Participatory forest monitoring: an assessment of the accuracy of simple cost–effective methods

International forest policies have recently increased the focus on involvement of local communities in forest monitoring and management as a strategy to improve biodiversity conservation efforts and local livelihood in developing countries. However, little is known about feasible methods, costs and accuracy of participatory monitoring schemes in developing countries. This paper examines the costs, accuracy and local reproducibility of three simple cost–effective methods for monitoring forest disturbance by local participants: (1) 20-trees method, (2) Bitterlich gauge method and (3) Disturbance Checklist transect. Using one of these methods the costs of monitoring forest habitats are only between US$ 0.04 and 0.12 ha−1 annually, depending on the methods used, this is significantly cheaper than the costs of traditional scientific methods for biodiversity monitoring. Results indicate that local community members without former scientific training can collect accurate data on habitat loss and forest disturbance after only a few days of introduction to the methods, and thereby contribute with valuable information for natural resource management. The strengths and weaknesses of monitoring done, respectively, by local community members and educated biologists, respectfully, are discussed. It is suggested that these approaches should be seen as supplements to each other rather than substitutes. Finally, it is argued that monitoring schemes in developing countries can be sustained after donor funds have ceased only if the local communities play a central role and clear financially and/or socially incentives for members of the local community are incorporated.

[1]  Richard E. Lewis,et al.  Participatory Ecological Monitoring of the Alaotra Wetlands in Madagascar , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[2]  S. Britto,et al.  Identifying conservation priority zones for effective management of tropical forests in Eastern Ghats of India , 2006 .

[3]  F. Bongers,et al.  Gaps and forest zones in tropical moist forest in Ivory Coast. , 1993 .

[4]  F. Danielsen,et al.  A simple system for monitoring biodiversity in protected areas of a developing country , 2000, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[5]  James D. Nichols,et al.  Monitoring of biological diversity in space and time , 2001 .

[6]  S. Sarkar,et al.  Systematic conservation planning , 2000, Nature.

[7]  T. Brooks,et al.  VEGETATION STRUCTURE AND COMPOSITION OF THE TAIT A IDLLS FORESTS , 1998 .

[8]  Douglas Sheil,et al.  Conservation and Biodiversity Monitoring in the Tropics: Realities, Priorities, and Distractions , 2001 .

[9]  Zhang Jinfeng,et al.  Participatory Resource Monitoring as a Means for Promoting Social Change in Yunnan, China , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[10]  L. Dinesen Priorities For Biodiversity Conservation in the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania-Based on Bird Data , 1998 .

[11]  M. Poulsen,et al.  Projects Come, Projects Go: Lessons from Participatory Monitoring in Southern Laos , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[12]  S. Bragdon The Convention on Biological Diversity , 1996 .

[13]  S. Wasser,et al.  Biogeography and ecology of the rain forests of eastern Africa: Frontmatter , 1993 .

[14]  Andrew Balmford,et al.  Complementarity and the use of indicator groups for reserve selection in Uganda , 1998, Nature.

[15]  S. Wasser,et al.  The conservation of the forest resources of eastern Africa: past influences, present practices and future needs , 1993 .

[16]  Adrian C. Newton,et al.  Use of indigenous knowledge for rapidly assessing trends in biodiversity: a case study from Chiapas, Mexico , 1999, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[17]  Neil D. Burgess,et al.  Monitoring Matters: Examining the Potential of Locally-based Approaches , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[18]  Taylor H. Ricketts,et al.  The Convention on Biological Diversity's 2010 Target , 2005, Science.

[19]  S. Green,et al.  Monitoring and Evaluation of Reef Protected Areas by Local Fishers in the Philippines: Tightening the Adaptive Management Cycle , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[20]  M. Huston A General Hypothesis of Species Diversity , 1979, The American Naturalist.

[21]  C. D. Becker,et al.  Community-based Monitoring of Fog Capture and Biodiversity at Loma Alta, Ecuador Enhance Social Capital and Institutional Cooperation , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[22]  S. Wasser,et al.  Biogeography and Ecology of the Rain Forests of Eastern Africa , 1995 .

[23]  J. Proctor,et al.  Structure and floristics of an old secondary rain forest in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia, and a comparison with adjacent primary forest , 2004 .

[24]  A. Cropper Convention on Biological Diversity , 1993, Environmental Conservation.

[25]  Julia P. G. Jones,et al.  When Should Communities and Conservationists Monitor Exploited Resources? , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[26]  Jon C. Lovett,et al.  Elevational and latitudinal changes in tree associations and diversity in the Eastern Arc mountains of Tanzania , 1996, Journal of Tropical Ecology.

[27]  D. Sheil,et al.  Finding and promoting a local conservation consensus in a globally important tropical forest landscape , 2006, Biodiversity and Conservation.

[28]  Alice Brandon,et al.  Can volunteers provide reliable data for forest vegetation surveys , 2003 .

[29]  F. Danielsen,et al.  Biodiversity monitoring in developing countries: what are we trying to achieve? , 2003, Oryx.

[30]  Lian Pin Koh,et al.  Unreported yet massive deforestation driving loss of endemic biodiversity in Indian Himalaya , 2006, Biodiversity and Conservation.

[31]  Assessment of Threat Status and Management Effectiveness in Kakamega Forest, Kenya , 2006 .

[32]  E. Topp-Jorgensen,et al.  Community-based Monitoring of Natural Resource Use and Forest Quality in Montane Forests and Miombo Woodlands of Tanzania , 2005, Biodiversity & Conservation.

[33]  Karen E. Firehock,et al.  A Brief History of Volunteer Biological Water Monitoring Using Macroinvertebrates , 1995, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.

[34]  Kristen S. Genet,et al.  Evaluation of methods and data quality from a volunteer-based amphibian call survey , 2003 .

[35]  J. T. Curtis,et al.  The Use of Distance Measures in Phytosociological Sampling , 1956 .

[36]  Jim Fowler,et al.  Practical Statistics for Field Biology , 1991 .

[37]  Challenges and opportunities for surveying and monitoring tropical biodiversity – a response to Danielsen et al. , 2003, Oryx.

[38]  D. H. Knight,et al.  Aims and Methods of Vegetation Ecology , 1974 .

[39]  Wayne M. Getz,et al.  Sustaining Natural and Human Capital: Villagers and Scientists , 1999, Science.

[40]  N. Mawdsley,et al.  Biodiversity inventories, indicator taxa and effects of habitat modification in tropical forest , 1998, Nature.