Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2023)

Current policies are insufficient to protect or restore Brazil’s cost-effective conservation priority zones

  • Rafael G Ramos,
  • Marluce Scarabello,
  • Aline C Soterroni,
  • Pedro R Andrade,
  • Rolf Simões,
  • Heloisa M Ruivo,
  • Florian Kraxner,
  • Fernando M Ramos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/acd209
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 6
p. 065006

Abstract

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In Brazil, conservation priority zones, in spite of their key role in preserving natural vegetation and its environmental resources are frequently located outside the country’s public network of protected areas (PAs). Here we present the first study on land-use impacts inside Brazil’s unprotected (i.e. outside PAs) Cost-Effective conservation priority Zones (CEZs), for the period 2020–2050. CEZs are conservation priority zones that had experienced low levels of human impact in 2020. In this study, we consider various governance scenarios, including different deforestation control and native vegetation restoration policies. To this end, a land-use change model is combined with a downscaling method to generate natural vegetation cover projections at a 0.01 ${^\circ}$ resolution. Results, which include the effects of climate change on the expansion of the Brazilian agriculture, project native vegetation losses (through deforestation) or gains (through restoration) inside unprotected CEZs. If the current pattern of disregard for the environment persists, our results indicate that a large share of the native vegetation inside Brazil’s CEZs is likely to disappear, with negative impacts on biodiversity preservation, green-house gas emissions and ecosystem services in general. Moreover, even if fully implemented and enforced, Brazil’s current Forest Code is insufficient to adequately protect CEZs from anthropization, especially in the Cerrado biome. We expect that this study can help improving the conservation and restoration of CEZs in Brazil.

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