Abstract

Commodity crop expansion remains a leading driver of deforestation and defaunation in the tropics. Voluntary certification standards are the primary mechanism for making commodity production more sustainable and rely on the High Conservation Value (HCV) framework for protecting biodiversity on farms. In the oil palm sector, the HCV approach requires producers to create a management and monitoring plan for on-farm species and habitat, but many companies struggle with interpreting and implementing recommendations from HCV reports. In this study, we explore the challenges to effective biodiversity monitoring on oil palm plantations by consulting recommendations from twenty-one HCV reports for RSPO-certified projects in Latin America, and conducting semi-structured interviews with eight RSPO-certified palm oil mills in Colombia to understand how companies adopt recommendations. We identified several shortcomings under the HCV management-monitoring process including lack of indicators and guidance in HCV reports, emphasis on operational (i.e. procedural) over strategic (i.e. effectiveness) monitoring, over-reliance on incidental wildlife encounters for monitoring populations, and significant technical and financial barriers facing companies. We provide recommendations for improving these aspects including the adoption of Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBV)—population state variables that bridge raw data with global indicators for policymakers—to guide and standardize monitoring on plantations. We conclude by proposing a strategy for biodiversity monitoring that is long-term, driven by EBVs, and centralized at the sector level in Colombia to improve standardization and reduce costs. Current company efforts track drivers of biodiversity trends that complement EBVs, and should continue to encourage staff buy-in and awareness of biodiversity conservation importance.

Highlights

  • Voluntary certification schemes have become the most salient strategy for making tropical commodity supply chains more sustainable, reflecting a shift toward private-sector sustainability governance (Byerlee and Rueda, 2015)

  • Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBVs) can be used to guide more standardized biodiversity monitoring on oil palm plantations by serving as an intermediate layer between primary data observed in the field and more derived indicators for policymakers (Table 1; Figure 1)

  • Acoustic monitoring provides a useful approach for understanding the population dynamics of a target species (Campos-Cerqueira and Aide, 2016) or can be used to compare entire acoustic communities based on soundscapes (Furumo and Aide, 2019), creating an opportunity to link species population and habitat structure EBVs

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Summary

Introduction

Voluntary certification schemes have become the most salient strategy for making tropical commodity supply chains more sustainable, reflecting a shift toward private-sector sustainability governance (Byerlee and Rueda, 2015). In order to assess the effectiveness of management activities, monitoring plans must determine species population metrics, or biological state variables, of plant and animal communities on plantations so that they can be compared over time (Schmeller et al, 2017).

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