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Impact of a Community‐Based Payment for Environmental Services Intervention on Forest Use in Menabe,Madagascar
Authors:MATTHEW SOMMERVILLE  EJ MILNER‐GULLAND  MICHAEL RAHAJAHARISON  JULIA PG JONES
Institution:1. Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College‐London, Silwood Park, Ascot SL5 7 PY, United Kingdom;2. Ny Havana, Morondava, Madagascar;3. School of the Environment & Natural Resources, Bangor University, Bangor, Gwynedd LL57 2UW, Wales, United Kingdom
Abstract:Abstract: Despite the growing interest in conservation approaches that include payments for environmental services (PES), few evaluations of the influence of such interventions on behaviors of individuals have been conducted. We used self‐reported changes in six legal and illegal forest‐use behaviors to investigate the way in which a PES for biodiversity conservation intervention in Menabe, Madagascar, influenced behavior. Individuals (n =864) from eight intervention communities and five control communities answered questions on their forest‐use behaviors before and after the intervention began, as well as on their reasons for changing and their attitudes to various institutions. The payments had little impact on individuals’ reported decisions to change behaviors, but it had a strong impact on individuals’ attitudes. Payments appeared to legitimize monitoring of behaviors by the implementing nongovernmental organization (NGO), but did not act as a behavioral driver in their own right. Although there were no clear differences between changes in behaviors in the intervention and control communities, the intervention did influence motivations for change. Fear of local forest associations and the implementing NGO were strong motivators for changing behavior in communities with the PES intervention, whereas fear of the national government was the main reason given for change in control communities. Behavioral changes were most stable where fear of local organizations motivated the change. Our results highlight the interactions between different incentives people face when making behavioral decisions and the importance of considering the full range of incentives when designing community‐based PES interventions.
Keywords:motivation  biodiversity conservation  monitoring  attitudes  incentives  actitudes  conservació  n de la biodiversidad  incentivos  monitoreo  motivació  n
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