Abstract

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has initiated a new sustainability mechanism, the ecosystem-services certification. In this system, management entities who wish to be certified for the maintenance of ecosystem services (carbon, biodiversity, watershed, soil and recreational services) must verify that their activities have no net negative impacts on selected ecosystem service(s). Developing a robust and cost-effective measurement method is a key challenge for establishing a credible certification system. Using a single method to evaluate a bundle of ecosystem services will be more efficient in terms of transaction costs than using multiple methods. We tested the efficiency of a single method, “biodiversity observation for land and ecosystem health (BOLEH)”, to simultaneously evaluate biodiversity and carbon density on a landscape scale in FSC-certified tropical production forests in Sabah, Malaysia. In this method, forest intactness based on the tree-generic compositional similarity with that of a pristine forest was used as an index of biodiversity. We repeated BOLEH in 2009 and 2014 in these forests. Our analysis could detect significant spatiotemporal changes in both carbon and forest intactness during these five years, which reflected past logging intensities and current management regimes in these forests. Enhancement of these ecosystem services occurred in the forest where sustainable management with reduced-impact logging had long been implemented. In this paper, we describe the procedure of the BOLEH method, and results of the pilot test in these forests.

Highlights

  • The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) forest certification was developed in the early 1990s to reduce the deforestation and forest degradation caused by unsustainable forest management [1]

  • The biodiversity observation for land and ecosystem health (BOLEH) method successfully elucidated the spatiotemporal changes of carbon density and forest intactness as maps across the three forest management units (FMUs) between 2009 and 2014

  • Our current study further demonstrates that the BOLEH method is useful to monitor temporal changes of forest intactness in a given FMU

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Summary

Introduction

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) forest certification was developed in the early 1990s to reduce the deforestation and forest degradation caused by unsustainable forest management [1]. Certified forest products are expected to gain better consumer appeal over uncertified products in the market and eventually drive out uncertified products Through this market mechanism, the deforestation and forest degradation caused by unsustainable forest management will eventually be mitigated. FSC forest certification is by no means a system to quantitatively verify positive management impacts or the enhancement of ecosystem services [1,2]. Based on these considerations, the FSC has increasingly received demands to reliably certify important forest ecosystem services [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

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