Integrating Social Values and Ecosystem Services in Systematic Conservation Planning: A Case Study in Datuan Watershed

Systematic conservation planning (SCP) deals with a delicate interplay of competing interests and has far-reaching impacts for all stakeholders and systems involved. While SCP has traditionally attempted to conserve ecosystem services that benefit ecological systems, public perceptions of conservati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2017, Vol.9 (5), p.718
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Yu-Pin, Lin, Wei-Chih, Li, Hsin-Yi, Wang, Yung-Chieh, Hsu, Chih-Chen, Lien, Wan-Yu, Anthony, Johnathen, Petway, Joy R.
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container_end_page
container_issue 5
container_start_page 718
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 9
creator Lin, Yu-Pin
Lin, Wei-Chih
Li, Hsin-Yi
Wang, Yung-Chieh
Hsu, Chih-Chen
Lien, Wan-Yu
Anthony, Johnathen
Petway, Joy R.
description Systematic conservation planning (SCP) deals with a delicate interplay of competing interests and has far-reaching impacts for all stakeholders and systems involved. While SCP has traditionally attempted to conserve ecosystem services that benefit ecological systems, public perceptions of conservation initiatives influence their ultimate feasibility and sustainability. In an attempt to balance ecological integrity, social utility, and urban development, this study develops a framework that applies four popular models to represent these competing factors, including two ecosystem services models—InVEST (Integrated Valuation of Environmental Services and Tradeoffs) for biophysical services (BpS), and SolVES (Social Values for Ecosystem Services) for social values (SV); a land use and land cover (LULC) suitability model; and Zonation for delimiting high priority areas. We also analyze a number of conservation scenarios that consider varying levels of urban development. While BpS are distributed with considerable spatial variability, SV spatially overlap. Approximately 6% of the area was identified as having both high BpS and SV, whereas a further 24.5% of the area was identified as either high BpS low SV or vise-versa. Urban development scenarios affected the conservation area selection drastically. These results indicate tradeoffs and potential synergies between development, SV, and BpS. Our findings suggest that the information provided by the proposed framework can assist in finding solutions to social-ecological planning complexities that serve multiple stakeholders.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/su9050718
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Approximately 6% of the area was identified as having both high BpS and SV, whereas a further 24.5% of the area was identified as either high BpS low SV or vise-versa. Urban development scenarios affected the conservation area selection drastically. These results indicate tradeoffs and potential synergies between development, SV, and BpS. 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subjects Case studies
Conservation
Conservation areas
Ecological effects
Ecological monitoring
Ecosystem services
Ecosystems
Feasibility
Feasibility studies
Information dissemination
Land cover
Land use
Single-cell protein
Social values
Sustainability
Tradeoffs
Urban planning
Variability
Watersheds
Zonation
title Integrating Social Values and Ecosystem Services in Systematic Conservation Planning: A Case Study in Datuan Watershed
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