AN INTERDISCIPLINARY TOOL FOR MONITORING CONSERVATION IMPACTS IN MADAGASCAR

Citation
C. Kremen et al., AN INTERDISCIPLINARY TOOL FOR MONITORING CONSERVATION IMPACTS IN MADAGASCAR, Conservation biology, 12(3), 1998, pp. 549-563
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences",Ecology,"Biology Miscellaneous",Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
08888892
Volume
12
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
549 - 563
Database
ISI
SICI code
0888-8892(1998)12:3<549:AITFMC>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Integrated conservation and development programs (ICDPs) are large, co mplex experiments in managing natural resources for both biodiversity and economic benefits. Monitoring should be an essential element withi n these programs to provide information for assessment and adaptive ma nagement; however, selecting appropriate indicators and designing effe ctive monitoring programs is difficult due to thier complesity. Useful native plants can make excellent indicator species for ICDPs because monitoring them provides information simultaneously on both ecological and socioeconomic change. In addition, monitoring useful species is n ecessary for establishing management plans for their sustainable use. On the Masoala Peninsula in Madagascar, site of an ICDP, we conducted household surveys and developed new ethnobotanical indices from select ing the most important plant species in different use categories from 105 forest products harvested destructively by local inhabitants. Unli ke previous studies, use categories were defined non-arbitrarily as gr oups of substitution products (e.g., products that are equivalent in t heir specific usage. By comparing use and preference within groups of substitution products, it is possible to predict over-extraction of pr eferred species and resource switching to secondary species. Knowledge of substitution groups is thus a necessary prerequisite for selecting indicator species that will furnish early warnings of non-sustainable use. We identified 13 groups of substitution products covering the ma jor household uses on Masoala. From these we selected the 25 species t hat were most heavily used or preferred. Following the use of these sp ecies over time will permit a detailed spatial and temporal analysis o f change sin resource use patterns and harvesting impacts in response to the integrated conservation and development program ultimately allo wing the test of the hypothesis that economic development linked to co nservation promotes conservation.