Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia

Protected areas (PAs) play a crucial role in biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation. However, ineffective management can lead to biodiversity loss and carbon emissions from deforestation. To address this issue and explore viable solutions, we assessed the impact of PA establishment...

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Main Authors: Sreekar, Rachakonda, Koh, Lian Pin, Lamba, Aakash, Mammides, Christos, Teo, Hoong Chen, Dwiputra, Adrian, Zeng, Yiwen
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/180900
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1809002024-11-04T02:42:23Z Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia Sreekar, Rachakonda Koh, Lian Pin Lamba, Aakash Mammides, Christos Teo, Hoong Chen Dwiputra, Adrian Zeng, Yiwen Asian School of the Environment School of Social Sciences Centre for Nature-based Climate Solutions, NUS Department of Biological Sciences, NUS Earth and Environmental Sciences Carbon financing Protected area management Protected areas (PAs) play a crucial role in biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation. However, ineffective management can lead to biodiversity loss and carbon emissions from deforestation. To address this issue and explore viable solutions, we assessed the impact of PA establishment on avoided deforestation in 80 Southeast Asian PAs using the synthetic control approach. Our results show that 36 PAs successfully prevented 78,910 ha of deforestation. However, the remaining 44 PAs lost 72,497 ha of forest, impacting the habitat of 226 threatened bird and mammal species. Effective management of these reserves could have potentially avoided up to 2.07 MtCO2e yr-1 in carbon emissions. We estimate that at least $17 million USD per year in additional funding is required to better manage these 44 ineffective PAs and reduce future emissions. Furthermore, we demonstrate that carbon markets have the potential to generate these funds by reducing carbon emissions from deforestation within protected areas. Our findings emphasize that improving PA management is an essential nature-based solution for conserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change. R.S. is supported by the River Star Foundation and L.P.K. is supported by the National Research Foundation (NRF) Singapore under its NRF Returning Singaporean Scientists Scheme (NRFRSS2019-007). 2024-11-04T02:42:23Z 2024-11-04T02:42:23Z 2024 Journal Article Sreekar, R., Koh, L. P., Lamba, A., Mammides, C., Teo, H. C., Dwiputra, A. & Zeng, Y. (2024). Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia. Current Biology, 34(16), 3830-3835.e3. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2024.07.031 0960-9822 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/180900 10.1016/j.cub.2024.07.031 39084222 2-s2.0-85201052040 16 34 3830 3835.e3 en Current Biology © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Earth and Environmental Sciences
Carbon financing
Protected area management
spellingShingle Earth and Environmental Sciences
Carbon financing
Protected area management
Sreekar, Rachakonda
Koh, Lian Pin
Lamba, Aakash
Mammides, Christos
Teo, Hoong Chen
Dwiputra, Adrian
Zeng, Yiwen
Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia
description Protected areas (PAs) play a crucial role in biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation. However, ineffective management can lead to biodiversity loss and carbon emissions from deforestation. To address this issue and explore viable solutions, we assessed the impact of PA establishment on avoided deforestation in 80 Southeast Asian PAs using the synthetic control approach. Our results show that 36 PAs successfully prevented 78,910 ha of deforestation. However, the remaining 44 PAs lost 72,497 ha of forest, impacting the habitat of 226 threatened bird and mammal species. Effective management of these reserves could have potentially avoided up to 2.07 MtCO2e yr-1 in carbon emissions. We estimate that at least $17 million USD per year in additional funding is required to better manage these 44 ineffective PAs and reduce future emissions. Furthermore, we demonstrate that carbon markets have the potential to generate these funds by reducing carbon emissions from deforestation within protected areas. Our findings emphasize that improving PA management is an essential nature-based solution for conserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Sreekar, Rachakonda
Koh, Lian Pin
Lamba, Aakash
Mammides, Christos
Teo, Hoong Chen
Dwiputra, Adrian
Zeng, Yiwen
format Article
author Sreekar, Rachakonda
Koh, Lian Pin
Lamba, Aakash
Mammides, Christos
Teo, Hoong Chen
Dwiputra, Adrian
Zeng, Yiwen
author_sort Sreekar, Rachakonda
title Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia
title_short Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia
title_full Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia
title_fullStr Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia
title_full_unstemmed Conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in Southeast Asia
title_sort conservation opportunities through improved management of recently established protected areas in southeast asia
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/180900
_version_ 1816858978933538816