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PUNA COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLAN <br />PROPOSED AMENDMENTS <br />Chapter 2 <br />MALAMA I KA'AINA <br />Despite the destruction of native forest and other resources that has occurred in Puna, and <br />the potential for much more damage through land development in the extensive subdivisions, as <br />described in Chapter 1, there remains a good opportunity not only to protect what is left, but <br />even reverse some of the historical impacts. <br />Puna contains vast acreage of largely intact natural area that comes under the protection <br />of Federal and State regulations; for example: <br />• The western portion of Puna is dominated by Hawaii Volcanoes National Park and <br />the adjoining upper east Hawaii rainforest. The Park was designated by the United <br />Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as an <br />International Biosphere Reserve in 1980, reflecting its value for research and <br />protection of evolutionary resources, and as a World Heritage Site in 1987, citing its <br />geological resources. <br />• The State of Hawaii designated two areas adjoining the Park as Natural Area <br />Reserves -- Kahauale`a and Pu`u Maka`ala -- meeting the same standards of resource <br />quality and protective management as the Biosphere Reserve. <br />• The State also manages several other forest reserves in Puna comprising 131,659 <br />acres: Upper [�] Waiakea Forest Reserve, [�] Waiakea Forest Reserve, <br />`Ola`a Forest Reserve (Mountain View Section), R�]amawa e] Nanawale <br />Forest Reserve, Malama [K4] Ki Forest Reserve, Keau`ohana Forest Reserve, and the <br />recently acquired Wao Kele O Puna Forest Reserve.4 <br />• The State Conservation District, which encompasses almost all of the above areas as <br />well as some additional lands, is organized as a regulatory hierarchy under the <br />jurisdiction of the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR). <br />There are five subzones of the Conservation District, each intended to provide a <br />degree of regulatory protection that reflects the intactness or relative significance of <br />the resources that are present in those subzones. About half of Puna's Conservation <br />District is in the Protective Subzone, which is the most restrictive of the five subzones <br />in terms of allowable uses. The remainder is in either the Limited Subzone, which is <br />designated for areas with potential high risk of natural hazard, or the Resource <br />Subzone, which is generally applied to less intact forest reserves. <br />• The Conservation District also includes the submerged lands beneath coastal waters. <br />DLNR's Office of Conservation and Coastal Lands therefore addresses shoreline and <br />4 The Wao Kele O Puna Forest Reserve is owned by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs but managed by DLNR's Division of <br />Forestry and Wildlife. <br />2-1 <br />