Abstract

The local community is an essential and key partner in managing protected areas, especially for national parks in Indonesia. Therefore, there is a need to establish adaptive collaborative management (ACM) between the park authorities and the local community. In 2000, several local leaders established a new organization to develop an ecotourism package called the Tangkahan Ecotourism Organization or Lembaga Pariwisata Tangkahan (LPT) and set up the Community Tour Operator to manage the ecotourism activities. Our study used a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis through focus group discussions (FGDs), interviews with related stakeholders and key informants, and carried out a literature review. It was found that ensuring local community could generate alternative income from ecotourism was an effective way to protect the park from any illegal activities. Additionally, the results about sustainability from the FGDs show that all three categories: Social Process, Adaptive Natural Resource Management, and Impact/Condition are interrelated, meaning that the collaboration and adaptive management in Tangkahan have resulted in high levels of humanistic well-being and the maintenance of ecological values, supporting collaboration processes and adaptive levels. Finally, our study can be used as a basis for a model of national parks focusing on ACM.

Highlights

  • Indonesia is the largest island nation in the world with 17 thousand islands covering a land area of 1.91 million km2 [1]

  • Our study aims to understand the success story of community tourism in national parks and the sustainability of ecotourism as a resource sharing strategy

  • This section is divided into two subsections: study area and the methods used in this study, comprising a literature review, interviews, SWOT analysis, and focus group discussions (FGDs)

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Summary

Introduction

Indonesia is the largest island nation in the world with 17 thousand islands covering a land area of 1.91 million km2 [1]. More than 22 million ha or 21.26% is managed as protected areas [2,3], which exceeds the protected areas (PAs) in most countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America [4], as well as exceeding the Aichi Biodiversity Targets aiming to protect 13% to 17% of the land surface by the year 2020 [5]. Human activities may negatively impact these protected areas and decrease their effectiveness as shown by current data: around 1.8 million ha or around 10% of the total area of lands in terrestrial protected areas is degraded [3]. The importance of PAs cannot be denied, especially in light of the current high pressures for economic and human development [6,7]. PAs protect the habitats, wildlife populations, forest ecosystems, and the various ecosystem services that they provide from deforestation.

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