Effects of Payment for Ecosystem Services and Tourism on Conservation and Development: Trade-Off or Synergistic?

Author:

Wang Yujun12ORCID,Yang Hongbo2,Hull Vanessa3,Zhang Jindong1,Chen Xiaodong2,Li Xiang4,Zhang Zejun1,Li Cheng1,Wang Fang5,Zhao Zhiqiang6,Tang Ying6,Liu Jianguo6

Affiliation:

1. a Key Laboratory of Southwest China Wildlife Resources Conservation (Ministry of Education), China West Normal University, Nanchong, Sichuan Province, China

2. b Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

3. c Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida

4. d Faculty of Law, Politics and Economics, Chiba University, Chiba, Japan

5. e College of Life Science, Fudan University, Shanghai, China

6. f Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan

Abstract

Abstract The effects of various strategies aimed at simultaneously promoting environmental conservation and human development are closely related to sustainable development regionally and globally. However, although the effects of many such strategies have been evaluated by ecologists and sociologists separately, their ability to simultaneously meet these two anticipated goals (i.e., environmental conservation and human development) at the fine spatial scale remains unclear. To answer this fundamental but crucial question, incorporating household and forest change data, we concurrently estimated the ecological and socioeconomic effects of two world-renowned Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) programs (i.e., the Nature Forest Conservation Program, the Grain to Green Program) and nature-based tourism in 30 protected areas across 8 provinces in China. Here we showed a trade-off between the ecological and economic effects of two PES programs, while synergistic effects exist in the ecological and economic benefits of tourism. Attributes of household and protected areas significantly influenced economic and environmental benefits as well. Our research provides new insights into the complex effects of PES programs and tourism, and crucial information to support their adequate and sustainable implementation in China and the rest of the world. Significance Statement This work answers a fundamental but crucial question, that is, whether the policies commonly advocated to incorporate environmental conservation and human development can yield positive effects both for conservation and economic development. Our evaluation is also timely to inform some shortness (i.e., negligible economic effects, or the lack of expected positive economic benefits) and provides new insights (e.g., the implication of households and protected-areas attributes in conservation and economic outcomes) of Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) programs and the complex effects of instruments in the context of multiple policies, particularly given the upcoming 2030 deadline for achieving the Sustainable Development goals (SDGs). We expected that implications in this study can provide important lessons for these two instruments, other PES programs, and other conservation and development instruments to support their adequate and sustainable implementation in China and beyond and to contribute to the achievement of relevant SDGs in the remaining years.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Reference33 articles.

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4. Dudley, N., 2008: Guidelines for Applying Protected Area Management Categories. IUCN, 86 pp.

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