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Compensation for ecosystem services: an evaluation of efforts to achieve conservation and development in Ecuadorian páramo grasslands

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

KATHLEEN A. FARLEY*
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, San Diego State University, San Diego CA 92182-4493, USA
WILLIAM G. ANDERSON
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, San Diego State University, San Diego CA 92182-4493, USA
LEAH L. BREMER
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, San Diego State University, San Diego CA 92182-4493, USA Department of Geography, 1832 Ellison Hall, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara CA 93106-4060, USA
CAROL P. HARDEN
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Tennessee, Knoxville TN 37996-0925, USA
*
*Correspondence: Dr Kathleen Farley Tel: +1 619 594 8472 Fax: +1 619 594 4938 e-mail: kfarley@mail.sdsu.edu

Summary

Ecosystem services programmes have been advocated for their potential to join conservation and poverty alleviation efforts, integrate working landscapes, and provide a flow of ecosystem services upon which populations rely. Ecuadorian páramo grasslands have rapidly become the focus of compensation for ecosystem services (CES) programmes intended to conserve hydrologic services, carbon sequestration and biodiversity. This paper reviews CES programmes in Ecuadorian páramos using a combination of semi-structured interviews with project personnel, policy makers and community leaders involved in CES programme development, document analysis, and archival research. Findings indicate that, in some cases, CES schemes can support local development, with potential to contribute to poverty alleviation; however, measures of programme effects on poverty were lacking. The programmes fell across the spectrum of activity-reducing to activity-enhancing, with some functioning as protected areas and others integrating working landscapes; however, designation of land as protected did not necessarily imply more restrictive use. Finally, these cases all reflect scenarios in which limited information is available linking land use with ecosystem services production and underscore the idea that adequate understanding of ecosystem production functions continues to be a barrier to development of effective programmes, particularly where the provision of multiple ecosystem services is anticipated.

Type
THEMATIC SECTION: Payments for Ecosystem Services in Conservation: Performance and Prospects
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2011

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