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Page 1: Attaining Sustainable Services from Ecosystems through Trade-off Scenarios

ASSETSAttaining Sustainable Services from Ecosystems through Trade-off Scenarios

State of the art as of 21st May 2012

Photo by Erwin Palacios CI Colombia © The Economist

Page 2: Attaining Sustainable Services from Ecosystems through Trade-off Scenarios

Our Team

• Southampton (Poppy, Eigenbrod, Hudson, Madise, Schreckenberg, plus Dawson, Margetts)

• Conservation International (USA)• Basque Centre for Climate

Change• CIAT & CI International Colombia

plus Colombian research centres, universities and NGOs

• Chancellor College, Malawi, plus Worldfish and LEAD Africa

Page 3: Attaining Sustainable Services from Ecosystems through Trade-off Scenarios

The overarching goal is to explicitly quantify the linkages between the natural ecosystem services that affect – and are affected by – food security and nutritional health for the rural poor at the forest-agricultural interface

Photo by Erwin Palacios CI Colombia

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A complex ecosystem where agroecosystem meets “natural” ecosystems

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ASSETS Research Themes

Theme 1:Drivers, pressures and linkages between food security, nutritional health and ES

• Relationships between forest ES, food & health

• Identifying key drivers and pressures

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Africa & Amazonia: different situations…… much in common

• Deforestation: Africa much more advancedAmazonia in rapd transition due to a range of

drivers• impacted by climate change and extreme weather events• issues of extreme poverty, malnutrition and inequality

Our workshops selected paired case study regions in Malawi and Colombia- as the best locations to address our research questions, but also because of links to partner organisations already active locally

Choice of Case studies- cutting across two continents

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• One of the poorest countries on earth: 52% in poverty, 29% undernourished

• Mostly deforested: 27% remaining• Prolonged droughts and occasional

extreme rain• Paired case study regions: East Chilwa

and Chingale (Zomba West) • 80% of people are subsistence

farmers or smallholders; • Differences in rainfall, water

availability, forest cover…• ….but with some protected

forests and wetlands (under pressure from overexploitation & drought)

Sub-Saharan Africa: Malawi

Data from UNDP, FAO, CIA Factbook,; imafe from nyastimes

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• Extremes of wealth and poverty in a fast growing economy

• 45% forested- mostly in Amazonia and Andes, but under great pressure

• Suffering climate & weather extremes: La Nina, Climate Change

• Paired case study regions: Upper and Lower Caqueta: • 62% living in poverty• At different stages of transition- driven

by incoming settlers, clearance for cattle, soya, biofuels

• Several protected forest areas• Indigenous groups may be most

threatened by land use changes

Amazonia: Colombia

Data from UNDP, FAO, CIA Factbook; image from telegraph.co.uk

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Participatory research

• Aims:– To understand links between ES and food security– To derive non-monetary values for different ES

• Well-being ranking of study communities• Focus groups (differentiated by social group) to:– Understand local concepts of food (in)security– Identify ES that contribute to food security at different

temporal and spatial scales• Seasonal calendars – seasonal coping strategies• Community timelines – inter-annual food security• Matrix scoring and ranking to prioritise the most important ES

for food security for different groups

• Participatory economic valuation of some ES

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Participatory mapping to develop adaptation strategies

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The Food Estimation and Export for Diet and Malnutrition Evaluation (FEEDME) Model

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Food Balance Sheets

Production

OpeningStocks

Imports

FoodFeed

Exports

Seed

Waste

Processing for Food

OtherUtilization

ClosingStocks

DomesticUtililization

SUPPLY = UTILIZATION

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Measuring household poverty, food security, and nutrition health

• Identify poverty status of households using objective and subjective measures (expenditure, subjective wealth, assets)

• Measure food security and nutritional status of under-five children in households across the forest-agricultural gradient

• Deeper understanding of coping mechanisms• Disseminate to, and feedback from the local

community

Aims:

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Food security surveys

• Aim : Assess availability, access, and utilisation of food and how ES affects each

• Measures (men, women, children)– Number of meals eaten on regular day/ yesterday– Frequency of not having enough to eat in the past 6

months– Frequency of sleeping hungry– Detailed food consumption data including types,

sources, amounts (weighed), repeated to capture seasonal variation

• Perception of hunger– has enough to eat– Hunger

• Nutritional health surveys– Anthropometric measurements

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ASSETS Research Themes

Theme 2: Crises and tipping points: Past, present and future interactions between food insecurity and ES at the forest-agricultural interface

http://blogs.reuters.com/photographers-blog/2010/08/12/an-aerial-view-of-sumatra-island/

• Coping strategies• Future scenarios

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The ARIES Model: Artificial Intelligence for Ecosystem Services

A bit of history• Initially developed at the University

of Vermont (Gund Institute) and Conservation International mainly on NSF money by ESPA co-PI Ferdinando Villa (now at Basque Centre for Climate Change, Bilbao Spain)

• Co-lead on ARIES is Miroslav Honzák at Conservation International (Washington) Malawian boy,

Zomba, November 2010

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ARIES: summary

• A rapid spatial assessment tool for ecosystem services and their values; not a single model but an artificial intelligence assisted system that customizes models to user goals.

• Demonstrates a mapping process for ecosystem service provision, use, sink and flow while most ES assessments only look at provision.

• Probabilistic, Bayesian models inform decision-makers about the likelihood of possible scenarios; users can explore effects of policy changes and external events on estimates of uncertainty.

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Components of the ARIES system

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Ecosystem Services flow analysis in ARIES

1. Provisionshed

2. Benefitshed

4. Flow of Ecosystem Services

3. Sinks of Ecosystem Services

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Precise spatial representationand Area of Critical Flow

Area of Critical Flow

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ASSETS Research Themes

• Minimising risk of future environmental change

• Influencing policy to better manage ES conflicts, trade-offs and synergies to sustain food security and health?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/7445570.stm

Theme 3: The science-policy interface: How can we manage ES to reduce food insecurity and increase nutritional health?

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Pidgeon … Poppy 2006 Proc Roy Soc

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Stakeholder Engagement & Feedback

Target audience• Community members– Through village meetings, community radios

• National policymakers e.g. Govt, civil society, NGOs– National advisory board meetings, briefings, policy

briefs• International policymakers– Scientific advisory meetings & through partners

(CIAT, CI, WorldFish)• Academic beneficiaries

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Our consortium will undertake world class research on ecosystem services (ES) for poverty alleviation at the forest-agricultural interface and deliver evidence from a range of sources and in various formats to inform policy and behaviour.

We hope to make a difference to the lives of 2 million poor people living in our case-study regions – up to 550 million people living in similar environments around the world.

Photo by Erwin Palacios CI Colombia


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