Biology, asked by archana0710i, 9 months ago

Bibliography of natural resource management

Answers

Answered by divyarajeev237480
5

Answer:

Natural resource management deals with managing the way in which people and natural landscapes interact. It brings together land use planning, water management, bio-diversity conservation, and the future sustainability of industries like agriculture, mining, tourism, fisheries and forestry. It recognises that people and their livelihoods rely on the health and productivity of our landscapes, and their actions as stewards of the land play a critical role in maintaining this health and productivity.[1]

Natural resource management specifically focuses on a scientific and technical understanding of resources and ecology and the life-supporting capacity of those resources.[2] Environmental management is similar to natural resource management. In academic contexts, the sociology of natural resources is closely related to, but distinct from, natural resource management.

Answered by AnkitaSahni
0

'Natural resource management' ( 'NRM' ) is the 'management' of 'natural resources' like 'land', 'water', 'soil', 'plants', and 'animals', with a selected concentration on 'how management affects' the 'standard of life' for 'present and future generations'.

  • 'Natural resource management' deals with 'managing' the 'way' in which 'people and natural landscapes interact'. It brings together 'natural heritage management', 'land use planning', 'water management', 'biodiversity conservation', and the 'future sustainability' of 'industries' like 'agriculture', 'mining', 'tourism', 'fisheries' and 'forestry'.
  • There is a 'direct want' for 'resource management' not only for this 'except' for the 'long run' 'generation' too. 'Resource management' will be outlined as 'property utilization' moreover as 'regulation' and 'protection' of 'accessible natural resources'.

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