A Comparison of Governance Challenges in Forest Restoration in Paraguay’s Privately-Owned Forests and Madagascar’s Co-managed State Forests
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Section
2.1. Methodology
2.2. Framing Governance of Forest Restoration
2.3. Study Sites
Country | Primary Forest | Other Naturally Regenerated Forest | Planted Forest | Annual Rate of Change in Forest (Total) 2005–2010 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1000 ha | % of forest | 1000 ha | % of forest | 1000 ha | % of forest | 1000 ha/year | % | |
Paraguay | 1850 | 11 | 15684 | 89 | 48 | n.s. | −179 | −0.99 |
Madagascar | 3036 | 24 | 9102 | 73 | 415 | 3 | −57 | −0.45 |
2.4. Overview of Forests in Each Ecoregion
Country | Ownership (2005) | |
---|---|---|
Public | Private | |
Madagascar | 98 | 2 |
Paraguay | 39 | 61 |
2.4.1. Paraguay’s Atlantic Rainforest
2.4.2. Madagascar’s Forests and Shrublands Ecoregion
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Ownership and Management of Forests
3.1.1. Madagascar
3.1.2. Paraguay
3.2. Selection of Restoration/Reforestation Projects
3.3. Discussion
3.3.1. Processes
Project | Aim/Type | Ownership | Management | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Madagascar | Makira—Makira Carbon Company (MCC) and Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) | REDD b | Public | Management of Protected Area by International NGO; co-managed outside of the protected area |
Ankeniheny to Zahamena Forest Corridor (CAZ)—Conservation International | REDD | Public | Co-managed | |
Fandriana to Vondrozo Forest Corridor (COFAV) Conservation International | REDD | Public | Co-managed | |
Holistic Forest Conservation Programme (PHCF)—WWF and Good Planet | REDD | Public | Co-managed and Community management | |
FORECA–GTZ/Inter-cooperation | REDD | Public | REDD+ readiness initiative (6 of the 8 project sites were in the forest and shrublands ecoregion) | |
Andasibe-Mantadia Biodiversity Corridor—Conservation International | Carbon sequestration | Public | Co-managed and Community management | |
WWF Fandriana Marolambo landscape | Ecological restoration | Public | Community management | |
Paraguay | TFCA (Tropical Forest Conservation Act) with Guyra Paraguay: Restoration of connectivity between two forest blocks in Caazapa National Park | Ecological restoration | Private | Debt swap board (includes NGOs and government) |
Restoration of four watersheds, developed by public entities: SEAM, INFONA and attorney general, with support from WWF; legal mechanism called “Conformance with the Forest Law” (CFL) | Ecological restoration | Private | Public | |
ITAIPU bi-national: project called “Paraguay Biodiversity” with SEAM, the World Bank and Partners: to restore the connectivity of six protected areas and the ITAIPU Reserves along to the Parana River | Ecological restoration | Private | Public with support of NGOs | |
Project called “Sustainable Management of Natural Resources.” Ministry of Agriculture (KFW/GTZ). To develop an Agroforestry programme with small producers in the Oriental Region of Paraguay. | Agroforestry using mixed species | Community | Public | |
Project of Conformance with the Forest Law. Coordinated by WWF, to restore 25% of forest reserve. | Ecological restoration | Private | Private and Public | |
Project: Restoring the Monday Watershed. Project developed by Association “A Todo Pulmon Paraguay Respira”. | Ecological and Agroforestry | Private | Private | |
Restoration undertaken as a fine for those deforesting on their own land | Ecological restoration | Private | Public | |
Restoration of areas to comply with sugar certification scheme | Ecological Restoration | Private | Private |
Aim/Driver | Practices/Species | Challenges | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ecological | Financial | Social/Political | |||
Madagascar | Carbon sequestration; Reducing forest degradation; Protection; Building resilience; Restoring forests; Protecting water | Subsidies and/or revenue; Revenue from carbon sequestration; Benefits from sustainable livelihood activities | Tenure security; Transfer of management rights; Employment; Provision of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) | Restoration: Native species; Useful tree species (e.g., for NTFPs); Reforestation: Fast growing exotic species for commercial purposes | Governance challenges
Participation of communities; Legal transfer of management rights to communities; Lack of national policies to encourage restoration; Working with individual landowners; Tenure conflicts; Education and sensitization of populations; Government attitude to restoration Other challenges Cost; Managing native species effectively Technical difficulties; Communications to raise awareness among the population |
Paraguay | Water protection;
Reducing deforestation and forest degradation; Restoring forests | Marketable species;
Revenue from carbon sequestration | Compliance with laws;
Transfer of management rights | Rapid growth species;
Species for which knowledge exists; Native species | Governance challenges Lack of proper control; Risk of illegal takeovers of land (tenure insecurity and property rights); Illegal logging; Absence of state; Lack of incentives; Poor political framework and support Other challenges Availability of seed producing trees; Lack of funds for maintenance |
3.3.2. Stakeholders
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Appendix
Appendix 1. Questions posed to forest owners, managers and experts engaged in forest restoration in Paraguay and Madagascar.
- Can you point to specific factors influencing your (others’) decisions to restore or not forests in your country?
- What is your/the primary motivation to restore forests?
- What are the most common species used for restoration? What determines the choice of species for restoration/reforestation?
- What determines the area chosen for restoration/reforestation?
- What approaches/species are commonly used for restoration?
- What could encourage you to restore more?
- What are the challenges faced with forest restoration?
- What are opportunities for forest restoration?
- How successful would you rate forest restoration (in your area/country)? And on what are you basing your judgment?
- How is the restored area currently managed/governed and how will it be managed/governed in the future? Who are the main actors in forest restoration management/governance and what is the relationship between these actors? What are the key challenges or opportunities with respect to governance of these areas?
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Mansourian, S.; Aquino, L.; Erdmann, T.K.; Pereira, F. A Comparison of Governance Challenges in Forest Restoration in Paraguay’s Privately-Owned Forests and Madagascar’s Co-managed State Forests. Forests 2014, 5, 763-783. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5040763
Mansourian S, Aquino L, Erdmann TK, Pereira F. A Comparison of Governance Challenges in Forest Restoration in Paraguay’s Privately-Owned Forests and Madagascar’s Co-managed State Forests. Forests. 2014; 5(4):763-783. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5040763
Chicago/Turabian StyleMansourian, Stephanie, Lucy Aquino, Thomas K. Erdmann, and Francisco Pereira. 2014. "A Comparison of Governance Challenges in Forest Restoration in Paraguay’s Privately-Owned Forests and Madagascar’s Co-managed State Forests" Forests 5, no. 4: 763-783. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5040763
APA StyleMansourian, S., Aquino, L., Erdmann, T. K., & Pereira, F. (2014). A Comparison of Governance Challenges in Forest Restoration in Paraguay’s Privately-Owned Forests and Madagascar’s Co-managed State Forests. Forests, 5(4), 763-783. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5040763