Title
Community Markets for Conservation (COMACO) links biodiversity conservation with sustainable improvements in livelihoods and food production
Author(s)
Dale Lewis , Samuel D. Bell, John Fay , Kim L. Bothi , Lydiah Gatere , Makando Kabila , Mwangala Mukamba , Edwin Matokwani , Matthews Mushimbalume , Carmen I. Moraru , Johannes Lehmann , James Lassoie , David Wolfe , David R. Lee , Louise Buck , Alexander J. Travis
Published
2011
Publisher
Ecological Economics
Abstract
In the Luangwa Valley, Zambia, persistent poverty and hunger present linked challenges to rural development and biodiversity conservation. Both household coping strategies and larger-scale economic development efforts have caused severe natural resource degradation that limits future economic opportunities and endangers ecosystem services. A model based on a business infrastructure has been developed to promote and maintain sustainable agricultural and natural resource management practices, leading to direct and indirect conservation outcomes. The Community Markets for Conservation (COMACO) model operates primarily with communities surrounding national parks, strengthening conservation benefits produced by these protected areas. COMACO first identifies the least food-secure households and trains them in sustainable agricultural practices that minimize threats to natural resources while meeting household needs. In addition, COMACO identifies people responsible for severe natural resource depletion and trains them to generate alternative income sources. In an effort to maintain compliance with these practices, COMACO provides extension support and access to high-value markets that would otherwise be inaccessible to participants. Because the model is continually evolving via adaptive management, success or failure of the model as a whole is difficult to quantify at this early stage. We therefore test specific hypotheses and present data documenting the stabilization of previously declining wildlife populations; the meeting of thresholds of productivity that give COMACO access to stable, high-value markets and progress toward economic self-sufficiency; and the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices by participants and other community members. Together, these findings describe a unique, business-oriented model for poverty alleviation, food production, and biodiversity conservation.
Keywords
conservation farming, food security, poaching, carbon, sustainability
Full Citation
Masozera, M., M. Bailey, et al., 2007. Distribution of impacts of natural disasters across income groups: A case study of New Orleans. Ecological Economics 63(2-3): 299-306. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2006.06.013

Access Full Text



Back

DMX1506800000