Protected Landscape/Seascape in Kazakhstan's Diverse Protected Areas
Protected Landscape/Seascape, or IUCN Category V, identifies areas where long-term human interaction has shaped distinct ecological, cultural, and scenic values. In Kazakhstan, such protected areas showcase conservation that safeguards the unique relationship between communities and their natural environment, preserving significant landscapes and biological diversity across the country's vast geography.

Matching parks

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These parks and protected areas currently define how Protected Landscape/Seascape appears across Kazakhstan.

Category focus

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.

Representative parks

Alvão Natural Park
Management profile

People and nature

Protected Landscape/Seascape
IUCN Category V recognizes that some of the world's most valuable conservation landscapes are not places without people, but places shaped by a long and continuing interaction between people and nature. In these areas, biodiversity, cultural identity, local livelihoods, scenic quality, and historical land-use patterns are often deeply intertwined. The category is used where safeguarding the integrity of that interaction is itself essential to conservation. Category V is therefore especially relevant to lived-in landscapes and seascapes whose value depends on continuity, stewardship, and the maintenance of characteristic ecological and cultural patterns over time.

Definition

A Protected Landscape/Seascape is a protected area where the interaction of people and nature over time has produced an area of distinct character with significant ecological, biological, cultural, and scenic value, and where safeguarding the integrity of this interaction is vital to protecting and sustaining the area and its associated nature conservation and other values. The category is not defined by the absence of human presence, but by the quality and significance of a long-evolved relationship between communities, land or sea use, and nature.

Key characteristics

Category V areas are often recognizable as coherent lived-in landscapes or seascapes with strong identity and visible continuity between ecological systems and human practice. They may include traditional agricultural mosaics, terraced valleys, pastoral uplands, island seascapes, cultural coastlines, forest-agriculture patterns, or mixed landscapes where settlement, heritage, biodiversity, and scenic values reinforce one another. The conservation interest often lies not only in habitats or species, but also in the texture of the whole place: its land-use patterns, cultural memory, local management traditions, landscape form, ecological connectivity, and visual character. These areas are frequently more socially inhabited and economically active than stricter categories, but their management seeks to keep use compatible with long-term landscape quality and biodiversity.

Management focus

Management in Category V is usually integrative, collaborative, and place-based. Rather than separating conservation from human life, it aims to guide land and sea use so that ecological, scenic, and cultural values remain mutually supportive. This may involve planning controls, support for traditional management practices, restoration of degraded features, visitor management, heritage protection, sustainable local economies, and governance arrangements that work across public authorities, private owners, communities, and civil society. Because these places are often dynamic rather than static, management is less about freezing a landscape in time and more about steering change in ways that maintain its defining character, ecological function, and social meaning.

Protection purpose

The purpose of Category V is to conserve landscapes and seascapes where nature and people have shaped one another over time in ways that produce high ecological, cultural, and scenic value, and to keep that relationship viable into the future through careful stewardship.

Management objective

Typical objectives include maintaining the characteristic quality and identity of a landscape or seascape, sustaining biodiversity associated with traditional land or sea uses, supporting communities and stewardship practices compatible with conservation, protecting scenic and cultural heritage values, guiding development away from forms that would degrade landscape integrity, encouraging sustainable tourism and local economies, and strengthening long-term resilience of the whole area as a living conservation landscape.

Global context
Wider background behind Protected Landscape/Seascape
This reference block covers the broader history and global examples that define Protected Landscape/Seascape as an IUCN management category, rather than the country-specific park pattern shown elsewhere on the page.

Category history

Category V grew out of a broadening conservation understanding that not all valuable protected places are 'untouched' nature. In many parts of the world, especially in Europe and other long-settled regions, biodiversity and scenic identity are closely tied to long histories of farming, grazing, fishing, woodland use, settlement, and cultural adaptation. Conservation policy gradually moved toward recognizing that these lived-in landscapes could be worthy of protected status in their own right. The IUCN category system formalized this through Category V, giving international legitimacy to protected areas where the continuity of human-nature interaction is central rather than incidental. The category has become especially important for regional identity, connectivity, buffer functions, and conservation at the scale of working landscapes.

Global examples

Examples commonly linked with Category V include traditional mountain valleys, terraced agricultural regions, coastal cultural landscapes, island seascapes, mixed pastoral-woodland systems, and nationally designated protected landscapes where both biodiversity and long-shaped cultural scenery are central. In Europe in particular, many regional parks, protected landscapes, and protected seascapes align with Category V when their management focuses on maintaining a valued human-shaped landscape with strong ecological and cultural significance.

More categories

Compare the diverse conservation classifications and national park systems across Kazakhstan's varied protected landscapes.

Explore Other IUCN Protected Area Categories in Kazakhstan for Comprehensive Conservation Insights
Discover Kazakhstan's full spectrum of protected areas, including numerous National Parks and other significant conservation landscapes, extending beyond the Protected Landscape/Seascape designation. Trace the distinct geographic distribution and management objectives of each IUCN category, offering a comprehensive atlas view of the nation's diverse natural heritage.

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

Peneda-Gerês National Park, Altyn-Emel National Park, Charyn National Park, Ile-Alatau National Park, Burabay State National Nature Park, Katon-Karagay National Park, Kolsay Lakes National Park, Bayanaul National Park, Zhongar-Alatau National Park, Karkaraly State National Nature Park

Explore common questions regarding Kazakhstan's protected landscapes, park geography, and conservation across its diverse Central Asian terrain.

Frequently Asked Questions About National Parks and Protected Areas in Kazakhstan
Discover essential facts about Kazakhstan's national parks and protected areas, detailing their geographic spread across the country's vast Central Asian steppes, mountains, and Caspian Sea regions. These common questions offer vital context for tracing Kazakhstan's diverse conservation landscapes and regional park geography for in-depth atlas exploration.
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Continue Exploring Kazakhstan's Protected Landscape/Seascape Parks and Protected Areas

Deepen your understanding of Kazakhstan's Protected Landscape/Seascape protected areas by browsing specific examples and their geographic context. This route offers detailed insights into IUCN Category V sites, revealing how human-nature interactions shape significant national landscapes, providing valuable atlas-level interpretation for conservation geography.