Systematic conservation planning for ecosystem services: opportunities for improving spatial targeting of ecosystem service payments in Costa Rica

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Date
2016Author
Ramos Bendaña, Zayra S.
Type
Tesis de doctorado
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Tesis (Doctorado) - CATIE. Escuela de Posgrado, Turrialba (Costa Rica), University of Idaho (Estados Unidos), 2016
Abstract
Tropical forests are of high conservation priority world-wide due their high value for harboring
biodiversity and providing ecosystem services from the local to global scale. Financial resources for
conservation are scarce. This challenges practitioners to design conservation networks
encompassing spatial synergies between biodiversity and ecosystem services. Furthermore,
conservation networks need to be robust to climate change impacts and the unpredictability of
biodiversity response to these impacts. Methodologies for selecting locations that can help achieve multiple conservation objectives and can be easily integrated in current conservation practices are urgently needed. The first chapter of this study was focused on exploring the effect of integrating
into conservation assessments two climate adaptation approaches based on environmental
heterogeneity, as well as the effect of the selection of planning unit size on resultant conservation
networks. With Costa Rica as planning region, our results showed that protecting the representation of the geophysical diversity resulted in conservation networks with over 25% more internal environmental heterogeneity, but more fragmented. Incorporating cross-environmental connectivity, on the other hand, resulted in low increases in environmental heterogeneity. Increasing the planning unit size reduced the effect of emphasizing connectivity between environmentally different locations. These results highlight the importance of testing
environmental-heterogeneity-based approaches in each context due the specific characteristics of
planning regions prior integrating them into formal conservation assessments. The second chapter
focused on exploring synergies between biodiversity and carbon storage priorities, when integrating environmental-heterogeneity-based climate adaptation approaches. Results revealed
very low synergies between targeting the representation of regional biodiversity and areas of high carbon content. However, spreading out across the country the selection of carbon priority areas
by adding stratification improved the synergies with biodiversity priorities, and revealed locations
iv that could be considered priorities for carbon storage in the distribution range of Dry Tropical
Forests; one of the most threatened tropical ecosystem. The extent of gains for co-benefits
between carbon-related ES and biodiversity conservation will depend in part on how priority areas are selected for implementing strategies, such as PES and REDD, and will determine the location
and amount of tropical forest to be conserved. As indicated by the recent development of the
spatial data used in Chapter 2, improving spatial datasets for supporting ES targeting is critical in
tropical dry forests. As a result, we developed new phenological approaches to map tropical dry
forest type using multitemporal Landsat 8 Operational Land Imager data. The major gains in
mapping accuracy realized by the multitemporal analysis bodes well for the future of landscape
level ES planning in tropical dry forest. Finally, the promising progress in the detection of functional
traits through remote sensing offers further opportunities to improve on the quality of the inputs
for the mapping of ES, a topic covered in Chapter 4.
Keywords
Publisher
CATIE, Turrialba (Costa Rica)
URI (Permanet link to cite or share this item)
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/8593Collections
- Tesis [3054]