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Conservation Businesses and Conservation Planning in a Biological Diversity Hotspot
Authors:ENRICO DI MININ  DOUGLAS CRAIG MACMILLAN  PETER STYAN GOODMAN  BOYD ESCOTT  ROB SLOTOW  ATTE MOILANEN
Institution:1. School of Anthropology and Conservation, Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology, University of Kent, , Canterbury, United Kingdom;2. Department of Biosciences, Finnish Centre of Excellence in Metapopulation Biology, P.O. Box 65, FI‐00014 University of Helsinki, , Finland;3. Biodiversity Information Reporting and Management Division, Ezemvelo KwaZulu‐Natal Wildlife, P.O. Box 13053, , Cascades, 3202 South Africa;4. Amarula Elephant Research Programme, School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu‐Natal, , Durban, 4041 South Africa
Abstract:The allocation of land to biological diversity conservation competes with other land uses and the needs of society for development, food, and extraction of natural resources. Trade‐offs between biological diversity conservation and alternative land uses are unavoidable, given the realities of limited conservation resources and the competing demands of society. We developed a conservation‐planning assessment for the South African province of KwaZulu‐Natal, which forms the central component of the Maputaland–Pondoland–Albany biological diversity hotspot. Our objective was to enhance biological diversity protection while promoting sustainable development and providing spatial guidance in the resolution of potential policy conflicts over priority areas for conservation at risk of transformation. The conservation‐planning assessment combined spatial‐distribution models for 646 conservation features, spatial economic‐return models for 28 alternative land uses, and spatial maps for 4 threats. Nature‐based tourism businesses were competitive with other land uses and could provide revenues of >US$60 million/year to local stakeholders and simultaneously help meeting conservation goals for almost half the conservation features in the planning region. Accounting for opportunity costs substantially decreased conflicts between biological diversity, agricultural use, commercial forestry, and mining. Accounting for economic benefits arising from conservation and reducing potential policy conflicts with alternative plans for development can provide opportunities for successful strategies that combine conservation and sustainable development and facilitate conservation action. Negocios de Conservación y Planificación de la Conservación en un Sitio de Importancia para la Biodiversidad
Keywords:biological diversity hotspot  investment  land uses  opportunity costs  sustainable development  Zonation software  costos de oportunidad  desarrollo sustentable  inversió  n  sitios de importancia para la biodiversidad  software para zonació  n  usos de suelo
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