Abstract

Biodiversity conservation is a required co-benefit of REDD+. Biodiversity monitoring is therefore needed, yet in most areas it will be constrained by limitations in the available human professional and financial resources. REDD+ programs that use forest plots for biomass monitoring may be able to take advantage of the same data for detecting changes in the tree diversity, using the richness and abundance of canopy trees as a proxy for biodiversity. If local community members are already assessing the above-ground biomass in a representative network of forest vegetation plots, it may require minimal further effort to collect data on the diversity of trees. We compare community members and trained scientists’ data on tree diversity in permanent vegetation plots in montane forest in Yunnan, China. We show that local community members here can collect tree diversity data of comparable quality to trained botanists, at one third the cost. Without access to herbaria, identification guides or the Internet, community members could provide the ethno-taxonomical names for 95% of 1071 trees in 60 vegetation plots. Moreover, we show that the community-led survey spent 89% of the expenses at village level as opposed to 23% of funds in the monitoring by botanists. In participatory REDD+ programs in areas where community members demonstrate great knowledge of forest trees, community-based collection of tree diversity data can be a cost-effective approach for obtaining tree diversity information.

Highlights

  • Biologists working in the tropics and elsewhere have always relied on local people for guidance

  • We found no significant difference between the number of trees in the plot network identified to at least genus level by botanists (99.3%; n = 1071 trees) and community monitors (94.7%; n = 1071 trees)

  • Our results suggest that local experts from among the Yi people can reliably identify tree species in Yunnan’s forests without having access to identification guides and herbaria

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Summary

Introduction

Biologists working in the tropics and elsewhere have always relied on local people for guidance. Indigenous and local communities possess knowledge about the landscape they inhabit [1]. In tropical forests, indigenous cultures sometimes have meticulous classification systems to distinguish between vegetation types on the landscape [2,3,4,5,6,7,8].

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