| Literature DB >> 27300439 |
Michael K McCall1, Noah Chutz2, Margaret Skutsch1.
Abstract
There have been many calls for community participation in MRV (measuring, reporting, verification) for REDD+. This paper examines whether community involvement in MRV is a requirement, why it appears desirable to REDD+ agencies and external actors, and under what conditions communities might be interested in participating. It asks What's in it for communities? What might communities gain from such an involvement? What could they lose? It embraces a broader approach which we call community MMM which involves mapping, measuring and monitoring of forest and other natural resources for issues which are of interest to the community itself. We focus on cases in México because the country has an unusually high proportion of forests under community communal ownership. In particular, we refer to a recent REDD+ initiative-CONAFOR-LAIF, in which local communities select and approve local people to participate in community-based monitoring activities. From these local initiatives we identify the specific and the general drivers for communities to be involved in mapping, measuring and monitoring of their own territories and their natural resources. We present evidence that communities are more interested in this wider approach than in a narrow focus on carbon monitoring. Finally we review what the challenges to reconciling MMM with MRV requirements are likely to be.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27300439 PMCID: PMC4907456 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0146038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Information for Community Forest Management and Carbon Sequestration.
| Boundaries of the community and its forest areas intended for carbon payments project | High Precision |
| Community’s land claims | Essential local spatial knowledge, and of neighbours; Sensitivity |
| Community forestry management systems and approaches, land-use plans | Essential local spatial knowledge |
| Location and sources of forest degradation -: (illegal) logging, grazing, marginal agriculture, (illegal) settlements, hydrological adjustments | Essential local spatial knowledge |
| Locations potentially affected by hazards (e.g. fires, erosion, ecosystem damage, flood, storm) | Timeliness |
| Conflict areas | Essential local spatial knowledge; Sensitivity |
| Delimitation of forest ecotype strata (zones) | High precision |
| Location and geo-referencing of sampling plots | Very high precision; Replicability |
| Geo-referencing trees and features for future locating of sample plots | Ditto |
| Field measurement and storage of tree data: DBH, tree heights, species, status, etc. in databases | Ditto |
| Assessing leakage | Sensitive; Leakage extends outside the community, monitored at higher spatial scale but using local data |
| Conservation of natural forests and biological diversity | Essential local spatial knowledge; Reliability of sources; Sensitivity; Spatial precision and timeliness are not high priority |
| Human rights—especially indigenous and forest communities | Ditto |
| Transparency and effectiveness of national forest governance structures | Ditto |
| Respect for knowledge and rights of indigenous peoples and forest communities | Ditto |
| Full and effective participation of actors | Ditto |
| Equitable internal distribution of benefits | Ditto |
Wildlife Monitoring Interests, in LAIF and other Communities.
| Animals, Insects | Monitoring the distribution, changes in population, location, habits, and threats |
|---|---|
| Large felines–especially jaguar, puma | Cultural heritage, potential ecotourism |
| Hunting for food or sport, population management & conservation, potential UMAs | |
| Hunting for food or sport, population management & conservation, potential UMAs | |
| Beaver, squirrel | Pests, hunting |
| Snakes, e.g. rattlesnake | Potential for herpetarium, medical use–antidotes to poison, cultural heritage |
| In danger of extinction, cultural heritage | |
| Cicadas | Conservation for ‘beauty’, propagation, potential for ecotourism and UMAs |
| Important for soil quality and plant growth | |
| Enos butterfly | In danger of extinction, cultural heritage, potential ecotourism |
| Amphibians, e.g. endemic salamander | In danger of extinction, potential ecotourism |
Sources: Fieldwork with LAIF and other communities.