Get the science right when paying for nature's services

Autor: Alex Varga, E. Perge, A. Koontz, Jesse R. Lasky, Kent H. Redford, Cathryn A. Freund, Jane Carter Ingram, Shahid Naeem, Lisa Naughton-Treves, K. Saterson, J. Potent, Stephen Polasky, M. T. Vargas, Case M. Prager, Fabrice DeClerck, Robert Costanza, D. Meyers, E. Bloomgarden, T. Agardy, Fabien Quétier, P. Olmsted, Lydia Olander, Charles Perrings, Megan E. Cattau, Wolfgang W. Weisser, D. Jarrett, Michael E. Colby, T. Gartner, F. Milano, Leah L. Bremer, A. Kiss, J. Gunderson, Michel Masozera, David Wilkie, P. Barten, Peter H. Burkill, G. Thoumi, Elizabeth Nichols, Pushpam Kumar, C. Ching, Sven Wunder, David Cook, R. Goldman-Benner, G. Bennett, Ann P. Kinzig, S. Vickerman
Rok vydání: 2015
Předmět:
Zdroj: Science. 347:1206-1207
ISSN: 1095-9203
0036-8075
DOI: 10.1126/science.aaa1403
Popis: Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) mechanisms leverage economic and social incentives to shape how people influence natural processes and achieve conservation and sustainability goals. Beneficiaries of nature's goods and services pay owners or stewards of ecosystems that produce those services, with payments contingent on service provision (1, 2). Integrating scientific knowledge and methods into PES is critical (3, 4). Yet many projects are based on weak scientific foundations, and effectiveness is rarely evaluated with the rigor necessary for scaling up and understanding the importance of these approaches as policy instruments and conservation tools (2, 5, 6). Part of the problem is the lack of simple, yet rigorous, scientific principles and guidelines to accommodate PES design and guide research and analyses that foster evaluations of effectiveness (4). As scientists and practitioners from government, nongovernment, academic, and finance institutions, we propose a set of such guidelines and principles.
Databáze: OpenAIRE