Recreational assessment of natural recreational resources of the Perm region - term paper. Territories of regulated recreational use What is included in the territories of regulated recreational use

TRRI - territories where recreational activities are allowed under certain restrictions, form hunting and fishing lands, as well as specially protected natural complexes (territories).

When evaluating hunting grounds for the development of this popular type of tourism, two main factors are taken into account: the type of natural complexes and the diversity of fauna. The first factor indicates the degree of favorableness of the landscape for hunting, the second - the abundance of animal species and the presence of rare animals. The richest hunting grounds in Russia are located in Kamchatka, in Siberia, in the Russian North.

Specially protected natural areas (SPNA) include: nature reserves, natural monuments, protected forest areas, national parks, nature reserves. The main purpose of these territories is the protection of valuable natural objects: botanical, zoological, hydrological, landscape, complex.

The strict nature protection function of protected areas determines the regulation of the use of these territories for other types of economic development. At the same time, the uniqueness of these natural objects determines their high value for educational tourism, which allows us to consider protected areas as important natural recreational resources, the use of which in tourism should be strictly regulated. Permissible type of recreational activity in protected areas is recorded in the passport of a specific protected object.

All over the world, national parks are actively covered by the tourism industry, performing, in addition to health-improving functions, the tasks of environmental education of the population. In Russia, national parks developed with a great delay, however, in recent years, interest in them has grown dramatically. Currently, 35 national parks operate on the territory of our country, and it is planned to organize 40 more.

Bioclimate

Among natural resources, climatic resources occupy a special place. A person cannot be isolated from the air surrounding him.

The impact of climate on the human body is called bioclimate. In accordance with this, bioclimatic parameters differ from ordinary meteorological characteristics, since they represent a complex effect of the meteorological characteristics of air masses on the human body: temperature, wind speed, humidity, and pressure.

The climate is formed under the influence of three main climate-forming factors:

Solar radiation, which provides light, heat and ultraviolet radiation to the earth;

Atmospheric circulation, which is associated with the transfer of air masses in atmospheric vortices (cyclones and anticyclones) and the presence of air mass separation zones (atmospheric fronts);

The underlying surface, which determines the redistribution of solar radiation and atmospheric circulation, depending on the nature of the earth's surface (meso- and microclimatic features of the area).

In recent years, the assessment of the bioclimate developed at the Central Institute of Balneology (now the Center for Medical Rehabilitation and Physiotherapy) in 1988 by Butyeva I.F. was used. All bioclimatic parameters were assessed according to the degree of favorable effect on the human body. At the same time, unfavorable factors that have an increased load on the adaptive systems of the human body are called annoying. Meteorological conditions, leading to less pronounced tension of adaptive mechanisms in the human body, are called training. In general, they are relatively favorable, and for most people who do not suffer from serious illnesses, they are useful conditions that have a training effect. Gentle climatic conditions are favorable for all people without exception, including for weakened patients who are on medical rest in a sanatorium or resort.

The categorization of medical and climatic conditions provides scientifically based criteria for recommendations to the population when developing new territories, choosing a place of residence, planning and designing a profile of resort areas, organizing a sanatorium-resort process, increasing the effectiveness of sanatorium-resort treatment and organizing recreational recreation.

Specially protected natural areas (SPNA) include: nature reserves, natural monuments, protected forest areas, national parks, nature reserves. The main purpose of these territories is the protection of valuable natural objects: botanical, zoological, hydrological, geological, complex, landscape.

The strict nature protection function of protected areas determines the regulation of the use of these territories for other types of economic development. At the same time, the uniqueness of these natural objects determines their high value for educational tourism, which allows us to consider protected areas as important natural recreational resources, the use of which in tourism should be strictly regulated. Permissible type of recreational activity in protected areas is recorded in the passport of a specific protected object.

Nature reserves, natural monuments and protected areas of the forest are territories allocated for unique, rare or typical natural complexes, the protection of which is entrusted to the land users of these territories: forestries, forestries, if the protected areas are located on the lands of the state forest fund (SFF), or rural administration, if they are located within the lands of former collective farms, state farms, etc. The land users of these protected areas are not involved in the organization of recreational activities on them.

Consider the types of protected areas and their purpose.

Botanical reserves, created to protect certain types of vegetation, are usually used for regulated winter hunting or fishing.

AT zoological reserves , where representatives of the fauna are protected, the regulated collection of mushrooms, berries and medicinal plants is allowed.

Geological and hydrological reserves are of interest for walking educational tourism, school excursions and training sessions for students of geographical and geological faculties of universities.

For the purposes of educational tourism, of particular importance are complex reserves , in which tourists are introduced to rare species of flora and fauna, picturesque landscapes. As a rule, setting up tourist camps on the territory of nature reserves is prohibited, only the laying of tourist trails is allowed.

Monuments of nature- these are unique natural objects (waterfalls, caves, picturesque rocks, etc.) or memorial natural objects (for example, larch in the Yaropolets estate, under which A. S. Pushkin rested). Natural monuments are always tried to be included in tourist routes as the most attractive natural objects.

Protected areas of the forest are allocated by foresters as reference (typical) or unique forest areas important for the conservation and reproduction of certain plant formations. Their visit is usually included in the routes of ecological tourism.

National parks and reserves are special types of protected areas that have an administration whose function is to organize both nature protection and recreational activities. True, the significance of recreational activities in them is different: in reserves, the nature protection function dominates and the cognitive recreational function is limited, in national parks both functions are of equal importance.

National parks- these are environmental institutions, the territories (water areas) of which include natural complexes and objects of special ecological, historical and aesthetic value, intended for use in environmental, recreational, educational, scientific and cultural purposes. The task of national parks, along with the nature protection function, is to create conditions for regulated tourism and recreation in natural conditions. This provides for the development and implementation of scientific methods for the conservation of natural complexes in terms of recreational use. A differentiated protection regime is established on the territories of national parks, taking into account local natural, historical, cultural and social characteristics. In accordance with this, the territory of the parks is divided into the following functional zones:

· zone of protected regime - any recreational and economic activity is prohibited;

· zone of custom regime – preservation of natural objects under strictly regulated recreational use;

· zone of cognitive tourism - organization of environmental education and familiarization with the sights of the park;

· zone of recreational use, including areas for recreation, sports and amateur hunting and fishing.

As can be seen from the established functional zoning of the territories of national parks, recreation and tourism are given a large place in them.

All over the world, national parks are actively covered by the tourism industry, performing, in addition to health-improving functions, the tasks of environmental education of the population. In Russia, national parks developed with a great delay, but in recent years interest in them has increased dramatically. Currently, 32 national parks operate in our country, and it is planned to organize another 40.

reserves- environmental institutions, the territory of which includes natural complexes and objects of unique ecological value, intended for use in environmental, scientific, scientific and educational purposes. Unlike national parks, nature reserves have a very limited recreational use, mainly for educational purposes only. This is reflected in the functional zoning of the reserves:

· zone of protected regime, in which flora and fauna develop without human intervention;

· a zone of scientific monitoring, in which the scientific staff of the reserve monitor the state and development of protected natural objects;

· zone of environmental education, where the nature museum of the reserve is usually located and strictly regulated trails are laid along which groups of tourists are guided to get acquainted with the natural features of the complex;

economic and administrative zone.

National and natural recreational parks (regional and local level)

The concept of sustainable development of nature and society provides for the creation of a network of specially protected natural and natural-historical-cultural territories, the area of ​​which, according to world standards, should occupy 10-12% of the area of ​​each state.

This network includes the following types of protected areas:

Nature reserves, natural monuments, protected areas of the forest, representing a certain educational interest for ecological tourism, recreational activities on the territory of which are organized by institutions that are not responsible for their protection;

Reserves (nature reserves) and national parks (organized to preserve the natural and cultural heritage of the country), in which the administration of these institutions is responsible for both recreational and environmental activities.

In national parks, unlike nature reserves, the recreational component is on an equal footing with the environmental component, and therefore their territory is not only a model of a valuable natural landscape complex, but also of interest for its recreational and aesthetic merits for visitors.

In most countries of the world, national parks have become the dominant form of protected areas. Under them, according to the definition of Maksakovsky N.V. (1996), the territories of the most valuable recreational, aesthetic and cognitive natural and historical and cultural resources are allocated for the purpose of using them in the field of tourism, excursion business and environmental education. Along with national parks, usually smaller natural and natural-historical parks of regional or local significance are created.

Recreational parks are necessary not only for remote exotic areas such as Kamchatka, but also for urbanized areas, especially in the zone of influence of large metropolitan areas. The formation of a network of protected recreational parks makes it possible to reduce the likelihood of losing valuable natural lands in suburban recreation areas.

Currently, the system of natural recreational parks of all levels in Russia is at the initial stage of formation. This is evidenced by:

Underdevelopment of parks (32 national parks in the Russian Federation);

The extreme unevenness of their distribution, as a result of which many physical and geographical regions are not represented in the network of national parks (there are only 6 national parks in Siberia, concentrated mainly in the Baikal region);

Lack of parks in the nearest radius of accessibility (up to 200 km) for most million-plus cities;

Incomplete coverage by national parks of exotic areas that attract the main unorganized flow of tourists.

All this sharply raises the question of the need to develop recreational parks in Russia in order to form an integral park system capable of solving the main environmental, recreational and educational tasks for eco-tourism facing our society.

National and recreational parks can have a variety of content and, accordingly, different technological forms.

The specifics of the parks are determined by the following factors:

General geographical position;

Character of the region: urbanized resorts or “wild territories”;

Position relative to large cities: agglomeration (Losiny Ostrov National Park), inter-agglomeration (Meshchersky National Park), extra-agglomeration (Komi Yu National Park);

Territory genesis: natural or natural-historical parks;

Functional recreational use: walking and landscape, mushroom and berry, hunting, sports and tourism, educational.

By analogy with world parks, one can distinguish the North American type (preserved natural complex) and the European type (picturesque rural landscape with historical and cultural complexes).

Maksakovskii N. V. proposed the following basic principles for the formation of a system of natural recreational parks in Russia.

Choice of geographic base is determined by the need to represent each of the 58 bioregions of Russia in the park system, which will allow to fully reflect the natural diversity of the country.

Choosing a territory for the park is determined by a combination of unique and typical properties in a given natural complex. The representativeness (specificity) of the landscape for a given bioregion is determined by the geographical location of the park. The recreational, aesthetic and educational value of the area is necessary for the organization of various forms of recreation in the park.

Key criteria for choosing a park area- high recreational potential (possibility of multifunctional recreational use, comfort of natural and climatic conditions, landscape diversity) and cognitive potential (concentration of natural and historical and cultural attractions).

It is also necessary to define additional criteria that determine the area and boundaries of the park:

Inclusion of ecologically key sites that maintain hydrological balance and a healthy human environment; ecological "autonomy" of the territory (basin principle - binding to watershed boundaries);

Resource-protective (resource-reproductive) significance of the territory (inclusion of high quality forests, high-quality sources of water supply, commercial hunting and fishing lands);

Transport accessibility (the share of the area of ​​the national park located in the zone of easy transport accessibility should not exceed 50% of its territory);

Compatibility of the national park with the existing system of nature and land use (absence or low presence in the territory of the national park of anthropogenic elements alien to nature protection tasks);

Predominance of federal ownership of land and other resources in the territory (Goslesfond, Gosvodfond);

Correspondence of the external boundaries of the national park with visual boundaries (power lines, roads, canals, rivers, mountain ranges) and landscape (valuable ecosystems should be included in the entire national park);

It is desirable that the outer boundaries of the park correspond to administrative and economic (land of agricultural and forestry enterprises) and political and administrative boundaries (region, territory, etc.).

Additional factors in the formation of the Russian park system:

Organization of several parks in areas of strong urbanization to provide recreation for large masses of the urban population and disperse places of organized recreation throughout the region in order to regulate visits and more effectively protect natural complexes;

Formation of additional parks in bioregions with generally recognized unique exotic areas (for example, Kamchatka, Sakhalin, the mountains of South Siberia);

Mandatory formation of national parks in every major subject of the Russian Federation on the territory of national autonomies.

Principles of placement of recreational parks in an urbanized area

There are stimulating and limiting factors for the organization of parks in urbanized regions. Drivers include the huge demand for active and positive outdoor recreation in major metropolitan areas. The limiting factors hindering the creation and development of suburban recreation areas are: strong development of the territory, excessive transport accessibility, a dense network of political and administrative boundaries and a complex land use system.

Recreational parks in an urbanized region should be represented by three forms:

Local natural parks, concentrated in the forest park zone, intended for one-day recreation;

Regional recreational parks located in the middle radius of accessibility and in some places on the periphery of the region, focused on weekend and possibly long-term recreation;

National parks occupying peripheral zones with a well-preserved natural environment.

Between recreational parks there is a buffer “vacuum” zone corresponding to highly developed agricultural or industrial production.

For such megacities as the Moscow region, a network of local recreational parks should be developed in the immediate vicinity of both the capital and large regional centers. Regional recreational parks for various purposes will be located in places of concentration of natural and cultural heritage sites in all sectors of the region.

The existing national park “Losiny Ostrov”, located in the very center of the metropolis, is unique not only in Russia, but also in the world.

On the outskirts of the Moscow region within a radius of 150 - 200 km there are several national parks: "Pereslavl-Zalessky" (Yaroslavl region), "Meshchera" and "Meshchersky" (Vladimir and Ryazan regions) and "Ugra" (Kaluga region).

Currently, it is proposed to create another series of national parks: the natural-historical park "Central Russia" (Volokolamsk, Istra and Ruzsky districts), the historical "Verkhne-Moskvoretsky" (Mozhaisk district), "Volgusha" (Dmitrovsky district), Sergiev Posadsky, as well as a wide network of regional and local parks.


Topic: Bioclimate

1. Formation and significance of climatic resources.

Among natural resources, a special place is occupied by climatic . A person cannot be isolated from the air surrounding him.

The effect of climate on the human body is called bioclimate . In accordance with this, bioclimatic parameters differ from ordinary meteorological characteristics, since they represent a complex effect of the meteorological characteristics of air masses on the human body: temperature, wind speed, humidity, and pressure.

The climate is formed under the influence of three main climate-forming factors:

· solar radiation , which ensures the supply of light, heat and ultraviolet radiation to the earth;

· atmospheric circulation , which is associated with the transfer of air masses in atmospheric vortices (cyclones and anticyclones) and the presence of air mass separation zones (atmospheric fronts);

· underlying surface , which determines the redistribution of solar radiation and atmospheric circulation depending on the nature of the earth's surface (meso- and microclimatic features of the area).

The climate has both positive and negative effects on the human body. Positive impact is usually used in recreational activities for the organization of climate treatment. Protection from negative factors is required in the form of climate prevention. The use of climatic factors is of great health significance in connection with the training effect of climate on the natural mechanisms of stimulation of the body's vital activity, worked out in the process of evolution: people in the process of historical development adapt to certain climatic conditions. The adaptability of a person to certain climatic conditions is called adaptation. When climatic conditions change (when moving from north to south and vice versa), the human body experiences significant adaptive loads that should be avoided in general, and when organizing recreation, it is imperative to take into account and choose the seasons when the level of adaptive stress of the body will be the lowest.

A person's habituation to new climatic conditions should occur gradually, over a certain time, called adaptation period , during which it is necessary to exclude additional loads on the body (sports trips, medical procedures, etc.). The adaptation period can last from several days to a month. In addition to climatic differences, it is necessary to take into account differences in time zones, i.e. temporary adaptation . With a sharp change in the biological cycle, desynchronosis develops, which adversely affects the entire system of the human body. Consequently, when characterizing different localities, a unified system of bioclimatic parameters is very important, which makes it possible to compare the bioclimatic conditions of different regions. Most people, living in urban areas, almost constantly stay in artificial microclimate conditions of housing and clothing, which weaken the mechanisms of adaptation. When organizing rest under the influence of a long stay of a person in natural conditions, especially when using climate procedures, the body's resistance to adverse environmental effects is significantly increased.

For a unified system for assessing the bioclimatic potential of a territory, as well as for assessing landscape and recreational conditions, a systemic assessment method developed in complex geography is used. The assessment is carried out both factor-wise and integrally according to the level of medical and climatic impact of the bioclimate on the human body.

In recent years, the assessment of the bioclimate developed at the Central Institute of Balneology (now the Center for Medical Rehabilitation and Physiotherapy) in 1988 by I. F. Butyeva has been used. All bioclimatic parameters were evaluated according to the degree of their favorable effect on the human body. At the same time, unfavorable factors that have an increased load on the adaptive systems of the human body are named annoying . Meteorological conditions leading to a less pronounced tension of adaptive mechanisms in the human body are called coaching . In general, they are relatively favorable, and for most people who do not suffer from serious illnesses, they are beneficial conditions that have a training effect. sparing climatic conditions are favorable for all people without exception, including for weakened patients who are on medical rest in a sanatorium or resort.

The categorization of medical and climatic conditions provides scientifically based criteria for recommendations to the population when developing new territories, choosing a place of residence, planning and designing a profile of resort areas, organizing a sanatorium-resort process, increasing the effectiveness of sanatorium-resort treatment and organizing recreational recreation.

Based on the assessment of the bioclimatic potential and its components, an integral and factor-by-factor medical-climatic zoning of the territory is carried out.

2. Solar radiation mode

The solar spectrum consists of three main parts:

· infrared radiation , which determines the arrival of heat on the earth's surface, which manifests itself in the temperature regime;

· light radiation , which determines the insolation (light) regime;

· ultraviolet (UV) radiation, associated with the biological activity of the sun.

For tourism, light and ultraviolet regimes are of particular importance.

Insolation mode is determined by the duration of sunshine, that is, daylight hours during which various recreational activities are possible. The lack of sunshine duration observed in northern latitudes is an uncomfortable phenomenon. During the polar night, recreational activities are not possible.

In table. 3.1 shows the criteria for assessing the insolation regime.

RUSSIAN INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF TOURISM

Department of "Geography of tourist destinations"



page
INTRODUCTION 3
5
1. Landscapes 5
1.1. Relief 5
1.2. water bodies 9
14
17
17
2.2. Hunting and fishing grounds 22
3. Ecological state of the natural environment 24
4. Landscape and recreational potential 26
5. Integrated landscape and recreational zoning of the territory 29
6. Climate and bioclimate 29
6.1. Main climate-forming factors 30
6.2. Solar radiation mode 30
6.3. atmospheric circulation 32
6.4. Thermal regime 34
6.5. wind regime 35
6.6. Humidity mode 35
6.7. Precipitation regime 37
7. Bioclimatic potential 40
8. Bioclimatic zoning of the territory 40
9. Hydromineral resources 41
9.1. Mineral water 41
9.2. Therapeutic mud (peloids) 43
45
CONCLUSION 46
49
APPS

INTRODUCTION

Objective: analysis of natural recreational potential and identification of prospects for the development of nature-oriented forms of tourism in the Oryol region.

Work tasks:

assessment of landscape and recreational potential and drawing up landscape and recreational zoning of the territory;

characteristics of territories of regulated recreational use;

assessment of bioclimatic potential and preparation of bioclimatic zoning of the territory;

characteristics of hydro-mineral resources;

Research methodology.

The main research methods were: the method of observation, statistical, comparative and cartographic analysis, methods of mapping and zoning of the territory.

Natural recreational resources in the course work were evaluated on a three-point system by a factor-integral method. The main evaluation criterion is the degree of favorableness of landscape components, bioclimate conditions, objects or factors for various types of nature-oriented tourism (health, sports, ecological, hunting and fishing).

Materials used.

The work is based on educational and local history literature on the natural conditions and resources of the Oryol region, atlases and maps, collections of scientific articles, analytical reports and statistical materials. To a small extent, data from the Internet was used.

Brief information about the territory.

The Oryol region was formed in 1937. It includes 24 administrative districts, 7 cities (3 cities of regional subordination - Orel, Livny, Mtsensk, and 4 cities of regional subordination - Bolkhov, Dmitrovsk-Orlovsky, Maloarkhangelsk, Novosil), 13 urban-type settlements and more than 3 thousand rural settlements. The administrative center of the region is the city of Orel.

The subjects of the region are the following administrative districts (indicating the district center): Bolkhovsky (Bolkhov), Verkhovsky (Verkhovye), Glazunovskiy (Glazunovka), Dmitrovsky (Dmitrovsk-Orlovsky), Dolzhansky (Dolgoye), Zalegoshchensky Zalegoshch), Znamensky (the village of Znamenskoye), Kolpnyansky (the village of Kolpny), Korsakovsky (the village of Korsakovo), Krasnozorensky (the village of Krasnaya Zorya), Kromsky (the village of Kromy), Livensky (the city of Livny), Maloarkhangelsky (the city of Maloarkhangelsk) , Mtsensk (Mtsensk), Novoderevenkovsky (town of Khomutovo), Novosilsky (town of Novosil), Orlovsky (town of Orel), Pokrovskiy (town of Pokrovskoye), Sverdlovsky (town of Zmievka), Soskovsky (village of Soskovo), Trosnyansky (from Trosna), Uritsky (town Naryshkino), Khotinetsky (town Khotynets), Shablykinsky (town Shablykino) (Fig. 1.).

The territory of the region lies between the parallels - 53º30' and 51º55'N, and between the meridians - 34º45' and 38º05'E. The meso-EGP of the Oryol region is determined by its position in the southwestern part of the European territory of the Russian Federation, in the center of the Central Russian Upland, in the southernmost part of the Central Economic Region.

The region has no access to the seas. Neighbors (of the first order) for it are the regions of the Central and Central Black Earth economic regions of the Russian Federation (Fig. 2): Tula in the north, Kaluga in the north-west, Bryansk in the west, Lipetsk in the east and Kursk in the south.

From the point of view of the micro-EGP for the Oryol region, a particularly favorable factor is the location of sections of its northern, western and southern borders. In the first case, this is access to a dynamically developing metropolitan region, in the next two - to the Slavic countries of the near abroad (Belarus and Ukraine), with which the region can develop close economic and cultural ties.

In terms of territory (24.7 thousand km2), the Oryol region is the smallest among all adjacent regions and ranks 67th in this indicator (among 89 subjects) in Russia. Its average length in the meridional direction is slightly more than 150 km, and in the latitudinal direction - over 220 km. The administrative center - the city of Orel - is close to the geographical center of the region.


NATURAL RECREATIONAL RESOURCES


1. Landscapes

The landscapes of the Oryol region belong to the class of plains. Here two natural zones adjoin: forest and forest-steppe.


1.1. Relief

The relief as the main component of the landscape is the most important natural recreational resource that determines the landscape diversity of the landscape. When evaluating the relief from the standpoint of its suitability for recreational activities, one usually takes into account its picturesqueness, mosaicism and the degree of dissection, the steepness of the slopes, and the presence of focal observation points. It is also taken into account that different types of recreational activities have different requirements for terrain conditions. So, in some cases, preference is given to a flat relief (for agro-recreation), in others - mountainous, strongly rugged (alpine skiing, mountaineering, etc.). For recreational purposes, the most favorable is a large-hilly, or ridge, relief, a relatively favorable slightly hilly and undulating terrain; even, flat, monotonous surfaces are unfavorable from the point of view of the aesthetics of landscape perception and due to the functional unsuitability of this type of relief. For health-improving recreation, both functionally and aesthetically, the most favorable is rugged terrain with slight excesses.

The formation of the modern relief of the region (Fig. 3.) is closely related to the geological and neotectonic conditions of the development of the territory in the Quaternary. Orographically, the territory of the Oryol region is confined to the Central Russian Upland and only in the extreme northwest - to the Desninsko-Dneprovsky trough.

In neotectonic terms, the vast majority of the territory of the region belongs to the Central Russian anteclise, as a structure of the first order (Fig. 4.). Within the anteclise, uplifts and troughs of the second order and fine local structures of higher orders are distinguished. G.I. Raskatov distinguishes the Dmitrov and Novosilsk uplifts, the Oksky and Livensky troughs.

The formation of large neotectonic structures here is closely related to the inheritance of the plan and sign of bed movements from the Cretaceous, and possibly from the Jurassic. The low thickness of the Quaternary deposits and the wide development of modern denudation processes also indicate the trend of continuing uplift of these areas. Within the uplifts, small structures are noted - uplifts and troughs of a local plan of higher orders. Between the Dmitrovsky and Novosilsky uplifts there is the Oksky trough, and south of the Novosilsky uplift is the Livensky trough, which are characterized by an increase in the thickness of Quaternary deposits and a lesser development of modern denudation processes.

According to the hypsometric position, the territory of the region can be divided into an elevated plain (abs. height more than 240 m) and a relatively low plain (abs. height less than 240 m) with varying degrees of dissection , . For elevated plains, the degree of dissection of the relief ranges from 1.7-2.5 km/km2 with a dissection depth of up to 70-120 meters. Relatively low plains are characterized by a degree of dissection of 50-80 m (mainly in neotectonic troughs). The main type of the region's relief, therefore, is a strongly and deeply dissected gently hilly erosion-denudation plain in the non-glacial region (watersheds of the rivers Oka, Sosna, Zushi, Neruch, Lyubovsha). Water-glacial deposits are found only in the basin of the river. Desna and its tributaries - r. Nerussa, Navlya, on the territory of Dmitrovsky and Shablykinsky districts.


1.3. land cover

In terms of soil cover, the Oryol region is a zone of transitional soils from soddy-podzolic to chernozem (Fig. 6.). The variety of soils is determined by different conditions of soil formation, which change from northwest to southeast. Given this trend, three soil zones are distinguished in the region: western, central and southeastern. Western the zone is made up of Bolkhovsky, Khotinetsky, Znamensky, Uritsky, Shablykinsky and Dmitrovsky districts with a predominance of light gray, gray and dark gray forest soils, occupying 85% of arable land. Part central zone includes Mtsensk, Korsakovsky, Novosilsky, Orlovsky, Zalegoshchensky, Sverdlovsky, Kromsky, Glazunov and Trosnyansky districts, where gray forest, dark gray forest soils and podzolized chernozems (86% of arable land) are mainly located. Novoderevenkovsky, Krasnozorensky, Verkhovsky, Pokrovsky, Maloarkhangelsky, Livensky, Kolpnyansky and Dolzhansky districts are included in southeasternzone with a clear predominance of podzolized and leached chernozems (3/4 of the area of ​​arable land).

The territory of the region is characterized by high agricultural development - over 80% of the total area, 4/5 of which is plowed (Fig. 8 (2).). Over the past decades, the area of ​​agricultural land has significantly decreased (by almost 10%). Not so noticeable, but very tangible, the main means of production in crop production, arable land, is declining. Characteristically, the share of pure fallows in the composition of arable land accounts for up to 23% (313 thousand ha) (Fig. 8 (3).). The area of ​​perennial plantations over the past 10 years (by 2002) has decreased from 24 to 13 thousand hectares. Fallow land compared to the mid-1990s. increased almost 7 times. In the structure of sown areas (1.6 million hectares, 2002), grains account for 708 thousand hectares (the share of winter crops is 35%), fodder - 330 thousand hectares, potatoes and vegetable and melon crops - 66 thousand hectares (4%), industrial crops - 41 thousand hectares (3%).


2. Territories of regulated recreational use

Category lands of regulated recreational use include territorial objects that have the status of specially protected natural areas of federal, regional and local significance - national parks and reserves, estates and museum-reserves, various types of natural monuments, etc.


2.1. Ecotourism Resources (PAs)

Under ecotourism we understand one of the forms of recreation, directly related to the use of natural potential. This is travel and outdoor recreation in a natural, little-modified habitat. This is healing in harmony with preserved nature. Ultimately, ecological tourism is a vivid example of a combination of nature, sports and ecology with the aim of developing spiritual, physical and cognitive principles in a person (Pozdeev, 2000.).

Despite the right to use the forest for recreation officially enshrined in the Fundamentals of Forest Legislation, the problem of organizing the latter in Russia as a whole and in the Oryol region in particular remains largely unresolved. This is partly due to the lack of an unambiguous definition in the specialized literature of the concept of "recreational forests". Our approach to the definition of this concept involves the assignment to the category of recreation those forest areas in which the recreational function dominates and determines the tasks of management. These include parks and forest parks in cities and suburban areas, individual sections of natural national parks intended for visitors to relax. The most important qualitative sign of recreational forests is their readiness for mass recreation (saturation with a road and path network, including asphalted health paths, sanitary and hygienic facilities, etc.).

***********************************************

As of the beginning of the 2000s, the list of protected natural objects of various status and purpose included 134 units (Fig. 10) with a total area of ​​almost 640 thousand hectares (a quarter of the regional territory). As part of their area, 84% is represented by hunting reserves. Oryol Polesie (with a relatively strict protection regime) accounts for over 13%; the rest of the protected area is represented by natural parks (or natural monuments of local importance) (Table 2.).

Tab. 2. Types of protected natural areas of the region.


Type of protected area

Name of protected area

Dendropark Arbuzov
Natural monument of local importance Telegino Park
Natural monument of local importance Tract "Young"
place of interest Park-estate. N. Khitrovo
Natural monument of local importance Lake Red
Natural monument of local importance Fragments of a linden alley and a garden
Natural monument of local importance The tract "Planting"
Natural monument of local importance The tract "Khotkovskaya Dacha"
place of interest N.V. Kireevsky Park
place of interest "Khotkovsky Park"
************************** Lake "Zvannoe"



Natural monument of local importance Old park in the village of Malaya Rakovka
Natural monument of local importance Garden "Melnik"
Natural monument of local importance Park in the village of Grunets
Natural monument of local importance Solitary long-lived tree (Linden heart-leaved)
National Park of Federal Importance "Oryol woodland"
Natural monument of local importance "Verochkina Grove"
Natural monument of local importance Arboretum VNIISPK
Natural monument of local importance Natural Park "Naryshkinsky"




The total area of ​​the Oryol Polesie National Park is over 84,000 hectares. Its boundaries include lands of other owners and users without their withdrawal from economic exploitation (49 thousand hectares). The main value of the national park is represented by forests (40% of the territory), which have preserved unique complexes of the southern taiga groups, in which a large number of rare plants and animals are concentrated; 12% of the territory is represented by meadow phytocenoses (Appendix 1.). The value of the plant communities of the park lies in the fact that they are located on the border of two botanical and geographical zones (European broad-leaved and Eurasian steppe) that are very susceptible to any anthropogenic interference.

According to the existing classification, natural monuments are divided into 7 types: forest (45), garden and park (44), hydrological (15), botanical (10), dendrological (9), geological and botanical and landscape (1 each). The total area of ​​natural monuments of regional significance of the region (130 natural objects) is almost 13 thousand hectares. An analysis of the features of their location (Fig. 11.) and functioning allows us to draw the following conclusions:

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Recreational comfort of water bodies in the region is quite low, including due to significant anthropogenic pressure. For example, in one of the main objects of recreational water use, the Oka, an excess of MPC for biological oxygen demand (BOD5) was noted with a maximum indicator of up to 4.52 mg/l; for biogenic pollutants, the excess of MPC ranges from 1.5 to 5.3 (Report ..., 2000). The beach digression of river NTCs is also significant, especially near residential areas.

A negative factor in the decline in the quality of the climatic resources of the region is a significant anthropogenic pollution of the atmospheric air, especially strong in the areas of the cities of Orel, Livny, Mtsensk. The structure of gas emissions by various enterprises is very diverse, but in terms of the impact on humans and the environment, the following deserve attention in the first place: carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides, salts of hydrofluoric acid, lead and dust.


Table 4. Factor-integral assessment of the ecological state of the natural environment.


Parameter

Score in points

Air basin condition 3
The state of the water basin 2
Soil condition 1
Integral assessment

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Components of the natural environment on the territory of the Oryol region are experiencing significant anthropogenic pressure, which manifests itself in poorly controlled emissions into the air, wastewater discharges into water bodies and soil degradation. However, in recent years, the anthropogenic impact on ecosystems has noticeably decreased. The ecological situation in the Oryol region is generally favorable for the development of recreational activities.


Rice. 15. Bioclimatic zoning of the Oryol region.


PROBLEMS HINDERING THE DEVELOPMENT OF NATURE-ORIENTED FORMS OF TOURISM IN THE OREL REGION

The main constraining factors in the use of recreational resources in the Oryol region are the following.

Weak development of most components of the natural resource potential.

De facto, ecological tourism, in the direct sense of this term (if you do not include lovers of hunting and sport fishing), is not developed in the region. This is confirmed by the absence of a stable flow of visitors (local or from other regions) to most of the protected natural sites. There is also no so-called rural tourism in the region, which is explained by the unwillingness of the local rural population to receive guests on a commercial basis, to provide them with specialized recreational services.

Lack of assessment of the socio-ecological potential of the territory and natural recreational resources of the region, insufficient knowledge of the real and potential needs of the population in recreation and in the volume of recreational services.

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CONCLUSION


LIST OF USED SOURCES

Avakyan A.B. Reservoirs, their economic importance, problems of creation and complex use // Influence of reservoirs on surface and underground runoff. M., 1972.

Alexandrov I. Geography of the Oryol region. - Tula, Priokskoe book publishing house, 1972

Atlas of the Oryol region. Federal Service of Geodesy and Cartography of Russia. - Moscow, 2000.

Barteneva O.D., Polyakova E.A., Rusin N.P. The regime of natural light on the territory of the USSR. L., 1971.

Belinsky V.A. Ultraviolet radiation from the sun and sky. M., 1968.

Report on the state of the natural environment of the Oryol region. 1997-2000

Behind the pages of the textbook of geography of the Oryol region. Brief local history essays. – M.: Publishing House of Moscow State University, 2004.

Ivanov V.V., Nevraev G.A., Fomichev M.M. Map of therapeutic mud of the USSR. M., 1968.

Studying the geography of the Oryol region at school. Physical geography: Teaching aid for teachers of geography / Under. ed. IN AND. Quiet. - Eagle, 1997.

Information bulletin on the state of the geological environment on the territory of the Oryol region for 1998 - Orel, 1999.

Pozdeev V.B. Ecological tourism in the context of regional development / Sat. Problems and prospects for the development of tourism in countries with economies in transition. - Smolensk, 2000.

Natural wealth of the Oryol region. - Eagle, 1997.

Raskatov G.I. The most important features of the tectonic structure of the northwestern part of the Voronezh anteclise / Issues of geology and minerals of the Voronezh anteclise. - Voronezh, VSU, 1970.

Recreational resources of the USSR: problems of rational use / V.N. Kozlov, L.S. Filippovich, I.P. Chalay et al. M., 1990.

Quiet V.I. Economic and social geography of the Oryol region. - Eagle, 2000.


EGP - economic and geographical position.

The degree of dissection is understood as the length of the valley-beam network, related to 1 km2 of area.

For the Central Russian Upland, it is accepted: weak dissection (less than 1.2 km/km2), medium (1.2-1.6 km/km2), strong (more than 1.6 km/km2).

May have exclusively federal significance.

Terrenkur (German) - a specially equipped path for dosed therapeutic walking.


3
Russian International Academy of Tourism
Dmitrovsky branch
Course work

By discipline: Recreational resources
On the topic: Recreational assessment of natural recreational resources of the Perm region
Completed by: St. 12 groups Jalalyan A.M.
Checked by: Associate Professor Pospelova A.A.
_________
(signature)
May 13, 2006, Dmitrov.
Content:
Introduction3
4
I. Recreational assessment of landscapes
1.1. Relief 4
1.2. Water objects 5
1.3. Land cover 9
1.4. Resources of mushroom, berry lands and lands with medicinal
plants 12
1.5. Aesthetic assessment of the landscape 12
1.6. Landscape and recreational potential and
landscape and recreational zoning of the territory 12
II. Territory reglaminated recreational
use
2.1. Hunting and fishing grounds 13
2.2. Recreational use of specially protected natural
territories 15
III. Bioclimate
3.1. Solar radiation mode 24
3.2. Atmospheric circulation 25
3.3. Wind regime 25
3.4. Thermal 25
3.5. Humidity and Precipitation Mode 26
3.6. Bioclimatic potential and bioclimatic
zoning of the territory 27
IV. Hydromineral and unique natural resources
4.1. Mineral waters 28
V. Conclusion 29
Introduction

In this work, a study and analysis of the natural recreational resources of the Perm region will be carried out.
The purpose of this work is to study the suitability of the natural recreational resources of the Perm region for the purposes of tourism activities. To achieve this goal, it is necessary to do the following - to study and characterize:
relief
Water bodies
ground cover
Resources of mushroom, berry lands and lands with medicinal plants
Hunting and fishing grounds
Bioclimate
Hydromineral and unique natural resources
After that, we can analyze and draw conclusions.
The object of study in this paper is the natural recreational resources of the Perm region.
At the end of the work, we will be able to summarize all our conclusions and characterize the natural recreational resources of the Perm region as favorable or unfavorable for the development of tourism.
Natural recreational resources

1. Recreational assessment of landscapes

1.1. Relief

The relief of the region was formed under the influence of mountain-building processes in the Ural Mountains (Hercynian folding, about 250 million years ago), as well as marine and continental sedimentation on the ancient crystalline basement of the platform.
The large (about 80% of the territory) western part of the region is located on the eastern outskirts of the East European Plain, where low-lying and flat terrain prevails, which is not very favorable for recreation. In the east, in the meridional direction, the Ural Mountains stretch, occupying 20% ​​of the region's territory.
The mountainous part of the region is represented by the mid-mountain relief of the Northern Urals and the low-mountain relief of the Middle Urals. The border between them is drawn at the foot of Mount Oslyanka (59 degrees north latitude). The mountains in the north of the region are the highest part of the region. Here is the highest point of the Perm region - Tulymsky Stone (1496 m) and other significant peaks: Isherim (1331 m), Prayer Stone (1240 m), Khu-Soik (1300 m). Stones in the Urals are mountains that rise sharply above the rest of the area. In the past, all the Ural Mountains were called the Belt Stone. The mountains of the Middle Urals are the lowest part of the Ural Mountains. The highest heights here are in the Basegi ridge (Middle Baseg - 993 m).
The highest point of the Perm region - the Tulymsky ridge
The flat part of the region has a hilly and hilly relief with a height of 290 - 400 meters above sea level. Uplands (Tulvinskaya Upland, Ufimskoye Plateau, Northern Ridges) and lowlands (the wide low valley of the Kama, partially coinciding with the Cis-Ural marginal foredeep) stand out on it.
The flat areas of the region have a two-tiered geological structure: a crystalline base and a sedimentary cover of marine origin. Once on the site of the modern plain was the ancient Perm Sea. It was relatively shallow, well warmed up to the bottom, so plants and animals developed abundantly in it. From their remains, mixed with rocks, modern rocks and minerals were formed: limestone, anhydrite, gypsum, salt, oil, coal.
Relief assessment for therapeutic recreation.
It is possible to create paths of 1,2 and 3 degrees of complexity.
Terrain assessment for sports tourism.
The relief of the region is represented by both flat areas and areas located in the aisles of the Ural Mountains, which contributes to the development of various sports.
Relief assessment for speleotourism.
Features of the local geological structure are conducive to the formation of caves. The Ural Mountains have over 500 caves. Particularly stand out among them: the ice Kungur cave.
Relief assessment for mountain tourism and mountaineering.
For these purposes, the northern part of the Ural Mountains, located in the Perm region, is most predisposed. Mountaineering is possible.
1.2. water bodies

Rivers form the basis of the hydrographic network of the region. All of them belong to the basin of one river - the Kama, the largest left tributary of the Volga. By the way, if we approach strictly from the standpoint of the science of hydrology, taking into account all the rules for identifying the main river, it turns out that not the Volga, but the Kama flows into the Caspian Sea. Along the length of the Kama (1805 km) - the sixth river in Europe after the Volga, Danube, Ural, Don and Pechora. The vast majority of its tributaries are small, that is, less than 100 km. 42 rivers of the region have a length of more than 100 km each, but of them only Kama and Chusovaya belong to the category of large rivers (more than 500 km).
The longest and most abundant rivers of the Perm region:
The rivers of the Western Urals are very picturesque and diverse in character. Some are typically flat (these are all the right tributaries of the Kama: Kosa, Urolka, Kondas, Inva, Obva and others; some are left: Veslyana, Lupya, South Celtma, Tulva, Saigatka). They have a calm current, a winding channel with numerous meanders, islands, channels, and aquatic vegetation. Their floodplains abound with oxbow lakes, and are often swampy.
The left-bank tributaries of the Kama, originating in the Ural Mountains, in the upper reaches are typically mountain rivers with a fast current. Along the banks of these rivers, there are often outcrops of numerous stones and picturesque cliffs. The channel is replete with rifts, rapids and small waterfalls. When they reach the plain, the rivers lose their mountainous character.
Vishera river. Stone Vetlan.
The main source of nutrition for the rivers of the Western Urals is melt water (more than 60% of the annual runoff). Therefore, the rivers of the region are characterized by prolonged freezing, high spring floods, low summer and winter low water. Forests significantly affect the regime of rivers. In the northern part of the region, due to forests, thick snow cover, and in the northeast and mountains, the flood lasts longer than in the south. Near the rivers of the forest-steppe south, the duration of freeze-up is shorter, they break up early in spring, and in summer there are high rain and flash floods. In the north-east of the region (the basin of the Vishera River), the rivers are full-flowing all year round. The level rise in spring exceeds 7-10 m, the current is fast (up to 2-3 m/s), the waters are cold, and the ice cover is thick. In the south, in summer, the rivers become very shallow and even dry up. In some harsh winters with little snow, small rivers freeze to the bottom. In the east, due to the high development of karst, disappearing rivers are not uncommon, there are second underground channels, watercourses with increased mineralization and hardness.
Ponds and reservoirs. Ponds were created in the Kama region for a variety of purposes: to regulate the flow of small rivers, for the needs of small-scale energy, timber rafting, fishing, water supply, irrigation, and to decorate rural areas. The largest ponds:
Nytvensky (6.7 sq. km) on the Nytva River
Seminsky (area 5.2 sq. km) on the Zyryanka River
Ochersky (area 4.3 sq. km) on the Travyanka River
The most ancient ones were created 150-200 years ago at the old Ural factories. Now about five dozen such veteran ponds as Ochersky, Nytvensky, Pashiysky, Pavlovsky, Yugo-Kamsky and others have become a kind of monuments of history and culture.
In the region there are also larger reservoirs than ponds - reservoirs created in connection with the construction of hydroelectric power stations: Kamskoye and Votkinskoye on the Kama, Shirokovskoye on Kosva.
lakes poetically called "the blue eyes of the planet." In the Perm region, there are a variety of types of lakes: deep and shallow, small and medium, flowing and drainless, surface and underground, floodplain, karst, tectonic, natural and man-made, fresh and salty, overgrown, completely lifeless and rich in fish, with beautiful names and completely unnamed. However, most of the lakes are small, floodplain and nameless.
In terms of the number of lakes, the Kama region is inferior to other Ural regions. The total area of ​​lakes in the Perm region is only 0.1% of its area.
The largest lakes are located in the north of the region:
l Chusovskoye (19.4 sq. km)
b Big Kumikush (17.8 sq. km)
b Novozhilovo (7.12 sq. km)
The deepest lakes (all of them are of karst origin):
b Rogalek (depth 61 m)
b White (depth 46 m)
Bolshoye in the Dobryansky district (depth 30 m)
Lake Igum (25.6 g/l) in the Solikamsk region has the highest salinity among surface lakes.
The largest of the underground is currently considered the lake in the grotto of Friendship of Peoples in the Kungur Ice Cave (about 1300 sq.m). In total, more than 60 lakes were found in this cave. Lakes are also known in other karst caves - Pashiyskaya, Divya, Kizelovskaya.
Lake Goluboe is a bulge of an underground river.
Since many rivers of the Perm region originate in the mountains, their temperature regime often does not meet the required assessment for a beach and bathing holiday. In the south, many rivers disappear during the summer season, which is caused by karst phenomena. Climatic conditions generally do not correspond to the necessary. There is no beach season.
Perhaps the development of yachting, which is most consistent with the Kama and a number of other rivers, of which there are many, as well as numerous ponds and reservoirs.
Rafting is carried out on rivers on boats and rafts.
1.3. land cover

Podzolic and sod-podzolic soils with low natural fertility predominate in the Perm region. There are sod-carbonate
(along river valleys), alluvial-soddy, soddy-meadow, leached chernozems, clayey and heavy loamy. In the Suksun, Kungur and adjacent areas there are degraded chernozems, dark gray, gray and light gray forest-steppe soils, which have the highest natural fertility in the region.
The nature of the soils in the Kama region, significant slopes of the surface, intense summer rains contribute to the development of erosion: more than 40% of the arable massifs of the region are subject to it to one degree or another.
The vast majority of soils need to increase fertility through the application of organic and mineral fertilizers, and 89% of arable areas require liming.
The main type of vegetation on the territory of the Perm region is forests, which occupy 71% of the territory. The main tree species are dark coniferous: spruce and fir. At the same time, spruce clearly prevails.
As we move from north to south of the region, the share of deciduous species gradually increases, the undergrowth, shrub layer, grassy and ground cover change. In the northern regions of the flat part of the region, spruce-fir forests are distributed in large continuous massifs. Under the canopy it is dark and humid, so the undergrowth and grass cover are poorly developed, and green mosses predominate in the ground cover, hare oxalis on the elevations of the relief, and cuckoo flax in the depressions. Such forests in the Kama region are usually called Parma. They are allocated to the subzone of the middle taiga.
To the south of the latitude of the city of Berezniki, linden is mixed with spruce and fir at limestone outcrops. In these forests, which form the subzone of the southern taiga, the shrub layer is more diverse, the moss cover is replaced by herbaceous vegetation. South of the city of Osa, the forests are changing again. From broad-leaved species, in addition to linden, maple, elm, elm, sometimes oak appear, and among shrubs - warty euonymus and common hazel. This is a subzone of deciduous-taiga forests. The most typical site of such a forest has been preserved on the right bank of the Tulva River, in the Tulvinsky Reserve.
Along swampy river valleys and near peat bogs, the so-called sogre forests (spruce, spruce-alder, pine) are developed. They are characterized by the depressed state of the tree cover: dry top, short stature, curvature of the trunks. The ground cover is dominated by sphang mosses.
Pine forests are common in the north-west of the region, on sandy-argillaceous sediments left over from glaciation, along sandy terraces of large rivers. Among coniferous forests, pine forests occupy the second place in the region.
Small-leaved birch-aspen forests make up a rather large share among the tree plantations of the Kama region. Many of them are of secondary origin (they arose during the natural change of vegetation at the site of fires and during the felling of dark coniferous species). In the forests of the northeastern and eastern parts of the region, along with dark coniferous species, there are light coniferous species - cedar and larch.
A significant part of the region's forests (over 50%) are mature and overmature stands. About 20% of the forested area is accounted for by young forests. The rest is medium-aged forests. Since intensive logging is carried out on the territory of the region, permanent forest nurseries have been created to organize reforestation work, where planting material is grown.
Meadow vegetation is common both in interfluves (dry meadows) and in river valleys (water meadows with the highest natural productivity). About 10% of the territory is occupied by meadows and pastures in the region. Swamp vegetation is represented on 5% of the territory
swamps in the Perm region, they are widely distributed, both upland and lowland. Swamps and lakes in the north of the region are traces of the former continental glaciation. Part of the swamps was formed as a result of natural processes in slow-flowing reservoirs. Often, human economic activity leads to swamping: intensive deforestation, the creation of reservoirs, the construction of dams, and the laying of roads.
There are over 800 bogs in the Perm region, the peat deposits of which can be of industrial importance. But the development of peat in many swamps is not recommended because of their role in water conservation, biological and other valuable qualities. In addition, vitamin-rich cranberries, cloudberries, and princesses grow in swamps. Many swamps are good haylands.
The largest swamps are located in the north of the region:
Big Kamskoye (area 810 sq. km)
Djurich-Nyur (area 350 sq. km)
Byzimskoye (area 194 sq. km)
1.4. Resources of mushroom, berry lands and lands with medicinal plants

650 plant species have been noted, including 67 rare and endemic ones.
Species quantity allows us to talk about a wide variety of species. There are territories (reserves, sanctuaries) where the abundance of growing plants is also high.
1.5. Aesthetic assessment of the landscape

The landscape has high attractive properties. Attractiveness is given to it by a large number of rivers and reservoirs, landscape and relief features. As well as a number of other features.
1.6. Landscape and recreational potential and landscape recreationrational zoning of the territory

The environmental assessment varies greatly from unfavorable (near Perm) to favorable. In general, the characteristic is moderately favorable.
Landscape and recreational potential is characterized by 3 points.
The general assessment is a favorable territory for recreational development.
2. Territory of regulated recreational use

2.1. Hunting and fishing grounds

In total, there are about 60 species of mammals, over 200 species of birds, almost 40 species of fish, 6 species of reptiles and 9 species of amphibians in the Perm region. More than 30 species of mammals are of commercial importance.
Of the carnivores, the pine marten is widely represented in the region. Its favorite habitats are overripe, cluttered forests, especially in the southern regions. The Perm region is one of the first places in the country in terms of the number of martens. Stoats and weasels live everywhere in the forests. In the southern and central regions - badger and otter, and in the northern - wolverine. Throughout the territory, except for the very south, bears and lynxes are found, although their numbers are small. The wolf is also found everywhere.
Most of the region's animals are of European origin, but Siberian species also penetrate. So, at the end of the nineteenth century, columns appeared in the eastern regions.
Of the artiodactyls in the Kama region, moose prevail, living along forest edges and copses. In winters with little snow, roe deer enter the eastern regions from the neighboring Sverdlovsk region. Deer penetrate from the Komi Republic to the northern regions.
Most carnivores and artiodactyls are of great commercial importance. Hunting for some of them (sable, otter, marten, elk) is possible only with special permits (licenses). Roe deer and reindeer are under protection, hunting for them is prohibited.
The wolf, wolverine and lynx cause considerable damage to animal husbandry and therefore hunting for them is encouraged. Small mustelids (polecat, weasel) destroy mouse-like rodents, but sometimes they contribute to the spread of infectious diseases (tick-borne encephalitis, rabies).
A lot of work is being done in the region on acclimatization and artificial breeding of some species of game animals - beavers, raccoon dogs, muskrats, arctic foxes and minks.
Of the 200 species of birds in the region, the most common are capercaillie, black grouse, hazel grouse, crossbills, several species of tits, among migratory birds there are starlings, thrushes, rooks, swallows. Of the birds of prey, eagles, owls, crows and magpies are most often found. Of the birds, the capercaillie, black grouse and hazel grouse are of the greatest commercial importance.
The reservoirs of the region are inhabited by more than 30 species of fish, of which 15 are of commercial importance. Such mass species as bream, roach, sabrefish, perch, pike form the basis of fishing and recreational fishing.
The stocks of the main commercial species are in a satisfactory condition, however, the commercial fish productivity of the Kama reservoirs is one of the lowest in Russia and is only 2-3.5 kg/ha. Low rates of commercial productivity of reservoirs are due to shortcomings in the organization of fishing, as well as the low production capacity of reservoirs. The main limiting factors are massive industrial pollution and the unfavorable hydrological regime of reservoirs.
Despite the high level of anthropogenic pressure, the main fishery reservoirs of the region - the Kama and Votkinsk reservoirs - provide more than 90% of the catch, which is an average of 850-100 tons of fish over the past decade.
The reform of state management systems had a negative impact on fisheries. Since the beginning of the 1990s, there has been a steady decline in catches of almost all major commercial species. The catches of bream, pike perch, pike, as well as roach and sabrefish at the Votkinsk reservoir have dropped sharply. With an increase in the number of blue bream, its catches did not increase.
Catches of amateurs, licensed fishing and poaching are practically unaccountable. But even assuming that the unrecorded prey of poachers and recreational fishermen is equal to organized fishing, there is an underutilization of the commercial stock.
Positive trends are observed in the dynamics of commercial fish in the Kama reservoirs. The number and catches of burbot, catfish, and asp are growing.
The stocks of sterlet in the Votkinsk reservoir were favorably affected by the long-term work of Kamuralrybvod on transplanting spawners into the reservoir.
The reservoirs of the north of the region - numerous lakes and oxbow lakes - are practically not mastered by organized fishing. The main reasons are the inaccessibility and complexity of the catches.
In the reservoirs of the region, 3 species of fish require special protection measures: taimen, sterlet of the upper Kas population and brook trout. In recent years, there has been some stabilization in the number of the first two species. The state of the population of brook trout in the basin of the river. Iren catastrophic. The experience of the Ulyanovsk region, where in the early 1990s specialized reserves were created to save the brook trout, shows that the restoration of a seemingly extinct species is possible.
As we can see, the Perm region has rich resources for the development of hunting and fishing tourism.
2.2. Recreational use of specially protected natural areas

The following reserves are represented in the Perm region:
Vishera Nature Reserve:
Number of lichen species: 100
Number of moss species: 286
Number of species of higher plants: 528
Vegetation:
The nature of the vegetation of the southern and northern parts of the reserve differ. In the south, middle taiga forests dominate, nemoral and forest-steppe species are found, in the north - north taiga forests. In the forest stand, the dominance of Siberian fir and Siberian pine was noted, an increased role of herbs compared to shrubs, and a wide distribution of associations with the participation of ferns were noted. Mountain middle taiga dark coniferous forests rise to a height of up to 400 m above sea level, giving way to northern taiga forests. The following altitudinal belts are distinguished: 1) mountain-forest (up to 600 m above sea level); 2) subalpine (about 600-850 m); 3) mountain-tundra (about 850-1000 m); 4) belt of bald deserts (over 1000 m). As an addition to this scheme, within the subalpine belt, there are: a subbelt of park crooked forest and tall-grass underalpine meadows and a subbelt of mountain wastelands with Siberian juniper, dwarf birch thickets (from Betu1a nana), k, etc.......... .......

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