首页> 外文期刊>Biological Conservation >Biodiversity conservation and livelihoods in human-dominated landscapes: forest commons in South Asia. (Special Issue: Conservation and management in human-dominated landscapes: case studies from India.)
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Biodiversity conservation and livelihoods in human-dominated landscapes: forest commons in South Asia. (Special Issue: Conservation and management in human-dominated landscapes: case studies from India.)

机译:以人类为主的景观中的生物多样性保护和生计:南亚的森林公地。 (特刊:人类主导景观的保护与管理:来自印度的案例研究。)

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Strict protected areas are a critical component in global biodiversity conservation, but the future of biodiversity conservation may well depend upon the ability to experiment successfully with a range of institutional forms, including those that permit human use. Here, we focus on forest commons in human-dominated landscapes and their role in biodiversity conservation at the same time as they provide livelihood benefits to users. Using a dataset of 59 forest commons located in Bhutan, India, and Nepal, we estimated tree species richness from plot vegetation data collected in each forest, and drew on interview data to calculate a livelihoods index indicating the overall contribution of each forest to villager livelihoods for firewood, fodder, and timber. We found that tree species richness and livelihoods were positively and significantly correlated (rho=.41, p<0.001, N=59). This relationship held regardless of forest type or country, though significance varied somewhat across these two factors. Further, both benefits were similarly associated with several drivers of social-ecological change (e.g., occupational diversity of forest users, total number of users, and forest size), suggesting identification of potential synergies and complexes of causal mechanisms for future attention. Our analysis shows that forest commons in South Asia, explicitly managed to provide livelihoods for local populations, also provide biodiversity benefits. More broadly, our findings suggest that although strict protected areas are effective tools for biodiversity conservation, a singular focus on them risks ignoring other resource governance approaches that can fruitfully complement existing conservation regimes.Digital Object Identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2010.03.003
机译:严格的保护区是全球生物多样性保护的关键组成部分,但是生物多样性保护的未来很可能取决于能否成功地尝试各种体制形式的能力,包括允许人类使用的形式。在这里,我们将重点放在人为主导景观中的森林公域及其在生物多样性保护中的作用,同时它们为使用者提供生计利益。我们使用位于不丹,印度和尼泊尔的59个森林公域的数据集,根据在每个森林中收集的样地植被数据估算树木的丰富度,并利用访谈数据来计算生计指数,以表明每个森林对村民生计的总体贡献用于柴火,饲料和木材。我们发现树木物种的丰富度和生计具有正相关且显着相关(rho = .41, p <0.001, N = 59)。不论森林类型或国家如何,这种关系都存在,尽管重要性在这两个因素之间有所不同。此外,这两种好处都与社会生态变化的多种驱动因素相似(例如,森林使用者的职业多样性,使用者总数和森林面积),这表明潜在的协同作用和因果机制的复杂性值得进一步关注。我们的分析表明,南亚的森林公地明确地为当地居民提供了生计,同时也为生物多样性带来了好处。从更广泛的角度来看,我们的研究结果表明,尽管严格的保护区是生物多样性保护的有效工具,但仅将其视为单一重点可能会忽略其他可以有效补充现有保护制度的资源治理方法。 10.1016 / j.biocon.2010.03.003

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