The ‘Satoyama Initiative’, promoted jointly by UNU-IAS and UNEP through the International Partnership for the Satoyama Initiative (IPSI) launched in 2010, aims to revitalize what kind of landscapes?
The Satoyama Initiative promotes Socio-Ecological Production Landscapes and Seascapes (SEPLS) β human-managed, traditional landscapes where centuries of sustainable interaction between people and nature have created rich biodiversity alongside human livelihoods | Urban biodiversity through green infrastructure (green roofs, urban forests) is a distinct and separate field not specifically addressed by the Satoyama Initiative | Marine Protected Area networks in Asia-Pacific are promoted through separate CBD Marine and Coastal Programme and regional initiatives | Migratory species corridors are promoted primarily under the Bonn Convention/CMS framework | Indian examples of SEPLS relevant to Satoyama: Sacred Groves (Devvans in AP and Telangana, Orans in Rajasthan, Devarakadus in Karnataka), Jhum shifting cultivation landscapes in Northeast India, and traditional Apatani rice and fish cultivation systems in Arunachal Pradesh