Abstract

Over the past 50 years, cash forest encroachment presents a major threat to tropical rainforests in Southeast Asia. Economic and social benefits provided by natural conservation and the loss of these benefits through encroachment must be accounted for. Here, we evaluated ecosystem services provided by a protected rainforest, Mengyang Reserve in China, in comparison to a simulated scenario where possible encroachment occurs. Strict conservation (i.e., current state) provided more value from carbon stocks, greenhouse gas sequestration, domestic water supply, and nature-based recreation. Yet, local villagers still aspire to expand their cash forests, especially rubber and tea. Based on our conservative estimate, the cash tree encroachment basically satisfying the cultivation needs of the villagers would reduce the net value by approximately 50% per year. Through placing numerical values on loss and benefit, governmental policy makers and local stakeholders might be able to visualize the impact of conservation policy guidance. Horizontal transfer payment based on village-explicit opportunity costs should be proposed from the context-specific valuation of ecosystem services, and should include increased funding, simplifying the process, and expanding the scope of payments. Our results provide a useful lesson on the understanding the effectiveness of ecosystem services value in tropical reserves.

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