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Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R University of Arizona Fall 2003 Kevin Bonine

Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

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Page 1: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003Conservation Meets Creativity RecapConservation and Economics (CH12)

Tidbits from (CH10,11)

Conservation BiologyECOL 406R/506R

University of ArizonaFall 2003

Kevin Bonine

Page 2: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

A. AnnouncementsA. JobsB. Readings

B. Final Exam (Friday 19 Dec. 1100-1300h)C. Conservation Meets CreativityD. Economics of ConservationE. TidbitsF. Evaluations

Ran out of time for grading!Everyone high C or better.

Page 3: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

5 December: Air Quality and Climate Change [New!]

28 November: Freshwater Resources and the Energy Picture

21 November: Fisheries, Soils, and Food Security

14 November: Population and Biodiversity

12 December: Special Issue -- Tragedy of the Commons?

5 December: Air Quality and Climate Change

Global Air Quality and PollutionHajime AkimotoScience 302, 1716-1719 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources] Modern Global Climate ChangeThomas R. Karl and Kevin E. TrenberthScience 302, 1719-1723 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources]

28 November: Freshwater Resources and the Energy Picture

Global Freshwater Resources: Soft-Path Solutions for the 21st CenturyPeter H. GleickScience 302, 1524-1527 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources] Energy Resources and Global DevelopmentJeffrey Chow, Raymond J. Kopp, Paul R. PortneyScience 302, 1528-1531 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources]

21 November: Fisheries, Soils, and Food Security

Tropical Soils and Food Security: The Next 50 YearsM. A. StockingScience 302, 1356-1359 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources] The Future for FisheriesDaniel Pauly et al.Science 302, 1359-1361 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources]

14 November: Population and Biodiversity

Series Introduction:The Shape We're InH. Jesse SmithScience 302, 1171 (2003)[Full text]

Human Population: The Next Half CenturyJoel E. CohenScience 302, 1172 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources] Prospects for BiodiversityMartin JenkinsScience 302, 1175 (2003)[Abstract] [Full text] [Web resources]

12 December: Special Issue -- Tragedy of the Commons?

Science's 12 December special issue will focus on the problem of managing and sustaining the shared bounty of Planet Earth, with a series of nine reviews covering broad issues in collective resource management, as well as discussions of third-world development, food security and health, law and environmental policy, and the politics of climate change.

Science2003

Page 4: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Competent before radical...Data and science, then fingerpainting

Photos courtesy of Ben Joslin

Page 5: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 6: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 7: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 8: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 9: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 10: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 11: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 12: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 13: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 14: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 15: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 16: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R
Page 17: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Economics of ConservationVan Dyke Ch 12

1. Role of Human Population Growth2. Neoclassical Economics3. Externalities 4. Environmental Economics etc.5. Genuine Progress Indicator6. Examples

$

Page 18: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

=14-1 Miller 2003

Conventional NeoclassicalEconomics

-Private Property-Economic Growth always good-Allocate based on price-More always better for an individual

(utility curves)

Page 19: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Ecological orEnvironmental Economics

=14-2 Miller 2003

Scavengers are key; we can’t really throw things away.

Return to pre-neoclassical ideas

Page 20: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

VanDyke, 2003

~1700 ~2000

Overwhelm?

Page 21: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

What is the purpose of the economic system?-to what end all of this wealth? Ultimate value beyond market?

0-Classical Economics

1-Environmental Economics (catch-all term, think cyclically)

2-Steady-State Economics (John Stuart Mill 1700’s, Herman E. Daly)- in = out- ‘Virtue and character higher goals than material wealth.’

3-Sustainable Development (Lester Brown)- do away with many subsidies- replace income tax with environmental tax

Stocks and Flows, EntropyNicolas Georges-Roegen

~”a Cadillac now means fewer human lives later”

Page 22: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Economic Growth vs. Development-efficiency, sophistication, utility

Nonrival (air to breathe) or nonexclusive goods (UV protection from ozone)

-Producer Pays/Polluter Pays-Dramatically less waste (packaging, scrubber sludge)

-Taxation/Subsidies-Pollution Rights-Precautionary Principle -Insurance

Government strategies and regulation-Stable, democratic government required?

Product itself

Page 23: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Government strategies and regulationStable, democratic government required?

(VanDyke p. 356:)NEPA, ESA, Clean Air, Clean Water…

-Work b/c require full and open disclosure of process and those involved.

-How do Cheney secret meetings with industry leadersto plan energy policy fit in?

SDCP and findings from economic analyses…

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Page 24: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Miller 2003

VanDyke, 2003

Genuine Progress Indicator

Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare

Page 25: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

ZimbabweCAMPFIRE Program

Communal Areas Management Program For Indigenous REsources

-aimed at creating worthwhile returns to villagers from the sustainable use of natural resources,-giving them income security and a stake in the preservation of the natural environment and wildlife of their area.

Communal areas are divided into regions which have local committees and projects.

-Fees, Meat, Hides-up to $50k/week hunting-photosafaris etc.

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Page 26: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

ZimbabweCAMPFIRE ProgramLocal Control and Projects

Poultry Farming in Masvingo

but...11 million peopleRobert Mugabe

Economic and Political Turmoil

Page 27: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Ecotourism ?-Highly Contentious

UN website:Masai in Eastern Africa and Masai Mara N.P. -lost grazing lands, lost rights -(native american analogy?)

Tourism works, but need many visitors -degradation -roads -infrastructure -sewage -deforestation for heating and cooking -corruption?

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Page 28: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

African Southern White RhinocerosCeratotherium simum simum<200 in 1900>11,000 today (and growing)habitat loss, poaching ($)CITES Appendix I

Look Ma,No Horns!?

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Page 29: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

White Rhinoceros Ceratotherium simum poaching for:medicine, aphrodisiac, dagger handles

horn up to 10kg:prices $600-10,000/kg($60,000/kg for Asian Rhino = ~5x price of gold)

Education poster in Yemen

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Page 30: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Ecosystem ManagementCh10 Van Dyke text

“...land management system that seeks protect viable populations of all native species, perpetuates natural disturbance regimes on the regional scale, adopts a planning timeline of centuries, and allows human use at levels that do not result in long-term ecological degradation”

Ecosystem: -energy and nutrient processing system with physical structure and function that circulates matter and energy.

Definitions are debatable

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Page 31: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Ecosystem Management (Ch10 Van Dyke text)

Why?-erosion, pollution, waste disposal, sedimentation-small or uncharismatic species, recreation, intrinsic value-single species approach very expensive

(SDCP model)

-driven by CAPACITY to deliver goods, services, functions;NOT Demand for them (forest as an ecosystem, not just a tree farm)

-management experimental and adaptive (SDCP)-monitoring

-cooperation, stakeholders

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Page 32: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

“Managers recognize the need for human communities to utilize some ecosystem resources” (VanDyke p.272)

-Define “some”-Where do we draw the line?-Human population increase?

Unit of ecosystem management?-watershed?-make sure include important components (Everglades and Lake Okeechobee)

Ecosystem Processes: Necessary vs. Sufficient-Hawaii missing 90% native vertebrates-fire, water, herbivory, predation

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Page 33: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

Tucson Watershed (Tucson Basin 1,700 sq. miles = 1 million acres)

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Page 34: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

-Restoration Ecology (CH11)-Biocultural Restoration

-Processes

e.g., Guanacaste, Costa Rica

e.g., Everglades, Florida

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Page 35: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R

END

Page 36: Lecture 28, 10 Dec 2003 Conservation Meets Creativity Recap Conservation and Economics (CH12) Tidbits from (CH10,11) Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R