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      Mapping the Economic Costs and Benefits of Conservation

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      PLoS Biology
      Public Library of Science

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          Abstract

          Resources for biodiversity conservation are severely limited, requiring strategic investment. Understanding both the economic benefits and costs of conserving ecosystems will help to allocate scarce dollars most efficiently. However, although cost-benefit analyses are common in many areas of policy, they are not typically used in conservation planning. We conducted a spatial evaluation of the costs and benefits of conservation for a landscape in the Atlantic forests of Paraguay. We considered five ecosystem services (i.e., sustainable bushmeat harvest, sustainable timber harvest, bioprospecting for pharmaceutical products, existence value, and carbon storage in aboveground biomass) and compared them to estimates of the opportunity costs of conservation. We found a high degree of spatial variability in both costs and benefits over this relatively small (~3,000 km 2) landscape. Benefits exceeded costs in some areas, with carbon storage dominating the ecosystem service values and swamping opportunity costs. Other benefits associated with conservation were more modest and exceeded costs only in protected areas and indigenous reserves. We used this cost-benefit information to show that one potential corridor between two large forest patches had net benefits that were three times greater than two otherwise similar alternatives. Spatial cost-benefit analysis can powerfully inform conservation planning, even though the availability of relevant data may be limited, as was the case in our study area. It can help us understand the synergies between biodiversity conservation and economic development when the two are indeed aligned and to clearly understand the trade-offs when they are not.

          Abstract

          A spatially explicit assessment of the economic costs and benefits of conservation in Paraguay highlights the challenges and potential utility of such an approach for understanding the value of biodiversity.

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          Most cited references128

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          Aboveground Forest Biomass and the Global Carbon Balance

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            Ecology. Direct payments to conserve biodiversity.

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              Young organic matter as a source of carbon dioxide outgassing from Amazonian rivers.

              Rivers are generally supersaturated with respect to carbon dioxide, resulting in large gas evasion fluxes that can be a significant component of regional net carbon budgets. Amazonian rivers were recently shown to outgas more than ten times the amount of carbon exported to the ocean in the form of total organic carbon or dissolved inorganic carbon. High carbon dioxide concentrations in rivers originate largely from in situ respiration of organic carbon, but little agreement exists about the sources or turnover times of this carbon. Here we present results of an extensive survey of the carbon isotope composition (13C and 14C) of dissolved inorganic carbon and three size-fractions of organic carbon across the Amazonian river system. We find that respiration of contemporary organic matter (less than five years old) originating on land and near rivers is the dominant source of excess carbon dioxide that drives outgassing in medium to large rivers, although we find that bulk organic carbon fractions transported by these rivers range from tens to thousands of years in age. We therefore suggest that a small, rapidly cycling pool of organic carbon is responsible for the large carbon fluxes from land to water to atmosphere in the humid tropics.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                PLoS Biol
                pbio
                PLoS Biology
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1544-9173
                1545-7885
                November 2006
                31 October 2006
                : 4
                : 11
                : e360
                Affiliations
                [1]Conservation Science Program, World Wildlife Fund, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America
                The David and Lucile Packard Foundation, United States of America
                Author notes
                * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: robin.naidoo@ 123456wwfus.org (RN); taylor.ricketts@ 123456wwfus.org (THR)
                Article
                06-PLBI-RA-0633R2 plbi-04-11-20
                10.1371/journal.pbio.0040360
                1629040
                17076583
                f3de7fa7-3d0f-445b-99d3-841415af943a
                Copyright: © 2006 Naidoo and Ricketts. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 13 April 2006
                : 28 August 2006
                Page count
                Pages: 12
                Categories
                Research Article
                Ecology
                Other
                Plants
                Animals
                Custom metadata
                Naidoo R, Ricketts TH (2006) Mapping the economic costs and benefits of conservation. PLoS Biol 4(11): e360. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040360

                Life sciences
                Life sciences

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