Litcius/Paper detail

Indigenous lands in protected areas have high forest integrity across the tropics

Jocelyne S. Sze, Dylan Z. Childs, L. Román Carrasco, David P. Edwards

2022Current Biology65 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

datasets, we find that high-integrity forests tend to be located within the overlap of protected areas and Indigenous lands (protected-Indigenous areas). After accounting for location biases through statistical matching and regression, protected-Indigenous areas had the highest protective effect on forest integrity and the lowest land-use intensity relative to Indigenous lands, protected areas, and non-protected controls pan-tropically. The protective effect of Indigenous lands on forest integrity was lower in Indigenous lands than in protected areas and non-protected areas in the Americas and Asia. The combined positive effects of state legislation and Indigenous presence in protected-Indigenous areas may contribute to maintaining tropical forest integrity. Understanding management and governance in protected-Indigenous areas can help states to appropriately support community-governed lands.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyTropicsIndigenousAgroforestryTropical forestEcologyConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementAfrican Botany and Ecology StudiesFrench Urban and Social Studies