Literature DB >> 20146766

Reassessing the forest impacts of protection: the challenge of nonrandom location and a corrective method.

Lucas Joppa1, Alexander Pfaff.   

Abstract

Protected areas are leading tools in efforts to slow global species loss and appear also to have a role in climate change policy. Understanding their impacts on deforestation informs environmental policies. We review several approaches to evaluating protection's impact on deforestation, given three hurdles to empirical evaluation, and note that "matching" techniques from economic impact evaluation address those hurdles. The central hurdle derives from the fact that protected areas are distributed nonrandomly across landscapes. Nonrandom location can be intentional, and for good reasons, including biological and political ones. Yet even so, when protected areas are biased in their locations toward less-threatened areas, many methods for impact evaluation will overestimate protection's effect. The use of matching techniques allows one to control for known landscape biases when inferring the impact of protection. Applications of matching have revealed considerably lower impact estimates of forest protection than produced by other methods. A reduction in the estimated impact from existing parks does not suggest, however, that protection is unable to lower clearing. Rather, it indicates the importance of variation across locations in how much impact protection could possibly have on rates of deforestation. Matching, then, bundles improved estimates of the average impact of protection with guidance on where new parks' impacts will be highest. While many factors will determine where new protected areas will be sited in the future, we claim that the variation across space in protection's impact on deforestation rates should inform site choice.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20146766     DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05162.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  28 in total

1.  Protected areas reduced poverty in Costa Rica and Thailand.

Authors:  Kwaw S Andam; Paul J Ferraro; Katharine R E Sims; Andrew Healy; Margaret B Holland
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-05-24       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Implications of heterogeneous impacts of protected areas on deforestation and poverty.

Authors:  Merlin M Hanauer; Gustavo Canavire-Bacarreza
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2015-11-05       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Conditions associated with protected area success in conservation and poverty reduction.

Authors:  Paul J Ferraro; Merlin M Hanauer; Katharine R E Sims
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-08-22       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  The performance and potential of protected areas.

Authors:  James E M Watson; Nigel Dudley; Daniel B Segan; Marc Hockings
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-11-06       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  The effectiveness of contrasting protected areas in preventing deforestation in Madre de Dios, Peru.

Authors:  Anni Johanna Vuohelainen; Lauren Coad; Toby R Marthews; Yadvinder Malhi; Timothy J Killeen
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2012-07-20       Impact factor: 3.266

6.  Conservation Beyond Park Boundaries: The Impact of Buffer Zones on Deforestation and Mining Concessions in the Peruvian Amazon.

Authors:  Mikaela J Weisse; Lisa C Naughton-Treves
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2016-05-14       Impact factor: 3.266

7.  Protected area types, strategies and impacts in Brazil's Amazon: public protected area strategies do not yield a consistent ranking of protected area types by impact.

Authors:  Alexander Pfaff; Juan Robalino; Catalina Sandoval; Diego Herrera
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2015-11-05       Impact factor: 6.237

8.  Impacts of protected areas vary with the level of government: Comparing avoided deforestation across agencies in the Brazilian Amazon.

Authors:  Diego Herrera; Alexander Pfaff; Juan Robalino
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-07-08       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Protected areas in South Asia have not prevented habitat loss: a study using historical models of land-use change.

Authors:  Natalie E Clark; Elizabeth H Boakes; Philip J K McGowan; Georgina M Mace; Richard A Fuller
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-05-31       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Carbon benefits from protected areas in the conterminous United States.

Authors:  Daolan Zheng; Linda S Heath; Mark J Ducey
Journal:  Carbon Balance Manag       Date:  2013-04-17
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