The sustainability of trade in wild plants—A data-integration approach tested on critically endangered Nardostachys jatamansi

Author:

Smith-Hall Carsten1ORCID,Pyakurel Dipesh2ORCID,Meilby Henrik1,Pouliot Mariève1ORCID,Ghimire Puspa L3,Ghimire Suresh4ORCID,Madsen Sofia T5ORCID,Paneru Yagya R6ORCID,Subedi Bhishma P3ORCID,Timoshyna Anastasiya7,Treue Thorsten1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Food and Resource Economics, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen , Rolighedsvej 23, Frederiksberg 1958 C , Denmark

2. Resources Himalaya Foundation , Damkal Charkrapath Marg 10007, Lalitpur Metropolitan City-3, Lalitpur , Nepal

3. Asia Network for Sustainable Agriculture and Bioresources , 819/29 Bhimsengola Marg, Kathmandu Metropolitan City-31, Kathmandu , Nepal

4. Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan University , Kirtipur Municipality-10, Kathmandu , Nepal

5. Department of Sustainability and Planning, University of Aalborg , A.C. Meyers Vænge 15, 2450 Copenhagen , Denmark

6. National Herbarium and Plant Laboratories , Satdobato-Godavari Rd, Godawari-3, Lalitpur , Nepal

7. TRAFFIC International , Cambridge, David Attenborough Building, Pembroke St, Cambridge CB2 3QZ , UK

Abstract

Abstract While the demand for many products from wild-harvested plants is growing rapidly, the sustainability of the associated plant trade remains poorly understood and understudied. We integrate ecological and trade data to advance sustainability assessments, using the critically endangered Nardostachys jatamansi in Nepal to exemplify the approach and illustrate the conservation policy gains. Through spatial distribution modeling and structured interviews with traders, wholesalers, and processors, we upscale district-level trade data to provincial and national levels and compare traded amounts to three sustainable harvest scenarios derived from stock and yield data in published inventories and population ecology studies. We find increased trade levels and unsustainable harvesting focused in specific subnational geographical locations. Data reported in government records and to CITES did not reflect estimated trade levels and could not be used to assess sustainability. Our results suggest that changing harvesting practices to promote regeneration would allow country-wide higher levels of sustainable harvests, simultaneously promoting species conservation and continued trade of substantial economic importance to harvesters and downstream actors in the production network. The approach can be applied to other plant species, with indication that quick and low-cost proxies to species distribution modeling may provide acceptable sustainability estimates at aggregated spatial levels.

Funder

Research Committee for Development Research

Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Independent Research Fund Denmark

Danida Fellowship Centre

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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