Biodiversity protection: measurement of output
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Date
1999
Type
Conference Contribution - unpublished
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Abstract
The term biodiversity conservation can be applied to efforts to conserve genetic
diversity, species diversity and ecosystem diversity. This paper focuses on
efforts to conserve species and ecosystem diversity. Efforts to reduce, or halt
this rapid loss of species and ecosystems involve significant costs. Environment
Department staff of the World Bank report that in Africa alone it has financed
or managed for the Global Environmental Facility, 118 projects with
biodiversity elements worth US $1.8 billion World Bank (1998). In New
Zealand, 1997/98 expenditures on ecological management accounted for $72.5
million or 46.8% of the Department of Conservation budget Department of
Conservation (1998a).
These expenditures are argued to be insufficient to stem the losses of
biodiversity. Globally, extrapolation of loss rates to numbers of species currently
at risk, suggests that biodiversity losses will climb to 200-1500 times the
background level and wipe out all currently threatened species (Pimm et al 1995
quoted in Ministry for the Environment 1997). The New Zealand Department
of Conservation (1998a) judge that .. , "[w]hile there is a lack of detailed
information .. , current conservation efforts are insufficient to stem the decline
in the health of indigenous biodiversity on the publicly conserved estate."
Annual expenditures on possum and feral goat control are only sufficient to
cover two thirds and half respectively of the areas necessary to provide
sustainable control of those pests Department of Conservation (1998a). The
Draft Biodiversity Strategy released on 20 January 1999 outlines proposals to
halt the decline of indigenous New Zealand biodiversity. The NPV of the
proposed expenditures over 20 years is $412 million MFE/DOC (1999). Halting
biodiversity decline will be costly.
Because resources available for biodiversity protection are limited, economic
efficiency questions are asked about biodiversity protection projects and
programmes. A US ecologist Dr Jared Diamond, has offered high praise for
some aspects of New Zealand's conservation management ... "The
contributions of New Zealand's conservation biologists [have provided] the
most imaginative and cost-effective conservation programme in the world"
(Diamond 1990).
Surprisingly little research appears to exist documenting the performance or
the cost effectiveness of conservation programmes. But the quotations above
illustrate that despite problems of data availability, judgments are made on the
contribution and merit of biodiversity protection activities. Given the issue
faced both nationally and globally - declining health of indigenous biodiversity
- and recognizing the facts of resource constraints, and costly protection
programmes, evaluation of efforts at biodiversity protection activities is
essential. This paper reviews the methodologies available to judge the success
and merit of biodiversity protection actions, briefly reviews the empirical work
completed to date, and provides recommendations on directions for further
development.
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