Passar para o conteúdo principal

page search

Biblioteca Participatory mapping to identify indigenous community use zones: Implications for conservation planning in southern Suriname

Participatory mapping to identify indigenous community use zones: Implications for conservation planning in southern Suriname

Participatory mapping to identify indigenous community use zones: Implications for conservation planning in southern Suriname

Resource information

Date of publication
Dezembro 2016
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201600180883
Pages
69-78

Large-scale development projects often overlap forest areas that support the livelihoods of indigenous peoples, threatening in situ conservation strategies for the protection of biological and cultural diversity. To address this problem, there is a need to integrate spatially-explicit information on ecosystem services into conservation planning. We present an approach for identifying conservation areas necessary to safeguard the provision of important ecosystem services for indigenous communities. “Community use zones” (CUZs) were generated using participatory mapping methods that identify place values indicating significant hotspots for ecosystem services. Using principles from landscape ecology, these areas are buffered to provide connectivity and to delineate ecosystem service delivery areas. We demonstrate the use of CUZs for five villages in southern Suriname (n=191 participants) to inform the South Suriname Conservation Corridor project. The mapped data reveal overlapping hotspots for different ecosystem services depicting multifunctional landscapes that provide an empirical foundation for delineating CUZs. In the absence of legal and traditional land rights for indigenous people, CUZs based on the provision of ecosystem services provide a defensible, spatially explicit approach for integrating indigenous needs into regional conservation plans in southern Suriname. We discuss the utility of CUZ maps for promoting land tenure and security and as a basis for collaborative governance in indigenous and community-conserved areas (ICCAs).

Share on RLBI navigator
NO

Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Ramirez-Gomez, Sara O.I.
Greg Brown
Pita A. Verweij
René Boot

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus