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Modelling trade offs between public and private conservation policies
Authors:Ascelin Gordon  William T Langford  Matt D White  James A Todd  Lucy Bastin
Institution:aSchool of Global Studies, Social Science & Planning, RMIT University, GPO Box 2476, Melbourne 3001, Australia;bThe Arthur Rylah Institute for Environmental Research, Department of Sustainability and Environment, PO Box 137, Heidelberg 3084, Australia;cBiodiversity and Ecosystem Services Division, Department of Sustainability and Environment, 2/8 Nicholson St East Melbourne 3002, Australia;dSchool of Engineering and Applied Science, Aston University, Birmingham B47ET, UK
Abstract:To reduce global biodiversity loss, there is an urgent need to determine the most efficient allocation of conservation resources. Recently, there has been a growing trend for many governments to supplement public ownership and management of reserves with incentive programs for conservation on private land. At the same time, policies to promote conservation on private land are rarely evaluated in terms of their ecological consequences. This raises important questions, such as the extent to which private land conservation can improve conservation outcomes, and how it should be mixed with more traditional public land conservation. We address these questions, using a general framework for modelling environmental policies and a case study examining the conservation of endangered native grasslands to the west of Melbourne, Australia. Specifically, we examine three policies that involve: (i) spending all resources on creating public conservation areas; (ii) spending all resources on an ongoing incentive program where private landholders are paid to manage vegetation on their property with 5-year contracts; and (iii) splitting resources between these two approaches. The performance of each strategy is quantified with a vegetation condition change model that predicts future changes in grassland quality. Of the policies tested, no one policy was always best and policy performance depended on the objectives of those enacting the policy. This work demonstrates a general method for evaluating environmental policies and highlights the utility of a model which combines ecological and socioeconomic processes.
Keywords:Conservation planning  Policy modelling  Grassland  Conservation on private land  Incentive program  Market based instruments
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