Journal article
High Carbon Stock forests provide co-benefits for tropical biodiversity
NJ Deere, G Guillera-Arroita, EL Baking, H Bernard, M Pfeifer, G Reynolds, OR Wearn, ZG Davies, MJ Struebig
Journal of Applied Ecology | WILEY | Published : 2018
Abstract
Carbon-based policies provide powerful opportunities to unite tropical forest conservation with climate change mitigation. However, their effectiveness in delivering biodiversity co-benefits is dependent on high levels of biodiversity being found in high carbon areas. Previous studies have focussed solely on the co-benefits associated with Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) over large spatial scales, with few empirically testing carbon-biodiversity correlations at management unit scales appropriate to decision-makers. Yet, in development frontiers, where most biodiversity and carbon loss occurs, carbon-based policies are increasingly driven by commodity cert..
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Awarded by National Eye Research Centre
Funding Acknowledgements
Natural Environment Research Council, Grant/Award Number: NE/K016407/1; NERC EnvEast PhD; Australian Research Council, Grant/Award Number: DE160100904