| Literature DB >> 25170150 |
Cristina Banks-Leite1, Renata Pardini2, Leandro R Tambosi3, William D Pearse4, Adriana A Bueno5, Roberta T Bruscagin3, Thais H Condez6, Marianna Dixo3, Alexandre T Igari7, Alexandre C Martensen8, Jean Paul Metzger3.
Abstract
Ecological set-asides are a promising strategy for conserving biodiversity in human-modified landscapes; however, landowner participation is often precluded by financial constraints. We assessed the ecological benefits and economic costs of paying landowners to set aside private land for restoration. Benefits were calculated from data on nearly 25,000 captures of Brazilian Atlantic Forest vertebrates, and economic costs were estimated for several restoration scenarios and values of payment for ecosystem services. We show that an annual investment equivalent to 6.5% of what Brazil spends on agricultural subsidies would revert species composition and ecological functions across farmlands to levels found inside protected areas, thereby benefiting local people. Hence, efforts to secure the future of this and other biodiversity hotspots may be cost-effective.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25170150 DOI: 10.1126/science.1255768
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728