Ecology and Society (Dec 2014)

Trade-offs among forest value components in community forests of southwestern Amazonia

  • Christopher Baraloto,
  • Paula Alverga,
  • Sufer Baéz Quispe,
  • Grenville Barnes,
  • Nino Bejar Chura,
  • Izaias Brasil da Silva,
  • Wendeson Castro,
  • Harrison da Souza,
  • Iracema de Souza Moll,
  • Jim del Alcazar Chilo,
  • Hugo Duenas Linares,
  • Jorge Garate Quispe,
  • Dean Kenji,
  • Herison Medeiros,
  • Skya Murphy,
  • Cara A. Rockwell,
  • Alexander Shenkin,
  • Marcos Silveira,
  • Jane Southworth,
  • Guido Vasquez,
  • Stephen Perz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-06911-190456
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 4
p. 56

Abstract

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Contemporary conservation interventions must balance potential trade-offs between multiple ecosystem services. In tropical forests, much attention has focused on the extent to which carbon-based conservation provided by REDD+ policies can also mitigate biodiversity conservation. In the nearly one-third of tropical forests that are community owned or managed, conservation strategies must also balance the multiple uses of forest products that support local livelihoods. Although much discussion has focused on policy options, little empirical evidence exists to evaluate the potential for trade-offs among different tropical forest value components. We assessed multiple components of forest value, including tree diversity, carbon stocks, and both timber and nontimber forest product resources, in forest communities across the trinational frontier of Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia. We installed 69 0.5-ha vegetation plots in local communities, and we characterized 15 components of forest value for each plot. Principal components analyses revealed two major axes of forest value, the first of which defined a trade-off between diversity of woody plant communities (taxonomic and functional) versus aboveground biomass and standing timber volume. The second axis described abundance of commercial species, with strong positive loadings for density of timber and nontimber forest products, including Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa) and copaiba oil (Copaifera spp.). The observed trade-off between different components of forest value suggests a potential for management conflicts prioritizing biodiversity conservation versus carbon stocks in the region. We discuss the potential for integrative indices of forest value for tropical forest conservation.

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