The impact of protected area governance and management capacity on ecosystem function in Central America
Abstract
Protected areas (PAs) are a prominent approach to maintaining and enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem services. A critical question for safeguarding these resources is how PA governance processes and management structures influence their effectiveness. We conduct an impact evaluation of 12 PAs in three Central American countries to assess how processes in management restrictions, management capacity, and decentralization affect the annual change in the satellite-derived Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI). NDVI varies with greenness that relates to plant production, biomass, and important ecosystem functions related to biodiversity and ecosystem services such as water quality and carbon storage. Any loss of vegetation cover in the form of deforestation or degradation would show up as a decrease in NDVI values over time and gains in vegetation cover and regeneration
as an increase in NDVI values. Management restriction categories are based on international
classifications of strict versus multiple-use PAs, and capacity and decentralization categories are based on key informant interviews of PA managers. We use matching to create a counterfactual of non-protected observations and a matching estimator and regression to estimate treatment effects of each sub-sample. On average, strict and multiple-use PAs
have a significant and positive effect on NDVI compared to non-protected land uses. Both
high and low decentralized PAs also positively affect NDVI. High capacity PAs have a positive and significant effect on NDVI, while low capacity PAs have a negative effect on NDVI.
Keywords
Publisher
Frédéric Mertens, Universidade de Brasilia (Brasil)
Is part of
PLoS ONE, Volumen 13, Number 10 (2018)
URI (Permanet link to cite or share this item)
https://doi.org/ 10.1371/journal.pone.0205964https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9539
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