Ecosystem services in conservation planning: targeted benefits vs. co-benefits or costs?

There is growing support for characterizing ecosystem services in order to link conservation and human well-being. However, few studies have explicitly included ecosystem services within systematic conservation planning, and those that have follow two fundamentally different approaches: ecosystem se...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2011-09, Vol.6 (9), p.e24378-e24378
Hauptverfasser: Chan, Kai M A, Hoshizaki, Lara, Klinkenberg, Brian
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Hoshizaki, Lara
Klinkenberg, Brian
description There is growing support for characterizing ecosystem services in order to link conservation and human well-being. However, few studies have explicitly included ecosystem services within systematic conservation planning, and those that have follow two fundamentally different approaches: ecosystem services as intrinsically-important targeted benefits vs. substitutable co-benefits. We present a first comparison of these two approaches in a case study in the Central Interior of British Columbia. We calculated and mapped economic values for carbon storage, timber production, and recreational angling using a geographical information system (GIS). These 'marginal' values represent the difference in service-provision between conservation and managed forestry as land uses. We compared two approaches to including ecosystem services in the site-selection software Marxan: as Targeted Benefits, and as Co-Benefits/Costs (in Marxan's cost function); we also compared these approaches with a Hybrid approach (carbon and angling as targeted benefits, timber as an opportunity cost). For this analysis, the Co-Benefit/Cost approach yielded a less costly reserve network than the Hybrid approach (1.6% cheaper). Including timber harvest as an opportunity cost in the cost function resulted in a reserve network that achieved targets equivalently, but at 15% lower total cost. We found counter-intuitive results for conservation: conservation-compatible services (carbon, angling) were positively correlated with each other and biodiversity, whereas the conservation-incompatible service (timber) was negatively correlated with all other networks. Our findings suggest that including ecosystem services within a conservation plan may be most cost-effective when they are represented as substitutable co-benefits/costs, rather than as targeted benefits. By explicitly valuing the costs and benefits associated with services, we may be able to achieve meaningful biodiversity conservation at lower cost and with greater co-benefits.
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However, few studies have explicitly included ecosystem services within systematic conservation planning, and those that have follow two fundamentally different approaches: ecosystem services as intrinsically-important targeted benefits vs. substitutable co-benefits. We present a first comparison of these two approaches in a case study in the Central Interior of British Columbia. We calculated and mapped economic values for carbon storage, timber production, and recreational angling using a geographical information system (GIS). These 'marginal' values represent the difference in service-provision between conservation and managed forestry as land uses. We compared two approaches to including ecosystem services in the site-selection software Marxan: as Targeted Benefits, and as Co-Benefits/Costs (in Marxan's cost function); we also compared these approaches with a Hybrid approach (carbon and angling as targeted benefits, timber as an opportunity cost). For this analysis, the Co-Benefit/Cost approach yielded a less costly reserve network than the Hybrid approach (1.6% cheaper). Including timber harvest as an opportunity cost in the cost function resulted in a reserve network that achieved targets equivalently, but at 15% lower total cost. We found counter-intuitive results for conservation: conservation-compatible services (carbon, angling) were positively correlated with each other and biodiversity, whereas the conservation-incompatible service (timber) was negatively correlated with all other networks. Our findings suggest that including ecosystem services within a conservation plan may be most cost-effective when they are represented as substitutable co-benefits/costs, rather than as targeted benefits. By explicitly valuing the costs and benefits associated with services, we may be able to achieve meaningful biodiversity conservation at lower cost and with greater co-benefits.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>21915318</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0024378</doi><tpages>e24378</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Agriculture
Biodiversity
Biodiversity conservation
Biological diversity
Biology
Budgets
Carbon
Carbon sequestration
Case studies
Comparative analysis
Computer programs
Computer Science
Conservation
Cost benefit analysis
Cost function
Costs
Earth Sciences
Economics
Ecosystem
Ecosystem services
Ecosystems
Environmental economics
Fisheries
Fishing
Forest management
Forestry
Forests
Geographic information systems
Handbooks
Harvest
Hybrids
Land use
Marine conservation
NGOs
Nongovernmental organizations
Opportunity costs
Protection and preservation
Recreation areas
Satellite navigation systems
Science Policy
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Sustainability
Systems design
Timber
Watersheds
Websites
Well being
Wildlife conservation
title Ecosystem services in conservation planning: targeted benefits vs. co-benefits or costs?
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