Biodiversity Valuation in Developing Countries: A Focus on Small Island Developing States (SIDS)

S. Teelucksingh, P. Nunes
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引用次数: 36

Abstract

The Millennium Development Goals explicitly recognise “sustainable development” as a target. A step towards this is a greater understanding of the significant role of biodiversity in rural communities of developing countries who depend most on the ecosystem goods and services and who as a result may suffer most from its continued degradation. Understanding the input of biodiversity in developing countries to the provision of the ecosystem goods and services (EGS) that are essential to their human well-being is seen as a significant first step in sustainable development, and environmental valuation is a necessary tool for achieving this objective. However, valuing biodiversity in a developing country context can be an intricate affair. While economic valuation literature yields a range of tried and tested methodological techniques for measuring biodiversity, the question remains as to whether these generalised techniques are capable of revealing the complexities of local environmental use in developing countries. A heterogeneous group, “developing countries” can be characterised by a range of factors existing in different intensities that can (1) impact the ways in which local communities interact with their environmental resources (2) impact the efficacy of the methodological and data collection process (3) impact the values obtained from the application of valuation techniques and (4) impact the implementation, success and sustainability of policy and management prescriptions. This paper attempts to address these issues by discussing the main characteristics of developing countries that can impact the biodiversity valuation process and, with specific reference to Small Island Developing States (SIDS), discussing how knowledge of these characteristics can assist the valuation process to better reveal the complex interaction between biodiversity and human welfare in a developing country context.
发展中国家的生物多样性评估:以小岛屿发展中国家为重点
千年发展目标明确承认“可持续发展”是一项目标。实现这一目标的一个步骤是更好地了解生物多样性在发展中国家农村社区中的重要作用,这些社区最依赖生态系统的产品和服务,因此,他们可能受到生态系统持续退化的最大影响。了解发展中国家对提供对其人类福祉至关重要的生态系统产品和服务(EGS)的生物多样性投入,被视为可持续发展的重要第一步,而环境评估是实现这一目标的必要工具。然而,在发展中国家的背景下评估生物多样性可能是一件复杂的事情。虽然经济评估文献产生了一系列经过试验和测试的测量生物多样性的方法技术,但问题仍然是这些通用技术是否能够揭示发展中国家当地环境利用的复杂性。“发展中国家”是一个异质群体,其特点是存在一系列不同强度的因素,这些因素可以(1)影响当地社区与其环境资源相互作用的方式;(2)影响方法和数据收集过程的有效性;(3)影响从应用估值技术中获得的价值;(4)影响政策和管理处方的实施、成功和可持续性。本文试图通过讨论可能影响生物多样性评估过程的发展中国家的主要特征来解决这些问题,并具体提及小岛屿发展中国家(SIDS),讨论了解这些特征如何有助于评估过程更好地揭示发展中国家背景下生物多样性与人类福利之间的复杂相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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