Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Te Wahipounamu – South West New Zealand' has mentioned 'Region' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Contents 1 Description 1.1 Flora 1.2 Fauna 1.3 Population 1.4 Land formations 2 Mxc4x81ori connections to the land 2.1 Legend 2.2 Use of Region 3 UNESCO World Heritage Site 4 Protection and management 4.1 Legal requirements 4.2 Treaty of Waitangi 4.3 Management planning framework 5 Tourism 5.1 Wilderness 6 Miscellaneous issues 7 References 8 External links | WIKI |
Also found in this region are Southern Brown Kiwi, Great Spotted Kiwi, Yellow-crowned parakeet, Fiordland Penguin, New Zealand Falcon, and Brown teal. | WIKI |
The world's rarest and heaviest parrot, kakapo, was found in this region until the early 1980s. | WIKI |
Landslides, although not frequent, are a potential hazard of the region. | WIKI |
The legend as to the formation of this region and the South Island is as follows. | WIKI |
Use of Region[edit] | WIKI |
There are only two main roads in the region, the Haast Highway and Milford Highway. | WIKI |
Most residents of the region are there because of the tourism employment opportunities. | WIKI |
Conservational efforts are in place in this entire region but they are a result of governmental beliefs and World Heritage designation, they are not a result of the tool of ecotourism. | WIKI |
The noise pollution from these aircraft disrupts the xe2x80x9cnatural quietxe2x80x9d of this region, which many wish to preserve. | WIKI |
One of the larger issues the region faces are populations of invasive species. | WIKI |
Invasive species have the biggest impact on the region. | WIKI |
The great Alpine Fault divides the region and marks the contact zone of the Indo-Australian and Pacific continental plates making it one of only three segments of the worldxe2x80x99s major plate boundaries on land. | UNESCO |
The region contains outstanding examples of plant succession after glaciation, with sequences along altitudinal (sea level to permanent snowline), latitudinal (wet west to the dry east), and chronological gradients (fresh post-glacial surfaces to old Pleistocene moraines). | UNESCO |
There is some evidence of the effects of global warming on the permanent icefields and glaciers in the region. | UNESCO |