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Achieving private conservation targets in Brazil through restoration and compensation schemes without impairing productive lands.

Authors :
Mello, Kaline de
Fendrich, Arthur Nicolaus
Sparovek, Gerd
Simmonds, Jeremy S.
Maron, Martine
Tavares, Paulo André
Brites, Alice Dantas
Rodrigues, Ricardo Ribeiro
Joly, Carlos Alfredo
Metzger, Jean Paul
Source :
Environmental Science & Policy; Jun2021, Vol. 120, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

• Forest restoration and compensation are needed to reach the target of native vegetation cover in private lands. • Requiring ecological equivalence can restrict compensation options, but it is a feasible option in Brazilian rural lands. • Forest restoration on low productive pasture increases the ability to achieve the private conservation target. • A combination of on-site restoration and off-site compensation allows to achieve the conservation target in Brazil. Environmental policies that require native vegetation conservation can be challenging to implement, especially in productive agricultural landscapes. In Brazil, the Brazilian Native Vegetation Protection Law mandates 'Legal Reserves', protected native vegetation that landowners must retain on their properties. If landowners do not have the required minimum amount of native vegetation on their properties (the Legal Reserve 'target'), they must either restore vegetation on the same property to meet the target, or compensate by protecting existing vegetation or restoring it on another property, ideally in ecologically equivalent areas. Here, we evaluate how different strategies (on-site/off-site protection and/or restoration), and different requirements for ecological equivalence when off-site strategies are used, affect the ability to achieve Legal Reserve targets, while minimising the need to restore native vegetation on productive farmland. We used a novel iterative tool to build scenarios that reflect different combinations of strategies to meet the minimum conservation target under different requirements for ecological equivalence, and compared their ability to achieve the target and their likely cost. The Atlantic Forest was the only biome where it was not possible to achieve the Legal Reserve target by protection of existing native vegetation, even when ecological equivalence rules were relaxed. As a consequence, vegetation restoration is required in this biome. Directing this required restoration to pasturelands that are less-suitable for agriculture allowed the target to be achieved in all states of Brazil, as long as only minimal ecological equivalence was required; however, for most states, the need to restore native vegetation on productive areas on farmlands could still be avoided while requiring medium to high ecological equivalence. These findings show the potential for moderate ecological equivalence to be achieved across most of Brazil in a cost-effective way and without impairing productive lands when seeking to meet the Legal Reserve targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14629011
Volume :
120
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Science & Policy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150336841
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2021.02.014