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Mesa
Redonda 1998
EL PILAR MANAGEMENT
PLAN
El Pilar Landscape:
Gateway Between Two Nations
Paisaje El Pilar:
Puerta Entre Dos Naciones
INTRODUCTION –
EL PILAR ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESERVE
Signatures Across the Landscape
The El Pilar Program has attracted an international,
multidisciplinary team with the momentum to evolve a unique plan. This
plan incorporates local community understanding, a government conservation and
development agenda, and international environmental concerns through an integrated
research program that informs a model development plan centered around the ancient
Maya center of El Pilar.
The first Mesa Redonda (1997) identified the research
and development issues, the international strategies to promote the studies,
and the collaborative institutional framework that would secure the reserve
area for the research and development program. Since this landmark event,
there have been great strides towards implementing aspects of the program.
The Mesa Redonda II brought together the growing team to further the unique
program of research and development at El Pilar in both Belize and Guatemala.
We are now in an excellent position to bring those broad plans into a design
for concrete action
The Past Informs the Future
The core of the El Pilar vision comes from
archaeological research on the evolution of the ancient Maya landscape.
The essence of this program acknowledges that clues to sustaining the complex
habitats of today's Maya forest environment are embedded in Maya prehistory.
Ancient Maya settlement and local community patterns provide material evidence
for the evolution of sustainable economies in one of the planet's last
frontiers: the tropics.
The goals of the multidisciplinary research
and development program are to demonstrate the critical relevance of basic
research to promotion of conservation and development around the world
today. The outcome will influence the application of a reserve management
plan that will conserve environmental diversity and preserve the irreplaceable
cultural heritage of both the ancient and contemporary populations in the
region.
The Forest as a Garden
The ecological structure of the Maya forest
is a relic of the dynamic relationship in which humans have played an integral
part. This relationship extends back more than four millennia to
the agricultural pioneers of the Maya forest region and the ancestors of
the ancient Maya civilization – the heritage of contemporary farmers. The
large contiguous stands of forest are a testimony to the efficacy of ancient
Maya practices. While the Classic Maya collapse affected the human populations,
plants and animals survived only to be threatened with extinction today.
Therein lies the ecological lesson that must be perceived to build a sound
basis for conservation in the future.
Traditional agricultural systems in the tropics
world-wide are as complex as the environment within which they developed.
Mimicking the forest structure, a poly-cultivation system evolved to minimize
instability, prevent degradation and integrate both intensive and extensive
labor techniques that maximize production. Heterogeneous and bio-diverse,
the forest gardens constituted the strength of the Maya community in the
past, as they do today, by relying on the traditional knowledge of local
farming households.
Combining research designs of agronomists
with those of traditional farmers from the area, this forest garden can
form a model of ancient Maya land use that will provide an ongoing source
of innovation for the community. Such a design that uses ancient
Maya settlement patterns and agricultural knowledge can foster resource
conservation that aligns with, rather than opposes, the natural regenerative
processes of the tropical forest.
Community Links
To accomplish the goal of improving living
standards and self-sufficiency of the regional communities, the immediate
and short-term needs of families must be incorporated into the long-term
agenda of sustainability. No reserve exists within a vacuum and to thrive
the local population must assume an active role in conservation or the
cultural aims may not be achieved.
A cooperative association has been established
with Amigos de El Pilar. Their goal is to develop community enterprises
in tourism and agriculture that increase villagers' economic stake in the
reserve. Through education and participation, the links between the community
and the reserve will strengthen local investments in conservation and develop
administrative responsibility. The leadership role villagers are
assuming and the self-determination they are gaining in the process is
the foundation upon which the future success of the El Pilar model depends.
Discovering El Pilar
The El Pilar Program has set the stage for
ecotourism where the visitor can explore and discover the beautiful Maya
architecture beneath the luxuriant forest canopy.
The program has promoted education and training
workshops, given lectures and tours, and encouraged participation in the
archaeological research. Further, the program has hosted events,
such as the Fiesta El Pilar, that has elevated the visibility of El Pilar
on the global front, that provide a springboard for tourism development.
Taking the Challenge
Park management is fundamental to the long-term
research and development plan as well as to the reserve's future. Informed
designs are based on cultural and ecological research. Further, identification
of stakeholders, incorporation of public interests, articulation of the
mission, and a clear set of objectives for the sustainable management of
the reserve is essential. Finally, the extent of conservation goals, issues
of access and education, and the long-term funding needs must be developed.
The El Pilar vision must include the concerns
and desires for both resource conservation and economic development. Short-term
strategies for community involvement and long-term concerns for conservation
of the ancient architecture and the environment are vital. Educational
and interpretive strategy for the park and surrounding landscape are also
important. These facets are all dependent upon the results of integrated,
collaborative, and multidisciplinary research program and are crucial to
establishing the reserve on a lasting base.
The management plan also takes into account
the location of El Pilar between Cayo, Belize, and El Petén, Guatemala.
This unusual setting impacts every aspect of research activities at El
Pilar. The research projects and resource management designs for
El Pilar must consider the contiguous sections of Belize and Guatemala
as a whole, as resources shared between two countries. The natural
environment, cultural resources, adjacent contemporary peoples, and access
for tourism all figure prominently in the master research and development
plan as well the ultimate product: The El Pilar Archaeological Reserve
for Maya Flora and Fauna. The reward will be an understanding of
the ancient and contemporary dimensions of the Maya forest.
Index | Introduction
| Background | Management
Considerations |Management Program
Administration | Implementation
Schedule | Budget
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