An Ontology of the Appropriate Assessment of Municipal Master Plans Related to Sardinia (Italy)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The Case Study
2. Background
2.1. The Appropriate Assessment of Municipal Master Plans
2.2. From “Ontology” to “Formal Ontologies”
Ontology | A discussion of the substance of an object |
---|---|
Relational ontology | A discussion of the substance of the relations between agents and structures (capital, social classes, agreed-upon semantics, etc.), which do not possess their own essence, formed only through their being in relation. |
Realistic ontology | The ontology of the system of relations, i.e., an ontology of reality. |
Formal ontology | A discussion on the substance of an agreed-upon representation. |
3. Methodology
3.1. The Appropriate Assessment Procedure under the Habitats Directive
- representativity, that is Criterion A.(a) of Annex III of the Habitats Directive: the representativity of an habitat for a Site is related to how a habitat is typical for the Site, and either for groups or for combinations of groups of habitats; the assessment of representativity should be implemented taking account of the provisions of the Interpretation Manual issued by the DG Environment of the European Commission [33];
- relative surface, that is the ratio of the area of the habitat in the Site to the total area covered by that habitat type within the national territory; that is, Criterion A.(b) of Annex III;
- state of conservation in terms of structure and functions and restoration possibilities, that is Criterion A.(c) of Annex III;
- global assessment of the habitats, with reference to the three criteria indicated above, that is Criterion A.(d) of Annex III.
- population of the species in terms of the ratio of the number of individuals with respect to the total population within the national territory, that is Criterion B.(a) of Annex III;
- conservation of the species, in terms of the state of conservation of the Site’s habitat elements relevant for the species, which is related to the elements’ state of conservation and to the restoration possibilities, that is Criterion B.(b) of Annex III;
- isolation of the species, which indicates the species’ potential contribution to biological diversity, that is Criterion B.(c) of Annex III;
- global assessment of the species, with reference to the three criteria indicated above, that is Criterion B.(d) of Annex III.
3.2. Ontologically Framing the Appropriate Assessment Procedure
4. Results
Core concept | Definition | Source |
---|---|---|
Conservation objectives | A conservation objective is the specification of the overall target for the species and/or habitat types for which a site is designated in order for it to contribute to maintaining or reaching a favorable conservation status of the habitats and species concerned, at the national, the biogeographical or the European level. | [36] |
Habitat | Natural habitat means terrestrial or aquatic areas distinguished by geographic, abiotic and biotic features, whether entirely natural or semi-natural; natural habitat types of community interest means those which, within the territory referred to in Article 2:
| [42] |
Impact | Impacts relate to all human activities and natural processes that may have an influence, either positive or negative, on the conservation and management of the site. | [43] |
Impact type | Impacts stemming from threats, pressures and activities - list in accordance with Article 17 code list. | [44] |
Site | Site of community importance means a site that, in the biogeographical region or regions to which it belongs, contributes significantly to the maintenance or restoration at a favorable conservation status of a natural habitat type in Annex I or of a species in Annex II and may also contribute significantly to the coherence of Natura 2000 referred to in Article 3 and/or contributes significantly to the maintenance of the biological diversity within the biogeographic region or regions concerned. | [45] |
Species | Species of community interest means species that, within the territory referred to in Article 2, are:
| [46] |
5. Concluding Remarks: Discussion and Outlook
Pros | Cons |
---|---|
Better understanding of the domain through an iterative learning process that can continually be refined. | The ontology can be exported only to countries where the AA procedure is in place. |
Inclusiveness of different and often non-consistent disciplinary and scientific perspectives through the participation of the experts in the involved domains or of key stakeholders. | Exportability is constrained by differences in the institutional spatial and regional planning frameworks to which the ontology relates. |
Sharing and reusing opportunities in the given domain. | Issues of semantics owing to different institutional contexts. |
Possibility of continuous refinement and updating. | Issues of semantics due to the translation of the glossary. |
Exportability in the domain under the given conditions. | Lack of mandatory character, which means that there is a need for the establishment of a formal, regulatory framework. |
Authors’ Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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Zoppi, C.; Lai, S. An Ontology of the Appropriate Assessment of Municipal Master Plans Related to Sardinia (Italy). Future Internet 2014, 6, 223-241. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi6020223
Zoppi C, Lai S. An Ontology of the Appropriate Assessment of Municipal Master Plans Related to Sardinia (Italy). Future Internet. 2014; 6(2):223-241. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi6020223
Chicago/Turabian StyleZoppi, Corrado, and Sabrina Lai. 2014. "An Ontology of the Appropriate Assessment of Municipal Master Plans Related to Sardinia (Italy)" Future Internet 6, no. 2: 223-241. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi6020223
APA StyleZoppi, C., & Lai, S. (2014). An Ontology of the Appropriate Assessment of Municipal Master Plans Related to Sardinia (Italy). Future Internet, 6(2), 223-241. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi6020223