| Literature DB >> 28006005 |
Rachel A Neugarten1, Miroslav Honzák1, Pierre Carret2, Kellee Koenig1, Luciano Andriamaro3, Carlos Andres Cano1, Hedley S Grantham4, David Hole1, Daniel Juhn1, Madeleine McKinnon1,5, Andriambolantsoa Rasolohery3, Marc Steininger6, Timothy Max Wright1, Will R Turner1.
Abstract
The importance of ecosystems for supporting human well-being is increasingly recognized by both the conservation and development sectors. Our ability to conserve ecosystems that people rely on is often limited by a lack of spatially explicit data on the location and distribution of ecosystem services (ES), the benefits provided by nature to people. Thus there is a need to map ES to guide conservation investments, to ensure these co-benefits are maintained. To target conservation investments most effectively, ES assessments must be rigorous enough to support conservation planning, rapid enough to respond to decision-making timelines, and often must rely on existing data. We developed a framework for rapid spatial assessment of ES that relies on expert and stakeholder consultation, available data, and spatial analyses in order to rapidly identify sites providing multiple benefits. We applied the framework in Madagascar, a country with globally significant biodiversity and a high level of human dependence on ecosystems. Our objective was to identify the ES co-benefits of biodiversity priority areas in order to guide the investment strategy of a global conservation fund. We assessed key provisioning (fisheries, hunting and non-timber forest products, and water for domestic use, agriculture, and hydropower), regulating (climate mitigation, flood risk reduction and coastal protection), and cultural (nature tourism) ES. We also conducted multi-criteria analyses to identify sites providing multiple benefits. While our approach has limitations, including the reliance on proximity-based indicators for several ES, the results were useful for targeting conservation investments by the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund (CEPF). Because our approach relies on available data, standardized methods for linking ES provision to ES use, and expert validation, it has the potential to quickly guide conservation planning and investment decisions in other data-poor regions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28006005 PMCID: PMC5179119 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Steps for rapid ES assessment for site prioritization.
Fig 2Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) in Madagascar.
Key ecosystem services in Madagascar.
| Section | Division | Ecosystem Service |
|---|---|---|
| Nutrition | Animal products (fish, bushmeat) | |
| Plant products (edible plants, medicine) | ||
| Water flows for household use | ||
| Water flows for irrigation | ||
| Materials | Construction materials (wood, thatch) | |
| Materials for artisanal products (wood, sedges) | ||
| Water flows for mining | ||
| Energy | Fuelwood, charcoal | |
| Water flows for hydropower | ||
| Mediation of waste, toxics and other nuisances | Water quality for household use | |
| Water quality for irrigation | ||
| Water quality for hydropower | ||
| Mediation of flows | Flood regulation | |
| Drought regulation | ||
| Maintenance of physical, chemical, biological conditions | Carbon storage and sequestration | |
| Coastal protection | ||
| Genetic material | ||
| Physical and intellectual interactions with ecosystems and land-/seascapes | Nature tourism | |
| Existence value (biodiversity) | ||
| Spiritual, symbolic and other interactions with ecosystems and land-/seascapes | Cultural and spiritual identity |
Key ecosystem services identified based on expert consultation and literature review; organized using the Common International Classification of Ecosystem Services (CICES) framework [45].
Criteria and data used for spatial analyses of ecosystem services.
| Ecosystem service | Criteria for importance | Spatial data (resolution) [source] |
|---|---|---|
| Hunting and non-timber forest products | Natural ecosystems within 10 km of relatively large numbers of food-insecure people, compared to other sites (ecosystems included in analysis: open water, mangroves, western dry forest, south western dry spiny forest-thicket, wetlands, western humid forest, humid forest, littoral forest, south western coastal bushland, western sub-humid forest, and tapia forest) | Land cover (30 m) [ |
| Population (1 km) [ | ||
| Food insecurity rates (commune level) [ | ||
| Commercial Fisheries | Coastal and marine areas with higher landed fisheries catch values, relative to other sites | Landed fisheries catch values (0.5 degree) [ |
| Small scale fisheries | Mangroves and coral reef ecosystems within 10 km of relatively large numbers of food-insecure people, compared to other sites | Mangroves (30 m) [ |
| Coral Reefs (500 m) [ | ||
| Population (1 km) [ | ||
| Food insecurity rates (commune level) [ | ||
| Provision of freshwater | Areas providing high levels of water quantity (runoff) that were also located upstream of areas with high demand for water for domestic consumption (per capita water demand multiplied by population), rice production (per hectare water demand multiplied by hectares of rice), or hydropower (production capacity in megawatt hours used as a proxy for demand), compared to other sites | Modeled water flow (1 km) [ |
| Population (1 km) [ | ||
| Rice paddies (unknown) [ | ||
| Hydropower facilities (point shapefile) [JIRAMA, 2014 unpublished data] | ||
| Climate mitigation | Forests containing relatively high levels of biomass carbon stock (analysis 1) and vulnerable to deforestation (analysis 2), compared to other sites | Forest cover (30 m) [ |
| Biomass carbon stock (1 km) [ | ||
| Deforestation (30 m) [ | ||
| Coastal protection | Mangroves within 2 km of relatively larger numbers of people vulnerable to cyclone storm surge, compared to other sites | Mangroves (30 m) [ |
| Population vulnerable to cyclone storm surge (1 km) [ | ||
| Inland flood reduction | Areas providing higher levels of water quantity (runoff) upstream of areas with relatively large numbers of people vulnerable to flooding, compared to other sites | Modeled water flow (1 km) [ |
| Population vulnerable to flooding (1 km) [ | ||
| Nature tourism | National parks with relatively high numbers of visitors, compared to other parks | Visitation in 2012 (per park) [Madagascar National parks 2012, unpublished data] |
Summary of ecosystem services included in the multi-criteria analyses.
| Service | Weight | |
|---|---|---|
| MCA1 | MCA2 | |
| Biomass carbon stock (tC) | 30 | 0 |
| Hunting and non-timber forest products (# of food insecure people within 10km of terrestrial & freshwater ecosystems) | 30 | 30 |
| Relative importance for fresh water for domestic use | 7.5 | 15 |
| Relative importance for fresh water for irrigation | 7.5 | 15 |
| Relative importance for fresh water for hydropower | 7.5 | 15 |
| Relative importance for fresh water for flood protection | 7.5 | 15 |
| Nature tourism (# of visitors to Madagascar National Parks in 2012) | 10 | 10 |
Different weights were applied in MCA1 and MCA2; see S5 Text for details.
Fig 3Importance of KBAs for hunting and non-timber forest products (left), and small-scale fisheries (right).
Fig 4Importance of KBAs for fresh water for domestic use (left), and agriculture (right).
Fig 5Forest carbon density (tons carbon per hectare) overlaid with KBAs (left); total forest carbon per KBA (tons C) (right).
Fig 6Results from multi-criteria analysis 1 (MCA1, left) and MCA2 (right).
MCA1 includes carbon, hunting and non-timber forest products, fresh water, and nature tourism; MCA2 includes the same variables with the exception of carbon.
Fig 7Final CEPF priority sites and other Key Biodiversity Areas.
Sites in the eastern humid forests were not prioritized by CEPF, as these sites already have some level of conservation investment.
Fig 8CEPF priority sites and relative importance for freshwater for agriculture (left) and local fisheries (right).