The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.

Carbon finance offers the potential to change land management and conservation planning priorities. We develop a novel approach to planning for improved land management to conserve biodiversity while utilizing potential revenue from carbon biosequestration. We apply our approach in northern Australi...

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Main Authors: Lucinda L Douglass, Hugh P Possingham, Josie Carwardine, Carissa J Klein, Stephen H Roxburgh, Jeremy Russell-Smith, Kerrie A Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3173368?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c7e45674a6aa468dac744749ce1acae12020-11-25T02:51:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0169e2384310.1371/journal.pone.0023843The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.Lucinda L DouglassHugh P PossinghamJosie CarwardineCarissa J KleinStephen H RoxburghJeremy Russell-SmithKerrie A WilsonCarbon finance offers the potential to change land management and conservation planning priorities. We develop a novel approach to planning for improved land management to conserve biodiversity while utilizing potential revenue from carbon biosequestration. We apply our approach in northern Australia's tropical savanna, a region of global significance for biodiversity and carbon storage, both of which are threatened by current fire and grazing regimes. Our approach aims to identify priority locations for protecting species and vegetation communities by retaining existing vegetation and managing fire and grazing regimes at a minimum cost. We explore the impact of accounting for potential carbon revenue (using a carbon price of US$14 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent) on priority areas for conservation and the impact of explicitly protecting carbon stocks in addition to biodiversity. Our results show that improved management can potentially raise approximately US$5 per hectare per year in carbon revenue and prevent the release of 1-2 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent over approximately 90 years. This revenue could be used to reduce the costs of improved land management by three quarters or double the number of biodiversity targets achieved and meet carbon storage targets for the same cost. These results are based on generalised cost and carbon data; more comprehensive applications will rely on fine scale, site-specific data and a supportive policy environment. Our research illustrates that the duel objective of conserving biodiversity and reducing the release of greenhouse gases offers important opportunities for cost-effective land management investments.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3173368?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucinda L Douglass
Hugh P Possingham
Josie Carwardine
Carissa J Klein
Stephen H Roxburgh
Jeremy Russell-Smith
Kerrie A Wilson
spellingShingle Lucinda L Douglass
Hugh P Possingham
Josie Carwardine
Carissa J Klein
Stephen H Roxburgh
Jeremy Russell-Smith
Kerrie A Wilson
The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lucinda L Douglass
Hugh P Possingham
Josie Carwardine
Carissa J Klein
Stephen H Roxburgh
Jeremy Russell-Smith
Kerrie A Wilson
author_sort Lucinda L Douglass
title The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.
title_short The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.
title_full The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.
title_fullStr The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.
title_full_unstemmed The effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.
title_sort effect of carbon credits on savanna land management and priorities for biodiversity conservation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Carbon finance offers the potential to change land management and conservation planning priorities. We develop a novel approach to planning for improved land management to conserve biodiversity while utilizing potential revenue from carbon biosequestration. We apply our approach in northern Australia's tropical savanna, a region of global significance for biodiversity and carbon storage, both of which are threatened by current fire and grazing regimes. Our approach aims to identify priority locations for protecting species and vegetation communities by retaining existing vegetation and managing fire and grazing regimes at a minimum cost. We explore the impact of accounting for potential carbon revenue (using a carbon price of US$14 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent) on priority areas for conservation and the impact of explicitly protecting carbon stocks in addition to biodiversity. Our results show that improved management can potentially raise approximately US$5 per hectare per year in carbon revenue and prevent the release of 1-2 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent over approximately 90 years. This revenue could be used to reduce the costs of improved land management by three quarters or double the number of biodiversity targets achieved and meet carbon storage targets for the same cost. These results are based on generalised cost and carbon data; more comprehensive applications will rely on fine scale, site-specific data and a supportive policy environment. Our research illustrates that the duel objective of conserving biodiversity and reducing the release of greenhouse gases offers important opportunities for cost-effective land management investments.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3173368?pdf=render
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